The
Rising: The Legend of Mangal Pandey Movie Review:
This
ambitious epic is a thunderously strong examination of how
friendship and principles can actually change the world.
Audiences put off by the concept of a very long Bollywood
romantic-musical-comedy historical epic will be gripped
by this one.
In 1857 Mangal
Pandey (Khan) is a sepoy, an Indian serving under the command
of Britain's East India Company, which by then had controlled
the subcontinent for a century with its own laws, military
and government. Mangal's a close friend of the sensitive
British captain William Gordon (Stephens), but the introduction
of a new gun cartridge drives a wedge between them. Greased
with cow and pig fat, it's deeply offensive to both Hindus
and Muslims. And a small standoff develops into a full-scale
indigent rebellion.
On the surface,
this is pure Bollywood: colourful sets and costumes, expansive
cinematography, big musical numbers, local culture, blood-soaked
violence, lusty romance and a cast of hundreds (OK, some
scenes feature impressive crowds). What sets this film apart
is a storyline that focuses not on the romance (there are
two of them here) but on themes and ideologies. It's also
a gentle and layered examination of the strong but shaken
friendship between two upstanding men who find themselves
on the wrong side of the law--and each other.
Khan and Stephens
are excellent--introspective and fiercely emotional, with
fire in their souls that's outlined clearly right from the
start. This means we're never really surprised by their
noble actions, no matter how many red herrings the filmmakers
throw at us. And it also makes the greedy villains of the
piece rather one-dimensional--callous colonialists and impassive
local rulers. The company's ruthless avarice is a fairly
heavy-handed swipe at today's globalisation, but the point
is a strong one.
These global-political
issues are vitally important, and are fascinating to see
in a film set 150 years ago. But what grips us is the intense
humanity that drives the film: tensions between east-west,
old-new, male-female and the local castes. These details
maybe a bit overwhelming, but they're also fascinating to
Western audiences, as is the historical context for the
free market system. That it boils over into a massive uprising
is hardly surprising. And it's the intimate drama that brings
it home.