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Jalsa review: A hit-and-run leads to a cover-up and unanswered questions

Jalsa review: A hit-and-run leads to a cover-up and unanswered questions

The film is rigorously crafted, using its visual and sound design to excellent effect in many scenes.
26 Mar, 2022

This article contains spoilers.

Jalsa means well. Tumhari Sulu director Suresh Triveni’s new film is sensitive about its subject — the unequal power dynamic between a journalist and her maid that is revealed after a hit-and-run accident. A key character is played by a boy with cerebral palsy who is treated no differently from the rest of the cast. The Amazon Prime Video release is rigorously crafted, using its visual and sound design to excellent effect in many scenes.

Perhaps Jalsa means too well. The screenplay, by Triveni and Prajwal Chandrashekar, stands a few respectable feet away from the edge of an ethical quagmire but doesn’t move forward. The dilemma that confronts Maya (Vidya Balan), who gets sleepy at the wheel and runs over a teenager, has escape routes and extenuating circumstances.

As an affluent divorcee living in Mumbai with her son Ayush (Surya Kasibhatla) and mother (Rohini Hattangadi), Maya depends on her maid Ruksana (Shefali Shah) to share the load. The accident victim is Ruksana’s daughter — an unhappy coincidence for Maya and happy happenstance for Jalsa's makers.

Furtive moves and panic attacks ensue as Maya tries to cover her tracks with the help of her colleague Amar (Iqbal Khan). More trouble arrives in the form of over-enthusiastic reporter Rohini (Vidhatri Bandi), who idolises Maya but threatens to expose her by following Alia’s story.

The 130-minute narrative takes some convincing, never easy when you consider the actor playing Maya. Vidya Balan’s innate warmth and immense likeability result in a sympathy-for-the-devil portrayal that undercuts the film’s attempt to introduce nuance and complexity.

In a sequence in which Maya lashes out at her defenceless son, the dialogue is replaced with background music. Had we heard Maya’s unfiltered thoughts, we might not necessarily have judged her, as the film is keen to avoid. Rather, we might have better understood Maya’s fractured emotional state.

In other places, sound plays a crucial role in ratcheting up Maya’s crisis. Sound designer Anthony B Jayaruban meshes the background score with the harrowing hum of juddering coffee machines and construction machines thundering into the earth.

The nerve-shredding feeling of being in a disaster film or a horror movie is enhanced by Maya’s recurring nightmares. One of these nightmares, if we have understood it correctly, is among Jalsa's best scenes — a chilling moment of reckoning for an avoidable tragedy.

Even as the contrivances stack up, Jalsa rarely loses its poise. Saurabh Goswami’s tonally rich camerawork and the solid performances set up a narrative that doesn’t ultimately have the stomach to confront and embrace its ambiguities.

Shefali Shah’s intense portrayal of Ruksana is perfectly complemented by Surya Kasibhatla’s affecting purity as Ayush. In a film that leaves its themes hanging like incomplete sentences, Ayush’s ability to say what needs to be said is among Jalsa's most rounded moments.


This article was originally published on Scroll.in and has been reproduced with permission.

Comments

Rationalmind Mar 26, 2022 07:51am
Very well analysed, brilliant review ! Kudos to the author.
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John Mar 26, 2022 09:01am
Why review Indian movies? They are banned anyway
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planettrekker Mar 26, 2022 09:22am
Excellent movie. Touches the human sentiments.
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Rf Mar 26, 2022 09:57am
John@ BCoz u guys earns bread n butter .. through this reviews..
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M. Saeed Mar 26, 2022 02:34pm
Praiseworthy must be praised in true honesty.
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Dragden Mar 26, 2022 02:47pm
@Rf seems more like you earn your bread and butter by coming here and commenting
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Tadka Mar 26, 2022 03:25pm
@Dragden didnt know this is a paid platform lol...
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Tadka Mar 26, 2022 03:27pm
@John. this is on OTT not bollywood box-office
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Noel Mar 26, 2022 05:17pm
A review well written! Loved the movie. The story and the complexity will grip the viewer. All character plays their part really well. I personally swayed from dislike for Maya to generate sympathy for her after understanding her dilemma and fear later. Also shows the power of one’s conscious and the intrigue of forgiveness!
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Vgp Mar 27, 2022 01:22am
@Tadka Don't bother. They won't know the difference
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Rian Mar 27, 2022 04:29am
Who cares
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ABCD Mar 27, 2022 06:35am
You watch or don't but for serious movie lovers it is one of the best. It will remain in mind for hours. For only entertainment go for Pushpa to watch Alu's action.
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Bunny Mar 27, 2022 03:58pm
@John ART should be above politics .
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Syed Hasni Mar 27, 2022 05:31pm
Hit and run, sound like a documentary on Javid Miandad from the Title. If it is, otherwise, I do not have time for that.
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