Om Shanti Om
Om Shanti Om - Movie review
Date of movie review: 11.09.2007
Reviewed by: Raam Tarat
In a word - Brilliant! Om Shanti Om (a Hindu mantra; an invocation of peace... which has no relevance in this context) is a...
IC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">Om Shanti Om Review (Low Graphics Version) _uacct = "UA-165614-1"; urchinTracker();FutureMovies.co.uk - Low Graphics Version
skip navigation | UK government accesskeys system | Text re-size: A A A A
Home | Film | Filmmaking | Site Search
Graphical: Version | Graphical: Homepage
Om Shanti Om Review
In a word - Brilliant! Om Shanti Om (a Hindu mantra; an invocation of peace... which has no relevance in this context) is a parody cum tribute to Indian movies of the 70’s and 80’s. This is Bollywood kitsch personified in that it gladly incorporates and celebrates every clich? in the book. That too with sheer glee, much admiration and some cheeky irreverence.
The film tells the story of Om Prakash (Khan), a young film extra in 1970’s Bombay with dreams of becoming a huge star; a Hero. Egged on by his histrionic-laden chum Pappu (Talpade) and overly-dramatic mother (Kher) he pursues this with aplomb trying to make the most of gaudy bit-parts in order to get noticed. Om also happens to be in love with a certain Shanti Priya (Padukone), the biggest actress on the silver screen and star of classics such as 'Dreamy Girl'. He gazes into her eyes, well in billboards at least... and lets his imagination do the talking.
A chance encounter in which he accidentally saves her life, as you do, leads to them striking up a friendship. But soon after follows a calamitous series of events during which both Om and Shanti die, only for him to be reborn in the incarnation (leading man) he so badly wanted. Cut to present day, where Om Kapoor (Khan) is a superstar actor with the world at his feet, but plagued with harrowing flashbacks from an unknown past. Slowly things begin to unravel; in his own words “They say if you truly want something from the heart, the whole universe conspires to bring it to you” and how...
Om Shanti Om is a movie that quite simply never takes itself too seriously. It simply celebrates all things Bollywood, as Director Farah Khan has stated - the seventies and eighties is a much loved period for her and her lead Shahrukh (who also produces) and this - their homage to it. Classily done. It contains every clich? in your classic Indian film script. Not just your typical love story or revenge drama, but also life after death and reincarnation; saving the damsel in distress and subsequent wooing; mother and son lost and re-united; ‘double-roles’; South-Indian stereotypes as well as many in-jokes.
Essentially it’s a homage to the formula film and classic makers such as Manmohan Desai and Prakash Mehra whose films in the 70’s and 80’s were commercial pot-boilers with a mixture of drama, music, comedy, romance, action and a high quotient of clich? as highlighted above. These were essentially secular multi-starrers designed to give the audience a smidgen of, well, everything. Oft-included with these was a yearning mother whom almost always managed to lose her kids (somebody call social services), the Muslim samaritan, the underdog overcoming better-off tyrants and somebody called ‘Vijay’.
It’s highly enjoyable as it’s superbly done, technically and visually brilliant, tongue-in-cheek and clever at that. The performances are superlative and apt, especially Ramphal as villainous producer Mehra, and debutante Padukone. There are a lot of set-pieces including a song and awards parody during which the who’s who of the industry feature. If you like Bollywood for essentially what it is - you’ll love this. If you don’t like Bollywood, this may answer a lot of questions, and likely leave you with a smirk on your face regardless.
