Miss Lovely is
a marvelous homage to the seedy and sordid world of Bombay’s defunct underground
Z-grade horror, trash and sexploitation industry that played to India’s lecherous grindhouse
audiences. Combining elements of a pulpy storyline, biting social commentary, wry
humour and self-reflexive look at the medium at its most lowbrow, it dished us
with a bleak but delectably tipsy underbelly, and was gloriously accompanied by
expressionistic audio-visuals that superbly catalogued the sleazy and lurid
quotient of the world being depicted. Sonu (Nawazuddin Siddiqui) is the naïve and
romantic younger brother of the brazenly carnal Vicky (Anil George) who’s planning
to get into distribution under the banner of Duggal Brothers – a reference to
the cult films of Ramsay Brothers. Things become complicated when Sonu falls
head over heels with the ravishing Pinky (Niharika Singh) who, as is eventually
revealed, is anything but the coy and virginal girl she seems to be. When, in
order to make a film with her, Sonu steals a stash of cash that Vicky has
been paid by the ruthless racket of B-Films, leading to trouble for both the
brothers. And when the police suddenly start cracking down on them, there’s
just no escape. The squalid, scandalous and titillative world was brilliantly created
by the mesmerizing cinematography that alternated between garish colors, moody
visuals and noirish chiaroscuro, and the stupendous authentic-looking art
direction that spoke volumes of the director’s technical virtuosity, while the soundtrack
evoked the disco age and tension in equal measures. Both Siddiqui and George
were great to watch, Niharika was delicious as a femme fatale under the garb of an innocent
damsel in distress, and the supporting cast was quite effective as well.
Director: Ashim Ahluwalia
Genre: Thriller/Post-Noir/Crime Thriller/Showbiz Drama
Language: Hindi
Country: India
2 comments:
Terrific review--really fascinating subject in the film, hope to see it one day!
Thanks Sam. After a long time I was so bloody impressed by a Hindi film - this is top-drawer stuff not just for its brilliant sight & sounds, but more so for the scandalous world of Z-grade horror films (the kind forever frowned upon by the urban educated & a nearly extinct domain too) that the director so marvelously evoked & paid homage to.
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