Dammit! No out-takes!! Is this really a Rohit Shetty film? Every film
of the “Gol Maal” director has so far ended with out-takes giving us
entertaining glimpses from during the making of the film. Here those
trademark Shetty out-takes are replaced by a Honey Singh track which
celebrates Rajnikanth and the lungi.
The rest of the film resembles those typical sambar-and-sandalwood
creations by K. Raghvendra Rao, and worse still, Raj Kanwar’s “Dhai
Akshar Prem Ke” where Aishwarya to escape her parental wrath at her
elopement, introduces to her family a man she has just met as her
soul-mate.
Of course, there are the flying cars exploding in the air to make
sure we know that all said and drummed, this is a Rohit Shetty
presentation.
Packaged with pickled precision, peppered with just the right doses
of naughty jokes and precocious pranks that go well with Shah Rukh’s
40-year-old brat’s act, “Chennai Express” is the kind of non-toxic comic
entertainer where the most damaging double-entendres you’d get is a
Tamil word that sounds like Angelina Jolie’s name.
Come again?
That brings me to another major hurdle in the heap of hilarity that Shetty builds so meticulously in the first-half.
The generous outflow of Tamil that seems initially engaging (more so,
since Shah Rukh shares our non-comprehension of the rapidfire Tamilian
cloudburst that accompanies Deepika’s quicksilver character) begins to
come in the way as the narration grows older and runs out of energy.
But then there is the sprightly Deepika as the runaway Tamilian girl
who piles on to the North Indian mithaiwala stranger to escape marrying
the boorish fiancee back home in her village in Tamil Nadu.
We’ve seen Kareena Kapoor
do the chirpy runaway train traveller in “Jab We Met”. Deepika brings a
special filtered-coffee flavour to her chirpy character. Even that
broad hammy accent grows on us.
Yes, we like! Here she is is the only Rohit Shetty team member (and I
use the term ‘team’ since Shetty generously credits the direction to
himself and his team) who seems to have a firm grip over her rudderless
dithering character.
Deepika plays Meena Amma with flavourful flourish. She is specially
delightful in three key sequences, two of them comic and the other
unexpectedly sombre.
In the sequence where her character turns into a sleeping, kicking
and convulsive zombie, she’s unbelievably goofy. It’s not just Shah Rukh
who gets a kick out of that scene.
Would Rohit Shetty please do a full-fledged out-and-out comedy with
Deepika? That, “Chennai Express” is not. It is a half-hearted but
laugh-hearted effort that makes the fatal error of taking itself too
seriously.
Towards the end when the utterly shammed climactic fight ensues, we
even have a long speech by Shah Rukh on the social status of the girl
child.
Not now, please!
As we squirm at the attempt to turn comedy into a serious business we
look back at the rest of the film with some amount of warmth and
affection.
Some of the long shots of the train winding through green acres is
breathtaking. And Shah Rukh’s first meeting with Deepika’s father over a
bridge over a fast-flowing river is shot with amazing brio.
There’s a wonderfully-shot sequence where Shah Rukh has to carry
Deepika to a temple over hundreds of steps. Deepika here goes from
amusement and mockery to a sense of belonging and pride in her man’s
arms. It’s a moment built with care and love.
But then, such tender affection really has no place in this comedy of
cultural dispossession where the Punjabi boy Rahul gets embroiled in
Tamil girl Meena’s family affairs and comes out… well not quite wiser.
But filled with self-mocking laughter.
Shah Rukh pokes a whole lot of good-natured fun at his now-aging
lover-boy persona. There are tongue-in-cheek references to “Dilwale
Dulhaniya Le Jayenge” and several other Shah Rukh Khan films and songs including the introductory South Indian lines from the “Jiya jale” song in “Dil Se”.
All these self-tributes work better than what Puri Jagganath did with the Bachchan persona “Buddha… Hoga Tera Baap”.
Rohit Shetty is more in command of his canvas here than in his last
comedy “Bol Bachchan”. But the self-deprecatory laughter is still not
good enough. Somewhere you feel the one-line plot (okay, if not one then
two-line plot) is stretched into an unwelcome second-half where nothing
really happens. Even the humour tracks stops short beyond a point.
But there is some genuine steam and spark in the early part of “Chennai Express”.
Towards the beginning of the train journey when Deepika and Shah Rukh
play a kind of antakshari of Hindi film songs to put the goons off her
trail, Deepika completely overshadows her kingly co-star, who should be
okay with being upstaged by his female co-star.
After all he has given Deepika priority over his own name in the
credit titles. And Deepika takes the lead very seriously. She has never
looked better and never been funnier on screen without even trying too
hard.
But then the plot and the situations let her down. The
antakshari-speak that was amusing in the beginning recurs during a stale
fight sequence in the second-half.
We are no longer laughing. Not when Shah Rukh’s purported big chase
sequences end in embarrassing deadends. Not when an item song with
incoherent words and even more misguided logistics pops up like a joke
whose punchline has gone missing.
Through all of this, Shah Rukh Khan braves it with a delicious sense
of self-mockery bordering almost on a masochistic absence of heroic
pride.
Yes, he likes it when the joke is on him. But that happens once too often here.
So it’s finally here. The film that all Shah Rukh Khan fans (which
covers half the hemisphere) has been waiting for. The good news first.
“Chennai Express” is a pleasant and likable film in parts. The bad news
is, it does nothing for Shah Rukh Khan’s imdomitable star power except
to tell us he can still play a 40-year Rahul without faltering.

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