Benjamin Franklin had once said famously - In this world
nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes. What does an
ordinary man or woman do when faced with the wrath of the Income Tax Department
that comes out to hound you? As somebody who was puzzlingly served an IT notice
a year back, I can relate to the scare that Income Tax can create in one’s
life.
Molly Mammen (Revathy) is an unlikely protagonist – a
slightly elderly woman settled in US with her family, who comes back after a long leave
to continue working in her small little job in a public sector bank in Nemmara
in Palakkad (presumably only for the pension). She is a committed hardworking employee who can brook no nonsense
and is willing to fight her way out of any situation, if she believes she is
right about it. She manages to sell her husband’s ancestral property, take a voluntary
retirement from her job and is about return to her family in the US when she
runs into the iron hands of the Income Tax department and the battle begins to
prove her innocence!
You first see Molly as she comes late for a religious family
function and bangs her car onto the priest’s scooter, knocking it down (a symbolic
rejection of conventions?). Family gossip marks her out as being unwelcome to
the family and her sleeveless dress does not help matters. As the daughter of a
Communist leader, rebellion is in her genes and she isn't someone who can be
knocked around that easily. She is liberal-minded but fairly adamant and you’d
have to admit that diplomacy is not her forte.
Molly isn't a firebrand woman out to change the world making
fiery speeches or a staunch feminist but somebody who is willing to make the
best of her situation and stand up for what she thinks is right. As her husband
Benny (Lalu Alex) says, there is a Molly in all our families, in some form of
the other who makes everyone around her insecure. There is no point in being
upset about it and one has to adjust to the way she is.
As she struggles with many of her small-time problems in
life, it acts as a mirror to many of the issues that we face in day-to-day
life. How many of us have struggled in government offices waiting for
hours, without any help at all. Even the slightest of help comes with a
suggestion of short-cuts that we are forced to accept because there is no way
out of the mess. Reminds me of my trip to the IT dept office last year where we
spent more than a couple of hours just waiting for the man who sent us the
notices to turn up but no one ever bothered to ask what we wanted when we
landed in a placid Govt office.
Molly’s struggles are not always driven out of her
conviction but also due to the simple necessity of doing things independently
when alone. She is married to a large family headed by her matriarch
mother-in-law KPAC Lalitha but finds no support when in trouble, except from
her mother-in-law and a benign neighbour. It doesn't help that she has brought
no dowry after her marriage and is an independent lady who has come down all
the way from the US of A to this small lazy town, where her outgoing nature is
a source of genuine bewilderment. Like Molly, haven't many of us Non-Residential
Keralites seen our relatives think that we have minted money outside and that
we are stingy for not spending money - the effort and toil just does not show!
As a single woman who tries to live independently in a small
town in Kerala, she struggles with house owners, head load workers, nosey
people, co-employees who are happy to keep away from work at the slightest of
pretexts and of course, the ever roving eye of men who are keen to ‘help’ her
whenever there is an opportunity. It isn't a world that Molly is unaware of
having brought up there; she, however, does not go about bad mouthing the place
and unlike many others, she is not willing to simple live with her problems.
The women around her are more or less satisfied with the
kind of lives that they live, living in a frog-in-the-wall kind of existence and
being happy about it. Her neighbour Usha (Lakshmi Priya) lives a contended life
of a teacher and is more obsessed with the progress of her TV serials than the
world around her; she leaves it to her husband, Ravi (Krishna Kumar) the
dentist, to handle things outside her house. Molly’s mother-in-law may be her
only support in the family when in Kerala but there is a generation gap that
cannot be bridged. Yes, they get along well and enjoy a rare sense of
camaraderie but it happens with a sense of acceptance that exists between their
worlds – a world where cooking and taking care of the house is a woman’s job
and a world where women can stand up on their own and take the battle to men.
There is a subtle social commentary on the world around her
in the small town in the form of bandhs, busy government offices and names that
tell us a lot of the times we live in. New Generation lower caste names like
Fleming Raj (with mother as Mulla Devi) which try to move away from the roots to a
starry-eyed auto rickshaw driver with cine ambitions going by the name Gunesh
Kuttan and an auditor called Paraman who is busier with making arrangements for
the local festival than providing tax advice.
It is a mark of the changing times where the young priest
Father Joby Matthews (Sharath) is a divorcee and is called in to settle a tax
dispute between his parishioners! When Molly suffers a small fall on the road,
the onlookers are keener to capture the scene with their mobiles than actually
give her a helping hand. The bank manager is impressed by her abilities at work
and is more than willing to be persuaded that the American system is wonderful;
in an absolutely hilarious moment when she is down with an accident, he even
wishes her a Happy Rest in Peace!
It is courageous of Ranjith to cast a young Prithviraj with
a much-older Revathy as the central protagonists of this drama. Yes, it is
evident that the plot demands such a casting but how many directors would be
willing to take such a (perceived) risk? Also, kudos to Prithviraj for taking
up this role which sees him play second fiddle to the central woman character. Mamukkoya
excels in an unexpected cameo as Salim Mechery, Molly’s lawyer, who also
dabbles in cartoons and plays (suspect that had Jagathy been around, he would
have been a natural choice to play the character). It is Revathy’s movie
throughout and I don’t think that for a minute that you’d think that she could
be any different from the character that she plays – we need such strong female
protagonists...
Prithvi as Pranav Roy is the haughty Assistant Tax
Commissioner who goes strictly by the rule book and cares two hoots for the
discomfort faced by the tax payer. He is honest and not driven by personal
interests but knows that he has the power to make people bend and is willing to
use his powers even if the situation does not demand it. It is a commentary of
the sad state of affairs that bright officers are competent and intelligent but
totally devoid of any sense of customer service. In a conversation with Salim
Mechery, Pranav remarks that the money that should reach the poor is being
siphoned away by NRIs like Molly only to be brought down to earth by Salim who
reminds him that this money does not reach the poor but only the coffers of
politicians.
But with all due regards to the director, I have misgivings
over the way the movie peters out in a direction of morality that I find it
difficult to digest. Call me a cynic but I have a problem with a moral angle
being thrust in suddenly for no better reason than giving a sermon to us poor
plebeians – something similar that I felt in the Ustad Hotel ending too. Yes, we know that Molly cannot be dishonest
and to expect a twist in the plot may go against her character and even
Ranjith’s convictions as a director. But I’m sure there are better ways of
taking an honourable exit, without cleaving in the morality clause.
Adv Salim finds glaring gaps in Pranav’s father’s tax
returns and this could in itself have been used as a bargaining tool simply to
drive home the point that even the best of men can be taken to task if somebody
tries to really screw their lives (somebody like a Subramanian Swamy!). Molly’s
defence of the expenses hidden from the Govt also do not cut any ice – when
Pranav asks ludicrously as to why this could not have been shown in her tax
statement, my mind was simply echoing his sentiments. What one presents in
one’s tax returns is not in the public domain so her talk about shying away
from publicity seemed far-fetched. And while she means well when she says that
the taxes paid by her do not reflect into action by the Govt, it still does not
explain her actions.
If you keep aside the contrived morality that seeps in
during the end and a couple of scenes that appear out of place (like Salim’s
entry into Molly’s house and the cringe-worthy spectacle of a tennis match), it
is a warm movie that definitely gladdens your heart and reiterates Ranjith
Sankar’s role as a director who thinks as the common man. His canvas for the film is not as large as in Passenger or Arjunan Sakshi but the situation is universally appealing; it avoids New Gen cliches and has a more traditional style akin to the old Sathyan Anthikkad cinema. His template of film
making draws on the ability of ordinary citizens who rise to the situation when
confounded with larger problems in life- what they do is not heroic but simple
things that matter..
Originally published in MadAboutMoviez - http://www.madaboutmoviez.com/2013/03/molly-aunty-rocks/
Originally published in MadAboutMoviez - http://www.madaboutmoviez.com/2013/03/molly-aunty-rocks/
I haven't seen it yet, but I've hear good things about it; as also of Celluloid. Thanks for the review.
ReplyDeleteIt's got lesser eyeballs than it should have but I'm told that it managed to break even. An unusual cast (by normal standards atleast) with an earthy setting and a proper story to tell all work in it favour.
ReplyDeleteCelluloid is going great guns with numerous State Awards and a National award to boot and importantly, a success commercially too..