Hitchcock
introduced this concept of split personality in a very effective
way in Psycho. The condition of Norman Bates (played to perfection
by Anthony Perkins) swinging wildly between an over-bearing
abusive mother and an utterly vulnerable yet rebellious kid,
both within the same person, the change of the voice, the
transformation of the body language, the co-existence of the
dual personalities, are rooted in a very strong premise/foundation
- the repressive inner-child within Bates created an alter
ego to channel his fears and frustrations into, and the actions
of Bates cannot be pinned on his fictional alter ego and vice-versa.
The premise here is pretty strong to absolve Bates of all
the horrific crimes that he commits in his mother's garb.
Hitchcock lays the foundation pretty strongly. Next in the
list is David Fincher's brilliant adaptation of Chuck Palahniuk's
biting social satire "Fight Club". Dulled by the
numbing tedium of every day life, lulled by the consumeristic
culture prevailing all around, the protagonist of the movie
invents an alter ego, who is everything that he is not - free,
unburdened, bold, charming and ultimately nihilistic. The
alter-ego's nonchalant attitude towards destruction and annihilation
completely contrasts the protagonist's conservative and timid
approach towards life, making the creation of such personality
by such repressed a mind totally believable. Last in the list
is an even more interesting split personality in Smeagol/Gollum
in "Lord of the Rings". While the other two characters
are based on repressive behaviors of some sort, this character
is seated in basic morality, plain good and bad. Smeagol's
good nature in helping out Baggins reach his destination is
overpowered by the avaricious quality of Gollum in claiming
possession of the "precious" ring. All the three
characters establish the basis of their split and conflict
in their natures, giving root to their alter-egos.
Shankar's
"aparichituDu" is rooted in apathy, in indifference,
in lack of concern, in the negligence of basic civic responsibilities.
Split personality, a serious and an extremely rare condition
(despite what the movie leads the audience to believe citing
internet sites, medical journals and white people in white
coats), is a cognitive disassociation phenomenon - a willful
partition of the thinking process, completely separating one
piece from the other, shielding one's thoughts from the other
and blocking off the flow of information between the two -
all this, on the premise of apathy? That, people indifferent
towards the every day duties, sometimes inconveniencing and
sometimes affecting the lives of the fellow citizens, would
lead to the creation of an avenging angel, set to bring society
back in order towing the same line, stands as the basic premise
for Shankar's story. Granted that suspension of disbelief
is most often the pre-requisite and the cardinal rule, while
applying logic and a sense of believability to a commercial
movie, but trying to tackle the reality of every day life,
the problems and the issues by applying a totally illogical
and fantastical premise greatly reduces the seriousness of
the issue, all the while completely undermining the very foundation
of such solution, in this case, the split personality syndrome.
While comparisions to Shankar's earlier venture, "Indian",
are fairly obvious, the Senapati character in "Indian"
carries move weight than the Ramanujam character in "aparichituDu",
owing to the simple reason that the driving point, the motivation
for Senapathi is far more pronounced and far more serious,
forcing him to pick up the weapon and dispense justice as
he sees fit. Even within the commercial parameters, the old
age of Senapathi, when tackling much younger and much stronger
enemies, is never called into question, for, it is already
built into the script that he derives his energy and strength
from the strong reasons that made him pick up the weapon in
the first place.
Shankar
falters at this very first step of providing the lead character
the right reason to create an alternate persona who does the
laundry work. "aparichituDu" is a super human story
of a different sort. A superman story already comes with a
pre-packaged alter-ego option. The man dons the cape, he becomes
super man, he wears glasses, he becomes Clark Kent. So are
Spider Man, Batman and the rest. All these supermen are clear
in their agendas of fighting evil; inner conflicts for them
is more of an identity issue - whether Spiderman is more Peter
Parker than the man in the suit, whether Bruce Wayne is the
alter-ego of Batman and the like. When "aparichituDu"
takes law into his own hands and starts killing people, because
they shirked their responsibilities towards the soceity, it
presents a complex dilemma - whether the timid Ramanujam is
removed far from "aparichituDu" because of all the
killings, or whether Ramanujam created "aparichutuDu"
to do the killings, meaning, whether the guilt of the murders
on a socially responsible citizen enhance the alienation from
the alter ego, or the creation of the alter ego is precisely
for the purpose of carrying on with the agenda. This difference
is important within the current context, in that, how could
a morally and socially responsible person condone the killings,
which flies in the face of the basic tenets of the society,
even if it is only at a mental level and not on any physical
scale, established in Ramanujam trying to exact some sort
of revenge on the perpetrators by going to the website and
lodging his complaint. If he thinks driving on the wrong side
of the road calls for a punishment, how and why did his mind
accept the idea of such harsh punishments to indifferent people,
which are strictly anti-social, not to mention, unlawful?
Senapathi, in "Indian", differs from this behavior,
in that, he does not mind weeding out the ills of society,
by any force necessary, even if it means ending lives, which
is established in his background as a member of Indian National
Army (Azad Hind Fauj).
While
"aparichutuDu" goes by value judgments (what is
food for one is poison to another), Senapathi relies on fair
justice. Shankar's earlier social movies, tackling reservation
(Gentleman), corruption (Indian), and, for that matter, accountability
(oke okkaDu) seem to have a much stronger base resonating
in the genuine problems that plague the contemporary society.
Picking up an issue that, at best, riddles the society, and,
at worst, inconveniences it, and trying to apply the same
extreme justice that is applied to the rest of the cases,
do not seem just, leave along, logical. The sincerity in maintaining
the focus on the key issue, that is usually his trademark
in all his social ventures, is diluted in split personality
syndrome and the tacky special effects that went into justifying
the abnormal behavior of "aparichituDu", which brings
afore the next culprit in question - Peter Haine, the stunt
choreographer. The unnecessarily elongated elaborate wire-work
stunt sequences coupled with the time-slice (inspired by Burly
Brawl sequence from Matrix Reloaded) techniques, push "aparichituDu"
fast into the fictional world of fantasy and super-human powers
and demonstrations, while the tone of the rest of movie tries
desperately to cling on to the realm of realism. Even with
the leeway to the maker that hyperkinetics of the alternate
persona is responsible for this seemingly super-human strength,
compare it to the super-human, yet contrastingly, realistic,
behavior of Senapathi, during the execution sequences. At
no part does it feel that the director was crossing his permitted
degrees of freedom and it felt that he stayed strictly within
the confines of dramatic licenses. Among all the technicians,
Sujatha (the original dialogue writer, and translated by Ramakrishna)
justified his presence and worthiness to the fullest extent,
through some sharp, funny, satirical dialogues and observations.
To sum it up, in the process of creating a super-human story,
Shankar ended up with a script that is neither super nor human!
More
Ramblings on films
Batman Begins
Radha Gopalam
Mughal E Azam
Swades
Anand
Virumandi (Tamil)
Lakshya (Hindi)
Yuva (Hindi)
Kakha Kakha (Tamil)
Malliswari
Boys
Aithe
Mr & Mrs Iyer
Okkadu
Show
Manmadhudu
Nuvve Nuvve
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