Bhakshak Movie Review: A Big Prod To The Conscience

Bhakshak
Bhakshak

Bhakshak(Netflix)

Starring Bhumi Pednekar, Sanjay Mishra, Aditya Srivastava ,Sai Tamhankar

Directed by Pulkit

Rating: ****

From its prologue where a  young girl is  brutalized and then  left to die, to  its closing monologue  where investigative journalist Vaishali  Singh  looks  straight into the camera  and asks us if we have lost all compassion…Bhakshak   resonates with the  corruption and brutality of  our times.

Bhakshak is set in  a  hell-house camouflaged as a  shelter  home in Munnawarnagar,a thinly veiled reference to the shocking gruesome crime in Muzaffarpur that had shaken the nation’s collective conscience in  2018. But  what did  we do? Did we  go beyond  out tsk-tsks in our living rooms?

  Pulkit’s film does much more than make polite noises. It is a film of smothered shrieks and chilling recriminations .It is partly a true-crime thriller that Costa-Gavras would  approve of,  and  partly a severe docu-dramatized condemnation of  our socio-political reality that allows such unspeakable crimes to happen, right in the heartland of India.

To his credit, Pulkit(a prized discovery among the most skilled storytellers  of  our cinema) never allows  the tone of  the film to get excessively righteous. The mood is one of regret and anger, yes. But there is  no blame game, no attempt  to pass the buck. Pulkit sees what most of us have ceased to long ago: we built this sordid world where children are abused, and those exposing  such heinous crimes are  told to shut up or die.

There is  this brilliantly written  confrontation sequence between Vaishali Singh and the crime kingpin  Bansi Sahu(Aditya Shrivastava, sterling in his evil avatar) where Sahu politely asks the intrepid journalist why she wants to  commit suicide. It reminded me of  Om Puri and  Sadashiv Amrapurkar in Govind Nihalani’s  Ardh Satya.

The  aura of  eeriness envelopes almost every frame.Inside the shelter home we hear muffled sounds of torture and pain  like distant roars of trains filled with Jews hurling towards doom in Nazi Germany.Shishir Chousalkar’s sound design  favours no particular design. Random ominous sounds startle  us, provided we  are listening.

Besides being an outright instant classic on oppression and  child abuse, Bhakshak is  also a technically-unerring winner. The  cinematography(Kumar Saurabh) ,the editing (Zubik  Sheikh) and the production design(Prashant Bidkar) embrace  the  squalor and turpitude with an exceptional absence of  judgement.

The performances lift this fable of a fall to the lowest level  of depravity,to a degree of deliverance . Not only Bhumi Pednekar , but also Sanjay Mishra as her kind considerate assistant and Surya Sharma as her  closeted-feminist husband, bring a rare gravitas to the nerve wracking proceedings.

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