Language: Hindi Full disclosure: Right at the outset, I should confess that I chose not to watch the original
Jersey
, Telugu film starring Nani, since I planned to review its Hindi remake, starring Shahid Kapoor. It’s a scene-by-scene adaptation so my impression of the Hindi film has no benchmark to measure it against. However, some moments did take me back to Shahid’s last film,
Kabir Singh
, also an adaptation of a Telugu hit, Arjun Reddy. Here too, the director is common to both the films — Gowtham Tinnanuri, who also helmed the original Jersey. Early on in the film, Shahid is seen riding a bike. But he’s not out there to get the girl a la Kabir Singh. He’s taking his seven-year-old son to play a cricket match. Arjun (Shahid) is a 36-year-old man in Chandigarh who quit cricket 10 years ago because he got rejected in the Indian cricket team selection. He was also suspended from his job a couple of years later because of a legal case. He now lives with his wife Vidya (Mrunal Thakur), a hotel receptionist, and their son Kittu (Ronit Kamra). While he’s a stay-at-home dad, Vidya is working hard to make ends meet. When Kittu asks his father to buy him the Indian cricket team jersey on the former’s birthday, the helplessness of Arjun frustrates him to the core, and eventually nudges him to chase his dream of joining the Indian cricket team again.
Shahid Kapoor and Mrunal Thakur in Jersey[/caption] But Tinnanuri’s direction only fleetingly adheres to this less-is-more school. While his writing doesn’t take convenient, crowd-pleasing full swings, it also doesn’t make every single count. Effort has gone into detailing here, from Arjun crushing an unfinished cigarette under his foot to Vidya’s eyes that well up because of exhaustion and sacrifice, but that effort often shows. For a film that wants to celebrate the familiar and the simple — the means of achieving that should’ve been a little more innovative, more intricate. There’s a lot to mine in the familiar motifs and arcs of the story here. Let’s start with the love story. Shahid and Mrunal’s easy chemistry would’ve been far more rewarding if her backstory and graph were fleshed out better. One gets why Arjun’s favourite cheerleader turns into a voice of reason. Sacrificing the family she was born into over the family she chose, coupled with the burden of being the sole earning member of the family, makes her a hardened working woman, instead of an unconditional lover.
Pankaj Kapur in Jersey[/caption] I must add that Shahid’s craft has seen an upward steep, but he should continue taking notes on acting from his seasoned father, like how to tweak one’s body language and voice after an age leap. Shahid is a worthy leading man, but misses the finer touches the audience will look for while re-watching his performance in the retrospective light of the film’s climax. Again, the argument circles back to making every single count, and not just hitting every ball out of the park. When the grown-up Kittu (played sincerely by Prit Kamani) reminisces about his father, he remembers him as a man who went against all odds and risks to play a game that lent identity and respect to him, as both a father and a sportsman. But the fact that Arjun continued to pursue his dream, even if to “live with his head held high in his son’s eyes,” without disclosing the chinks in his armour to the family, makes him an escapist — or a victim of the crushing hopes of ‘heroism’ that’s imposed on ‘unsuccessful’ men like him. In the larger picture, it’s disappointing to learn that the son’s lasting memory of his father is that of a hero, and not of a victim. [caption id=“attachment_10588191” align=“alignnone” width=“640”]
Ronit Kamra and Shahid Kapoor in Jersey[/caption] How about we talk about the world Jersey is set in? There is dearth of any nuance in the depiction of Punjab or specifically, Chandigarh. The director is unfamiliar with that turf, but even the dialogue writers Siddharth-Garima (also behind the dialogues of Kabir Singh) only perpetuate the Punjabi cliches that riddle the Hindi film industry. The only ray of sunshine is Kamra, who surprisingly steeps his accent in subtle colloquialism. And finally, let’s address the elephant in the room — cricket. We’ve only recently witnessed two rousing/inspiring films on the sport in
83
and
Kaun Pravin Tambe?
. While the latter, like Jersey, is about late bloomers on field, the first one is a masterclass in how to marry cricket and drama. In its defense, Jersey can’t pull off the scale of 83. While cinematographer Anil Mehta and editor Navin Nooli try, the DNA of the film is more micro than macro. It’s a far intimate story, but embracing the familiar and the comforting with abandon could’ve gone a long way in making it a more potent experience.
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