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Taxi No. 9 2 11

Nana Patekar, John Abraham, Sameera Reddy, Sonali Kulkarni

Published on: Feb 25, 2006 04:38 PM IST
None | By , ** & 1/2
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As luck and scriptwriter Rajat Aroraa would have it, the two unlikely "heroes" end up lending a shoulder to one another.

HT Image
HT Image

Besides the striking lead pair who epitomise the spirit of frictional camaraderie, the best aspect of Taxi No 9 2 11 is its amazing eye for locational detail. Not a moment in the brief and crisply edited (Aarif Shaikh) narrative is confined to a studio.

The camera explores the non-glamorous side of Mumbai with penetrating panache.

The crowded streets, the dingy chawls and the high-rise apartments mingle in a bustle of audio-visual lucidity. But there's no anxiety to bring Mumbai alive. It just happens to come to life without trying.

Patekar and Abraham do the rest. Their interactions and conflicts are cleverly written. We never feel the weight of their combined charisma as it collides and creates the kind of masculine sparks that are rare to mainstream Hindi films.

Director Luthria dares to go against the grain. The profile and contour of the narration are cosmopolitan. And yet at heart, Taxi No 9 2 11 is a purely homespun morality tale about people who choose not to take responsibility for their actions.

To slot Taxi No 9 2 11 as a road caper would be a creative crime. This is a film that goes far beyond the thrills provided on screen. Of course, there's no dearth to the thrills as well. The traffic of stress on the crowded roads of Mumbai, excellently staged by stunt director Abbas Ali Moghul, coalesces effortlessly with the sensitive thought processes that underlines his gently forceful take on the theme of male bonding.

In the deepest recesses of this cannily crafted rage drama, there's a softly beating heart that tells us to love life.

Life in Taxi No 9 2 11 isn't beautiful. Not really. Luthria looks at Mumbai's underbelly with much affection and some regret. He makes optimum use of the spatial disharmony of the metropolis to carve out a story of one day in the life of two absolutely disparate individuals who change each other's outlook in unexpected ways.

The expertly packaged human drama is bolstered and held in place by the two central performances. Nana is a raging volcano of middleclass angst. He has done the clash-act repeatedly. But manages to make it look different once again.

John's take on the tycoon's evolution from self-interest to compassion is very sensitively graphed by the actor. You can see a lot of deliberation going into each moment that John creates on screen. Whether it's his interaction with the obdurate banker or his realisation that his girlfriend (Sameera Reddy) is at the end of the day, just a gold-digger with a prodding mom to boost her materialism, John feels for his character.

And we feel for the characters and environment that the director constructs.

Living in a concrete jungle is a constant struggle. Luthria satirises the struggle of survival and finally makes the seriocomic act of survival a statement on urban morality.

 
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