Dosanjh is no stranger to light-toned comedies. There is a childlike innocence and an ingrained sense of mischief to his personality that render themselves effectively to the tongue-in-shriek tone of this retro-comedy. There is a sequence where Diljit tries to impress his girl by pretending to enjoy a Marathi satirical play with much noise and enthusiasm. Diljit nails the part of the over-eager lover-boy, a Romeo with high hormones and low self-esteem, a variation on the role Rajkummar Rao plays in in this week’s other sunshiny comedy Ludo.
Fatima Sana Sheikh as Manoj’s outwardly docile sister who moonlights is a deejay may be shocking in her conduct for those times. Given today’s scenario, she is hardly the rebel with a cause that she’s meant to be.
The era in the early 1990s and there are no cellphones. The pager has just come in. The aura of the era of Amitabh Bachchan, Govinda and Mithun Chakraborty is done unobtrusively. And except for one shot where we see an electrical switch that came a good ten years later, the period details, the taxis on the road and the non-toxic chit-chit in the home between mother Supriya Pilgaonkar and son Manoj Bajpayee are well played-out. He runs a detective agency in the front room, she operates a beauty parlour in the backroom.
“Your job is to break people’s lives mine is to beautify them,” Mama wisdom can be quite a showstopper.
Bajpayee in multiple disguises plays the “wedding detective” with a wicked streak and the most hideous drag act I’ve seen in a Hindi film. I must say Manoj carries the saree with even less grace than Akshay Kumar in Laxmmi. He also carries off his character’s wicked activities(he likes to spy on men and break up their wedding and marriages) with a full-on temerity.
With Bajpayee and Dosanjh providing a fulsome fang-base for the funny scenes, Suraj Pe Mangal has the audience well hooked to its laugh line, moles warts and all. The last act leading to the climax is way too tedious. Vijay Raaz’s unexpected appearance in the finale livens up the limping closing act. He plays a man with OCD. Of course, during those times it was not known as OCD.
At one point in the plot, Dosanjh’s best-buddy-sidekick introduces him to a new concept of urban wellbeing. Woh kya kehte hai? Cool! That’s what this film tries to be, and succeeds to some extent. If only it hadn’t overstayed its welcome.
Directed by Abhishek Sharma Suraj Pe Mangal Bhari gets 3 stars.
Image Source: Instagram/bajpayee.manoj