Aabeer Gulaal: Classy Ambrosial Excursion Into Romcom Territory

This gossamer threaded yarn has some really uplifting moments between the lead players. They can be spotted in isolation even when they are with a crowd of family and friends. Bagdi, who has co-written the ambrosial screenplay with Meghna Singhee, excels in delicately segmenting the central romance in a ‘When Hari Met Sawri’ kind of indigenous romcom.

Aabeer Gulaal: Classy Ambrosial Excursion Into Romcom Territory

Photo:SNS

Rating: *** ½


As far as love stories go, this one goes that extra mile to
provide just that little extra something to the movie experience, that special spark that separates  the routine from the remarkable. Aabeer Gulaal, directed by Aarti S Bagdi with an impressive eye for the unseen, falls somewhere in-between.

Advertisement

This gossamer threaded yarn has some really uplifting moments between the lead players. They can be spotted in isolation even when they are with a crowd of family and friends. Bagdi, who has co-written the ambrosial screenplay with Meghna Singhee, excels in delicately segmenting the central romance in a ‘When Hari Met Sawrikind of indigenous romcom.

Advertisement

The ‘Bollywood’ references  are ubiquitous. And VaaniKapoor, God bless her dancing feet, is always up to it. In their first encounter in a hotel room (watch how the  sequence unfolds like the creases  of a  silk saree) Gulaal does Rekha’s steps  from Umrao Jaan, although  Aabeer confesses his favourite  song in  the  film is  the  lone Talat Aziz solo (Zindagi  jab bhi tere bazmmein). It figures.

Heck, this could be an upscaled  Tanu and Manu, except for the fact that this couple is just not into  morphing. They are fiercely individualistic, united by their love for food, dance ….and love! But of course.

I  loved the way Fawad’s Aabeer keeps  rescuing Gulaal  from  sticky situations (all interestingly narrated), while her father back in Jaipur (Parmeet Sethi doing an Amrish  Puri) keeps calling anxiously. Even when Aabeer grits his teeth at unnerving moments, we know where his heart is going. These  two strangers  are  meant for each other.

Both Fawad Khan and Vaani  Kapoor are terrific in their parts, especially Fawad who has a way with words. A simple invitation for coffee sounds like something else.Here is an actor whose spoken words convey the punctuations and silences of true conversation  without  losing any  of  its poeticality.

Fawad makes his character Aabeer Singh very believable and charming, Vaani is right behind. Their shared sensuousness spreads out in an arching trajectory subsuming everything that comes in the way. The food looks tempting. The romance looks inviting. Aabeer Gulalis for everyone who has ever been in love, or would  liketo be. There is no  room for  hatred here.

(The writer is a veteran journalist and film critic.)

Advertisement