What Pankaj Advani's [ Images ] Sankat City tries to do -- and the JBDY inspiration is evident as we see briefcases slither up and down the aisle of a miraculously uncrowded bus -- is to take a truly, truly twisted plot and weave much madness through it, a decidedly laudable idea in these times of spectacularly unfunny films. However, adding extra spoonfuls of surrealism isn't the way to achieve a cupful of absurdity, and while Advani's film brimmeth over with whimsy, there's precious little actual fun to be had.
It takes a good twenty minutes to start warming up to the performances, for each actor ladles on the over-the-top hamming the film mistakes for farce. Comedy only works when at the right pitch and Sankat City -- fatally flawed at the most basic level by making every single character a joke -- grossly trips over the line as each actor seems to be trying to act worse than the other. A doctor from London [ Images ] serves up a mad accent, a godman stuffs fish down people's throats If everybody's a gag, who's left to laugh at the punchline?
And they're weak gags, save for a stray moment or two. The situations themselves aren't bad at all, thanks to a script that zanily trips on coincidence, but so overblown are the actors that even decent moments turn into absolute filler. It's a shame because the plot itself is quite interesting, with multiple connections and authentic twists. The film, on the other hand, is consistently self-indulgent as it stretches patience with sloppy editing -- when a scene with a workable gag ends a few moments after the punchline, the joke dies and we're even left with time to mourn it.
The performances are almost unanimously weak, as stated earlier, save for Rahul Dev [ Images ], Manoj Pahwa and Jehangir Khan. Anupam Kher [ Images ] isn't bad either as he reprises his Hum accent with diabolical glee, but is loaded down with painfully overwritten lines. Kay Kay Menon [ Images ] you feel badly for, shining in accidental moments while he flits inconsistently through a very weak part, but the lion's share of the blame has to be placed onto Rimii Sen [ Images ], who plays the femme fatale (the background score keeps telling us that she's "a bad girl") of the piece, as woeful a piece of miscasting as can be.
The plot is too elaborate to summarise right here, but it involves theft and debt-collection and stealing from debt-collectors to pay off other debt-collectors. It's a mad little jalebi of events, and if only the actors had played it straight -- save the girl this really is a talented lot -- we would have a gripping, uproarious winner on our hands.
As said, there are some very nice moments -- I'd single out the Kalashnikov-wielding ruler of the rubbish wastelands as the coolest thing in the film -- but it rarely rises above the level of the predictable, the humour oscillating between not-bad at best and not-again most of the time, which is heartbreaking because of the squandered potential. It could have been cult, and ends up merely as filler, watchable because of a genuine plot.
They might call it Sankat City, but this film's set in dullsville. As Naseeruddin Shah [ Images ] said in the film that inspired this and all of us, eat some, throw some out.
Rediff Rating: 
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