With stereotypical characters and lazy screenwriting, Saket Chaudhary’s Hindi Medium fails the complex social realities it’s trying to depict.
Hindi Medium’s hero, Raj (Irrfan Khan), is the kind of man who evokes both envy and sympathy. Envy because Raj is a successful businessman: he owns a big garment store, he drives a BMW, he can afford whatever he wants. Sympathy because Raj, at least in his wife’s eyes, is a lesser husband, a lesser father: he lives in Chandni Chowk, he lacks sophistication, he can’t speak English. Raj’s wife, Meeta (Saba Qamar), is adamant that her daughter, Pia (Dishita Sehgal), studies in a private school. Growing up, Raj and Meeta, who fell in love before getting married, studied in a government school. As a result, English still remains foreign to them – a fact that embarrasses her. They are rich, they live a comfortable life, they have fewer worries than most. And yet they are, in the Indian lexicon, not ‘classy’.
Stereotypes are annoying because they don’t confront and challenge our views, rather reinforce our biases, diluting the discourse. They divide the people in camps – of good and bad – and prompt us to take sides. Chaudhary portrays the characters on the higher echelons of class – whether it’s the school principal, the educational consultant or the Vasant Vihar residents – as unfeeling, to the point of being callous; as wrong, to the point of being evil. Chaudhary sets up a false and gratuitous binary, reducing a part of Hindi Medium’s world and its people to caricatures.
And yet, Hindi Medium is not without its merits. It is intermittently hilarious and affecting. Even when saddled with a mediocre script and in a largely unfamiliar genre (comedy), Khan excels, showing why he’s one of the best Indian actors. Dobriyal, another fine actor, owns his part too, expertly switching from drama to comedy. Chaudhary also manages to imbue the film with a lightness of touch, nearly throughout, even when it’s tackling some discomfiting truths.
An attempt to examine the class divide in modern India and how numerous Indians are oblivious to their privilege, Hindi Medium has an important story to tell. It wants to talk about the corruption in private schools, which deprives thousands of kids a chance at fair education; about the deplorable conditions of government schools, magnifying the existing inequities in society; about the lack of empathy that eludes the affluent. But Hindi Medium needed better filmmaking and writing. Chaudhary not only fails his film but also an important social reality.
Hindi Medium Review: Dull script fails to impress, in spite of Irrfan Khan
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