
KABHI KHUSHI KABHIE GHAM
(notes by
Corey K. Creekmur)
("Sometimes happiness, sometimes sorrow")
2001, Hindi, 209 minutes
Directed by Karan Johar
Music: Jatin Lalit, Sandesh Shandilya, and Aadesh Shrivastav; Cinematography:
Kiran Deohans
Patriarchy has not yet, to my knowledge, made the Endangered Species list, but
Karan Johar seems to feel that it needs shoring up with this massive, opulent,
yet oddly hollow film. Strange to say, KABHI KHUSHI KABHIE GHAM
compressed as K3G by the press even before it was released may now be
the most successful Indian film ever made, at least in terms of initial revenue
returns. A minor scandal was created when the film should have appeared within
the top-10 box office in the United States on Variety's lists for late 2001,
but was omitted because the editors apparently couldn't believe that an "unknown"
film was doing "house full" business in American theatres (albeit
those catering to Indo-American audiences); the film did appear high up on the
U.K. charts at the same time. Meanwhile, K3G broke records throughout India,
supported by a massive marketing campaign that included CDs and cassettes as
well as a fancy gift book on its making. Inevitably, the film doesn't live up
to the hype could any film? but this one seems an especially notable
letdown: the storyline is rather simple and blatantly illogical at times, and
the lavish sets and use of showy locations never serve much purpose; most of
the songs aren't very memorable, and seem inserted rather then integrated, reinforcing
a claim that is too often brought against Hindi films (unfairly in many cases
e.g., 2001's other big hit LAGAAN, which works to carefully combine song
and story).
The film, through emphatically "big," treats a fairly narrow topic:
the internal dynamics of the ostentatiously rich Raichand family, headed by
Yashovardhan (a.k.a. Yash, played by Amitabh Bachchan) and his wife
Nandini (Jaya Bachchan). A flashback reveals that the childless couple adopted
a son, Rahul (Shah Rukh Khan), but were surprised when Rohan was born a few
years later, placing Rahul in the tricky position of being the "eldest"
but not the "natural" child of his parents. The family is a model
of love and respect until Rahul falls in love with Anjali (Kajol), a perky and
comically clumsy Punjabi girl from Delhi's Chandni Chowk, whose younger sister
Pooja is Rohan's classmate. (The development of the love between Shah Rukh's
Rahul and Kajol's Anjali, which occupied most of the running time of DILWALE
DULHANIYA LE JAENGE and KUCH KUCH HOTA HAI, takes mere seconds here.) Yash had
a classier, business-minded match in mind for Rahul: Naina (Rani Mukherjee,
left with little to do in the film); but Rahul chooses love over duty in order
to marry Anjali, accepting banishment from the Raichand family and mother India.
All of this comes as news (in the form of a long flashback) to the adult Rohan
(Hrithik Roshan), igniting his quest to reunite his broken family. Once a roly-poly
and teased little boy, he's now a strapping, style-conscious hunk who plans
to go to London and covertly work his way into Rahul's home and family, since
his own brother, sister-in-law, and childhood playmate surely won't recognize
him. Finally, he stages a family reunion at an upscale London shopping mall,
and in a rather confusing ending, everyone quickly apologizes for previous bad
behavior. (Rahul, it seems, should have simply disrespected Yash by not staying
away and all would have been forgiven; Anjali was apparently right to ask for
the blessing of the man who was banishing her from his home and family.) Karan
Johar's chosen epigraph for the film, used in the script and in all its advertising
"its all about loving your parents" is in fact
hard to apply to the film, since Rahul's adherence to his love for his parents
generally brings him grief. Rather, the film seems to actually admonish stern
fathers to trust and love their children mothers, aunties, and grandmothers,
of course, love their children unconditionally even while respecting the idiotic
wishes of vain patriarchs.
Such domestic
clichés have been central to many of the recent family-oriented hits
of Hindi cinema, and the promise of another treatment of similar material evidently
paid off in ticket sales. But K3G doesn't bring much to the now familiar formula.
Even one of the film's greatest draws, its casting coup of three of the biggest
male stars of Hindi cinema, doesn't pay off as fully as it should: Amitabh Bachchan
and Shah Rukh Khan had already been paired, in quite similar roles, in Aditya
Chopra's lackluster MOHABBATEIN (2000), and the addition of Hrithik Roshan doesn't
significantly alter the dynamic. Amitabh (who now plays the kind of unyielding
fathers his career-defining "angry young man" used to get angry about)
has a few nice comic scenes with Khan in the latter's London home, but they
don't create the sparks one expects from an on-screen meeting of mega-stars.
Shah Rukh, while still in the boyish persona that made him famous, effectively
carries the emotional weight of the film, and is best when he registers the
undeserved pain of his banishment. He's also convincing as a father himself,
a career transformation that began when he played a widower in Karan Johar's
hit debut KUCH KUCH HOTA HAI. The three female stars don't fare very well either:
Jaya Bachchan is as impressive as possible in the conventional role of the Indian
woman torn between her duties as mother and wife, and her final chance to tell
off her (real-life as well as on-screen) husband is at least satisfying. Kajol,
cute as ever, gives in to frequent mugging and pratfalls that become tiresome.
Kareena Kapoor's grown-up Pooja is simply confusing: she's a spoiled NRI princess
living in London who has apparently taken CLUELESS as a lifestyle guide (a decade
too late), but is asked to gain sudden sincerity at the last moment. Paired
with Roshan, whose emotional mission doesn't prevent him from partaking of fancy
cars and the latest fashions, she can't seem to decide whether she's playing
a sexy cartoon or a sympathetic co-conspirator in the rescue of a wounded family.
Like a number of recent films that depict (and address) so-called NRIs (non-resident
Indians), K3G is most interesting but also most confusing when
it mixes the material pleasures of global consumerism with the nostalgic desire
for Indian values: a transitional montage of the familiar sights of Tony Blair's
"cool" London is accompanied by "Vande Mataram" (a
hymn to the Motherland beloved of the Hindu Right) on the soundtrack, and patriotic
feelings are aroused in the principals when they hear the Indian national anthem
sung by
the blonde and blue-eyed children's choir of a posh English school
(the British parents, understandably baffled, nevertheless stand and shed tears
as well). Father Yash keeps harping on the importance of the rituals and traditions
of his family (which apparently include an expensive foreign education), but
it's often difficult to understand how his Anglophile lifestyle including
an English country mansion, personal helicopters, and finely tailored designer
suits reinforce the traditional Indian values he seeks to
uphold (admittedly, the same might be said of some of Indias reigning
Hindu commercial families).
Logic is hardly the primary concern of this or any popular Indian film, but
when the chemistry is right this may not matter. Here, where it's never more
than lukewarm, a number of obscurities seem glaring: the source of the family's
massive wealth is never clarified, and when Rahul is banished to life in London,
he seems to have figured out how to maintain a tidy income, though we're never
sure what he does for a living. The suggestion that fat little Rohan could transform
into tall and buff Hrithik by going away to school for a few years (what an
athletic program they must have!) perhaps explains why his "bhaiya"
doesn't recognize him at all a few years later, leading even Rahul to wonder
aloud how the little butterball lost all the weight (the answer is delicately
avoided). But why must Rohan infiltrate Rahul's home and family anyway? The
film never suggests any rift between the brothers (Rohan has apparently simply
accepted his brother's decade-long absence without question), and so Rohan's
clever deception seems altogether unnecessary. It's stubborn Yash who needs
to be convinced to accept his banished son and daughter-in-law: Rahul, who honors
a large portrait of his parents every day, is hardly reluctant to return to
his family's arms.
Finally, given the track record of the filmmaker and his composers, the songs
in K3G are also surprisingly lackluster, and massive sets and phalanxes of dancers
tend to be the only notable contributions to their picturization. The blustery
"Say `Shava Shava'" (with Yash at least loosening up for a bit) and
the catchy "You Are My Soniya," are at least memorable, but the other
songs fade quickly. Inside jokes and allusions to Amitabh's new career
as the television host of the Indian franchise of Who Wants to be a Millionaire?,
and a persistent use of the theme song from KUCH KUCH HOTA HAI are clever
but also serve little purpose. In the end, it doesn't seem a wise move on Karan
Johar's part to keep reminding his audience of that previous, equally excessive,
but far more effective film.
[The Yash Raj Films DVD of K3G is of excellent quality, and fully subtitled,
but unlike other recent DVDs released by this company, offers no significant
extras. Then again, after 3.5 hours with the Raichands (a family that has everything),
you probably wont need anything more.]