Maharathi: Movie Review
Maharathi is embellished with competent performances that attempt to camouflage the imperfections.
Director: Shivam Nair
Cast: Paresh Rawal, Neha Dhupia, Boman Irani, Naseeruddin Shah
Rating: ** ��
In a drama the performances take precedence. But in a film, the plot takes priority... more importantly if it's a thriller. Maharathi scores on the former aspect but shakes on the latter. This cinematic adaptation of a Gujarati play has able performances from its seasoned cast of senior actors. But the plot that starts off promisingly is flawed by few loopholes.
Subhash Sharma (Paresh Rawal) rescues Jai Singh Adenwala (Naseeruddin Shah) from a car accident and gets recruited as his driver. Jai Singh shares an estranged relationship with his much younger wife Mallika (Neha Dhupia).
Like most murder mysteries, even the plot of this one is devised on the undying life-insurance money maneuver. The only difference being that here the person insured (Jai Singh) kills himself and challenges the claimant (his wife Mallika) to prove his suicide as a murder to obtain the insurance amount. Subhash teams up with Mallika to fake the suicide as a murder and mutually share the insurance money.
Ideally Subhash's motivation for the entire manipulation should have ended the moment Mallika dies, since she was the only claimant to the insurance. Strangely he not only continues his concoction but also wins the insurance claim in the climax through reasons unexplained. Further Jai Singh leaves a will assigning his property in the name of Subhash. Now why would any person allocate his entire estate in the name of his driver?
The buildup of the narrative is interesting and keeps you riveted in the initial portions. But as Subhash's plan goes for a toss in the concluding reels, the story complicates itself while trying to cover one flaw by another. Legality jargons like insurance clause, property-will and power of attorney muddle up the mystery.
However Maharathi scores for its smart dialogues which give Paresh Rawal sufficient scope to exploit his comic timing in the thriller genre. Despite the drama being primarily set in one mansion, the camera moves capably in the interiors to capture the finest frames. Avoiding song-dance-melodrama only enhances the effect.
One of the elegantly penned lines from the film says, "Small risk and small gains means business, big risk and big gains means gamble, small risk and big gains means opportunity". Maharathi doesn't make the best of its opportunity.
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