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It was 2010 when Ranveer Singh, as the boorish yet charming Bittoo Sharma, sashayed into our collective consciousness. It has been a good eight years since the film came out. Yet, Band Baaja Baaraat remains one of the most remarkable entrants in Hindi cinema’s overdone genre of romantic comedies.
For one, it was one of the first few films to articulate with precision the growing aspirations of youth from small towns. Second, it takes the viewer on a roller-coaster of emotions, throwing in every shade of romance there is. And most importantly, for giving Bollywood and the world at large, the phenomenon that Ranveer Singh is.
Singh sinks his teeth into the character of Bittoo Sharma with unparalleled sincerity. In doing so, he emerges as a striking portrait of the stereotypical Delhi University graduate who is lost in his laziness and has no concrete future plans except not wanting to return to the small town he has come from. He makes ‘binness’ plans while devouring bread pakoras with careless relish, has no qualms about speaking with his mouth full and is a bit of a dimwit to acknowledge his feelings for Shruti (played by Anushka Sharma).
In his sophomore outing, Ladies vs Ricky Bahl, Singh pulls a crisp conman act despite the rather inconsistent and mostly predictable plot line, but it is Lootera where he stuns the audience with his performance.
Vikramaditya Motwane weaves a wondrous tapestry in Lootera, deftly carving a universe at the cusp of change. He takes the action to the Bengal of 1950s, replete with Old World charm that’s painfully skirting its way out.
Between Manikpur and Dalhousie, a lot happens but at the heart of the film is a tale of love and loss.
Ranveer Singh as Varun is quite a revelation as the troubled soul battling an eternal tempest within. If he chooses his calling, he betrays his love. Either way, he loses. He suffers in silence and you suffer with him.
Lootera is a magnificent film with picture-perfect frames, exquisitely crafted music, deft screenplay and perfectly brewed characters. But for me, the cinematic experience got elevated much more because of Ranveer Singh’s superlative performance.
His stillness got to me... until Ram shook me out of it through his boisterous energy in Ram Leela – Singh’s next screen outing.
Lootera brought him critical acclaim but it was Bhansali’s Ram Leela that cemented Ranveer Singh’s position as one of the most commercially bankable stars in Bollywood.
He packs a powerful punch as the spirited Ram and sets the screen on fire with his crackling chemistry with Deepika Padukone.
Two years later, he would collaborate again with Bhansali and Padukone to give another smashing hit in Bajirao Mastani. He gets into the skin of the character along the lines of the skin-crawling rasp of pen on paper. From the physique to the Puneri accent, he gets everything right. He is perfect in every frame, be it as the shrewd warrior, the guilty husband or the passionate lover.
In a film that can be called a passionate celebration of love, Ranveer Singh surprises you with his smoldering intensity. He is magnetic in the song Malhari and his screen presence - or rather complete screen domination - sends you on an adrenaline rush.
And just when you thought Ranveer has reach the zenith of his acting prowess, he comes back to seduce you with his villainy in Padmaavat – the biggest blockbuster of his career till date.
In playing the maniacal Khilji, Ranveer wears barbarism as his second skin letting the character engulf him completely. He pursues Padmavati with an all-consuming junoon, is unrelenting in deceit and mouths painfully narcissistic lines such as ‘Allah ki banayi hui har nayaab cheez par Alauddin ka haq hai ’. His high-pitched clamour left me gasping with a what-will-he-do-next breathlessness.
And when he is not speaking, he emotes with his kohl-rimmed eyes.
He is grotesque. He is repulsive. But he is also the pulsating heart of the film.
In giving three solid films to Ranveer back to back, Bhansali has shown in him immense faith and each time Singh has magnificently risen to the occasion. His performances are uniformly excellent, so much so that he has metamorphosed into the quintessential Bhansali lead.
Bhansali may have written some of the most glorious chapters of Ranveer Singh’s career but the actor is equally delightful as Kabir Mehra in Zoya Akhtar’s ambitious Dil Dhadakne Do. He is like a whiff of fresh air amidst a sea of caricatures. He is the calm to the chaos of his folks. And the electrifying chemistry between him and Anushka Sharma is one of the highlights of the film.
In Gunday, Ranveer Singh is a complete hoot as the gangster Bikram, whereas he is the only silver lining in Kill Dil, which is in most parts is little more than a snooze-fest. He is an infectious bundle of energy who manages to charm his way through the unnecessary twists and turns that Shaad Ali weaves.
In Befikre, he is passable but that’s because it’s the only film in his eight-year long career where he doesn’t meet the standards he has set for himself.
And for his detractors who accuse him for being extra, he wears ‘extraness’ with a badge of honour, unabashedly, albeit with some pride and that makes it infectious.
He dons garish costumes, loud outfits, mismatched silhouettes while having sheer fun.
He steals the limelight even while playing the anti-hero.
And all this when he is not, by his own admission, a conventionally good-looking actor.
As he gears up for Simmba and Gully Boy, watch out for this actor, for he is the one who’s going to break every rule there is in the rule-book.
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