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Bollywood films have many ‘types’ – the ‘Salman Khan’ variety, the Shetty-esque action flicks, the quintessential masala, the Karan Johar brand of romance, the grand Bhansali canvas and now for the latest – the ‘Swachh Bharat Mission’ brigade!
We have had Akshay Kumar’s Toilet: Ek Prem Katha and more recently Nila Madhab Panda’s Halkaa. The films have picked up the cudgels against open defecation. Well-intentioned they may be, the formulaic trajectory of the story prove to be their undoing.
So there is the whole angle about water scarcity and illegal tanker mafia in the slum Kanha stays in. His mother, played by actress Anjali Patil, is a single parent trying to hustle up a living doing embroidery.
Kanha (Om Kanojia) and his friends sadly don’t go to school as they try to earn a quick buck selling drugs. The opening scene has an NGO worker getting the kids to distribute condoms. Somewhere in the middle of the film, there is talk about conducting medical tests to check for sexually transmitted diseases among slum dwellers.
Om Kanojia leads the bachcha brigade, as he and his delightful friends even manage a trip to Delhi to help with their toilet-building plans. Squatting on their haunches, out in the open, trying to relieve themselves as they make big plans to meet the Prime Minister is all very well.
However, the over simplistic climax where all roads lead to PM, somehow seems more in tune with the election-year frenzy than a well conceived screenplay. Actors Anjali Patil and Rasika Agashe are effective in their limited roles and the kids are particularly free-spirited and impressive.
Mere Pyare Prime Minister ends up feeling like a government-funded campaign on sochalay than a compelling story that speaks to us directly.
This one gets 2 Quints out of 5!
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