Review - Manorama Six Feet Under
1st October 2007 | posted in Anand S, Guest, Hindi Movies, Reviews |Looks like youre new here. You may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!
Alternate Names: Manorama 6FU
| Rating: | Watch for sure - preferably in theatre |
Sleaze, corruption, and intrigue in small town India.
As the largest film making country in the world, we have not had indigenous versions of the Noir genre of films on our screens except for a short period in the fifties. More power to debutante director Navdeep Singh for having the courage and the vision to give us what is possibly the finest noir film in an Indian language.
Yes, in the fifties we had them for sure, notable amongst them being Baazi and Aar Paar, both directed by Guru Dutt, but they suffered from the fact that the mores of film making in India did not really allow the chief protagonist to be cynical, morally ambiguous, and deeply pessimistic about the world: a world that was jaded and characterized by an acute loss of faith in ‘universal’ values of love and justice.
The Noir (French for night, literally and figuratively standing for ‘black film’) genre gave us such Hollywood films like The Maltese Falcon and The Asphalt Jungle in the forties and fifties, and more recently the conventions of the genre have been reworked in neo noir films like the Coen Brothers’ Blood Simple and Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner.
So what does the director do here? Navdeep Singh has crafted a film dripping with nuances of life in a small desert town, and has used the metaphor of the desert to suggest the aridness and sterility of the life of the chief protagonist, Satyaveer Randhawa, underplayed superbly by Abhay Deol.
We have the character elements of the noir genre in ample measure: a morally ambiguous, loveless world, populated by cynical and apathetic characters each driven by their own lusts and greed, the femme fatale who is sympathetic to the hero, mysterious damsels in distress, the aging patriarch with his insatiable ravenousness for power justifying his actions by appealing to the “natural order of things”, crooked cops, scummy goons, and nosey neighbors.
The script is an inspired retelling of Roman Polanski’s seventies noir classic Chinatown and to the director’s credit, he does not hide it, but instead pays tribute to it in his own way by reworking the plot and some key scenes to suit his point of view. He also throws in a direct reference to the original just to make sure you get the point.
Unlike traditional noir films, the camera work does not frame scenes in stark contrasts of light and dark, with fog and or steam cloaking people in a half light, neither is the film set in the mean streets of a city lovingly photographed to make sure that all the grittiness and grime stand out. Instead here we have the desert in all its harshness as well as in gentler moods, and scarred and pitted monuments serve as the back drop to existential ruminations and the unfolding of the plot.
The camera lingers on the characters and their reactions; it frames the characters tightly, especially inside darkened rooms, creating a claustrophobic atmosphere that goes well with the dark machinations in the plot.
The cast has done a good job: both Raima Sen and Gul Panag are competent, and Vinay Pathak is simply superb as the local Sub Inspector with his cynical outlook on life.
The film does not have a climax in the conventional sense, which may leave a lot of people feeling highly dissatisfied, but a degree of redemption is achieved by the chief protagonist. Satyaveer Randhawa is again not a hero, he is not the good guy who is absolutely honest and incorruptible, but as the film proceeds, we understand that he is corrupt too. Evil is not vanquished in the end, neither does justice triumph. Evil is something that is at best lived with, because it resides in us and not in the “villain”. All that we can do is to come to terms with it and with ourselves.
For those who are looking for a typical “thriller” film with the “good guy” vanquishing the “bad guys”, this film is best avoided.
For those who like their life complex, their characters morally ambiguous, and would like to ponder on the workings of fate and existence, this is a film that you must see.
Click here to read what I scribbled on my notepad while watching this movie (what worked and what didn’t for me). Might contain spoilers!
Click here to see what 21 other reviewers/viewers think. Average rating 3.2 / 5.0: 12 thumbs up, 3 so-so, 6 thumbs down.
If you enjoyed reading this, please help maintain this site with a donation
| Rating: | Watch for sure - preferably in theatre |
Detailed Ratings (out of 5):


posted on October 1st, 2007 at 5:28 pm
posted on October 2nd, 2007 at 2:14 am
posted on October 3rd, 2007 at 7:03 am
posted on July 19th, 2008 at 10:36 pm
posted on August 11th, 2008 at 12:24 pm
posted on August 11th, 2008 at 12:27 pm
posted on August 11th, 2008 at 12:30 pm
posted on August 17th, 2008 at 9:28 pm
posted on August 18th, 2008 at 4:13 am
posted on August 19th, 2008 at 4:28 am
posted on September 21st, 2008 at 5:37 am
posted on September 22nd, 2008 at 12:37 pm
posted on September 22nd, 2008 at 1:01 pm
posted on November 1st, 2008 at 6:20 am