Subhash K Jha speaks about The Shaukeens

This article was last updated on April 16, 2022

Canada: Free $30 Oye! Times readers Get FREE $30 to spend on Amazon, Walmart…
USA: Free $30 Oye! Times readers Get FREE $30 to spend on Amazon, Walmart…

The Shaukeens

Who says remakes can never be as good as the originals? Abhishek Sharma's new-age rendering of Basu Chatterjee's Shaukeen is a smartened-up avatar of the original. It's it the smart-phone of the current generation as compared with landline version of the comedy that Chatterjee made 25 years ago.

Thanks to Tigmanshu Dhulia and Sai Kabir's writing the characters are spunkier and more rounded even when they appear to be as curvaceous as Haydon.

In principle The Shaukeens hijacks only the basic idea of the original film. Three 60-plus men get lustfully attracted to a PYT. Incidentally the PYT from Basuda's film has now metamorphosed into a sad boring housewife in Shaukeens. A tragic bit of self-reference that makes no sense.

But we are digressing. The three over-the-hill lechers in The Shaukeens, played with dignified horniness by Anupam Kher, Annu Kapoor and Piyush Mishra, are as dangerous as a child with a toy gun. A tone of ironical self-mocking bravado runs throughout the 2-hour comic celebration of the wrinkled libido.

Not that Dhulia's writing and Sharma's astutely tongue-in-cheek direction spare the childlike-buzurg the rod (ahem). There are some scenes of embarrassing humiliation meted out the prowling trio, for instance the one where a girl on a deserted Delhi road reacts violently to their leching. Kher, Kapoor and Mishra drop their vanity even as they loosen the string of their pyjamas for some hardcore action.

More power to the actors' sporting spirit. All three actors, seen in a collective huddle of jaded horniness, give off their best performances portraying their sexually famished characters with a mix of childlike guilelessness and over-ripened curiosity.

I specially loved Piyush Mishra's home life. A bland manufacturer of a masala brand his two sons are shown to come forward one at time each evening , the first to offer him his meal and the other a choice between a blue and white pyjama.

The Shaukeens

These are lives awaiting excitement. Mauritius and Ms Hayden provide that much-needed break from ennui in the three elderly thrill-seekers' lives. Haydon, full of trivialized existential problems about the number of 'likes' on Facebook and other puerile prattle, plays her unselfconscious hottie's role with the required amount of innocence and sauciness. She serves as an able foil to the three old men's heightened horniness.

Rather than indulge the lechers, the narrative mocks them without letting them know. That's the film's primary victory. But the main-stay of The Shaukeens and the reason why this film must be seen is Akshay Kumar. Playing an alcoholic bored and cranky version of himself Akshay quite simply takes over the show, bringing into play the kind of self-deprecatory humour that we have not seen any Bollywood superstar indulge in.

There are scenes showing Akshay Kumar the star, targeting himself as a non-actor, surrounded by yes-men and minions who smirk and cheat behind his back. Look out for Cyrus Broacha as the star secretary, Mohan Joshi as the star-director and Kavin Dave as an on-location fixer. This could have been a tragic saga of a superstar's isolation from reality. Instead, Akshay turns the whole stardom game into an in house joke and Kagaz Ke Phool becomes Kagaz Ke Bloody-Fool.

This is Akshay's best performance in recent years. He adds considerably to the film's comic quotient. As do the three veteran actors with performances that go beyond the bawdy.

The Shaukeens is a rib-tickling rumbustious sleaze-less comedy that Basu Chatterjee is likely to smile at.It's bound to make you laugh out loud.

Unless you are Jackky Bhagnani.

Article written by staff at Bollywood Hungama. Read more

Share with friends
You can publish this article on your website as long as you provide a link back to this page.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*