The name of Runningshaadi.com was changed to
Running Shaadi when a matrimonial site objected to the film’s title. The makers
probably didn’t realise how much it would eventually hurt the film’s flow. It
feels like a party pooper and ruins the viewer experience every time the word
‘.com’ is bleeped. But this isn’t the only flaw that dogs Running Shaadi.
After he gets fired from his job, Bharose
(Amit Sadh), a Bihari migrant in Amritsar, zeroes in on the idea of opening a
website where he can help lovers elope and get married.
His close friend Cyber (Arsh Bajwa) fuels his
ambitions and his former boss’ daughter Nimmi (Taapsee Pannu) lends her credit
card to buy a domain name. It was supposed to turn into a mad caper from here
on, but a clogged screenplay reduces it to an average fare with occasional
comic relief.
What begins in Punjab and looks like a subtle
film about the problems faced by a migrant ends up travelling to Bihar where
loud actors and forced scenes expend most of the novelty.
She is open to sex, drinking and buying
condoms (an information the film sprinkles, for no reason at all). And yet when
it comes to love, she would run away rather than tell her parents. Running
Shaadi clearly has some very strange ideas about love and modernity. And
stranger still when it comes to modern-day Patna, though at least that lends
itself to the film’s few moments of genuine humour.
As yet another film centred around the great
Indian wedding, Nimmi (Taapsee Pannu, in an accent that will make any
self-respecting Punjabi cringe) is the daughter of a bridal-wear store owner in
Amritsar. Bharose (Amit Sadh, genuine if nothing else) is a Bihari employee at
the shop. At first, Amit Roy, a cinematographer making a directing debut,
appears to have a kernel of an idea about budding love between a Sikh girl and
a Bihari boy in a set-up that perhaps encourages little, if any interaction
between two such people.
Bharose’s role initially evokes sympathy
because he is trying to make it big as an underdog in an alien land. Casual
chemistry between Bharose and Nimmi also works fine as an idea. At least, Nimmi
is someone who is not judgmental. The best thing about Running Shaadi is that
characters seem to rise above the boundaries of caste and creed.
Though Amit Sadh keeps faltering in switching
accents and Taapsee Pannu talks like Bollywood’s now stereotyped Punjabi girl,
their characters have been written with some depth.
Taapsee’s character is unapologetic about her
body and desires. She buys condoms and has an opinion about abortion and love,
something Bollywood shies away from showing because it still wants its heroines
in a particular mould which suits the ‘family audience’. Similarly, Amit Sadh’s
Bharose shows a progressive attitude, but remains rooted. A mixture of what we
are and what we want.
ut the second half of the film gets bogged
down by an influx of an army of actors with distinct traits. Led by Sinha Jee
(Pankaj Jha), these actors talk in many dialects including Maithili, Bhojpuri
and chaste Hindi. As parts of a well-knit Bihari society, they churn out some
intriguing moments, but fail to do it seamlessly.
Director Amit Roy may have unnecessarily
stretched the film to 114 minutes. Running Shaadi has its moments, but they are
too few to keep you engrossed.
Running
Shaadi
Movie cast :-Amit Sadh, Taapsee Pannu, Arsh Bajwa
Movie
director
:-Amit Roy
Movie rating :-5/3
star
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