In this film, it’s all about loving your neighbour

August 22, 2016 12:00 am | Updated 07:57 am IST

A still from Happy Bhag Jayegi

A still from Happy Bhag Jayegi

Happy Bhag Jayegi (Hindi)

Director: Mudassar Aziz

Starring: Abhay Deol, Diana Penty, Jimmy Shergill, Piyush Mishra, Ali Fazal, Momal Sheikh, Javed Sheikh

Unlike what the promotions would have us believe, Happy Bhag Jayegi is not about Happy or Diana Penty who plays the lead character. Thankfully so. The sophisticated, Westernised Penty hardly looks or behaves like the rooted Amritsari kudi that she is meant to be on screen.

And it requires way too much of a suspension of disbelief to imagine that a polished Penty could be dishing out yummy aaloo paranthas (a significant ingredient in the film, mind you).

If in Bajrangi Bhaijaan the adorable little girl Shahida gets stuck in India and has to be taken back to Pakistan, here it’s Happy, on the run from her own wedding, who lands up in Lahore by mistake. The crucial difference is that Happy is far from adorable, just plain petulant and irritating. Throughout the film people keep talking about falling in love with Happy and one keeps wondering how anyone could do that. Quite like her, the man she is in love with, Guddu (Ali Fazal), is also largely inconsequential.

It is Pakistan that is vital. What’s interesting is how Happy… is an Indian comedy that turns out to be more about our neighbour. In fact, Pakistan is its strength. Of course, friends across the border may have an axe to grind in terms of the authenticity of depiction. But was that ever the intention of the makers? For me the more likeable set of characters are all on that side — even an Iffatbi, a Fakhru Mamu or the bumbling baddies are nicer than the pallid, insipid Happy. The centre of the film is actually Abhay Deol who plays Bilal Ahmed, son of the former governor. All depth and dignity, he is the solid, dependable, romantic hero, the kind you’d love to take home.

NAMRATA JOSHI

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