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Gandu is a stylish, impressive independent feature bursting with experimental energy. The performances by its amateur cast, who are improvising much of the dialogue, are generally very good, and the direction pops off the screen, from the rapid-fire rap montages, complete with words covering the frame, to the seamless integration of what seem to be real people, captured in candid interviews. It's only too bad that I felt such little connection to Gandu and his feelings on his lot in life, or that Q's goals with the character of Gandu are frustratingly vague, on the tip of the tongue but never quite realized. Based on the packaging for the disc, it's not hard to picture Q as a rebel, a madman with a video camera who filmed something semi-autobiographical. Frankly, while I was watching some of the rap sequences in the film -- especially with the comment from Q's interview in the booklet that music and his filmmaking were inseparable -- I may have forgotten that Gandu was played by an actor and not the director himself. Only in the making-of featurette do you get a chance to see Q in the flesh: a cheery, 30-something man with a lively sense of humor who seems totally unlike his protagonist. It's to his credit that the film brims with a vital energy, bursting at the seams with the anxiousness of a person with something to say. Stylistically, his accomplishment is also incredibly impressive. The film's cinematography, by Kaushik Mukherjee, has a polish that some major Hollywood productions lack. The gorgeous black-and-white photography is accentuated by lively use of the subtitles and split frames that emphasize certain points. Occasionally, the film will cut to a brief moment of Q and A with random passerby, asking about a term, like "pornography," and key words will appear above and below the four frames of interview subjects, all in a row, across the screen. Q easily evokes various moods: the light comedy of Ricksha doing his best Bruce Lee, the playful intimacy of a woman conversing with her lover over webcam in a local web cafe, and the tumultuous emotional rollercoaster of Gandu's life. For a debut feature, Q delivers a remarkably assured end product. That said, the story lets the movie down. Gandu's listlessness turns into the movie's listlessness. According to the movie, "Gandu" is Bengali slang for "asshole," and yet Q refuses to clarify exactly whether or not Gandu's ambition is foolhardy. On one hand, the musical sequences are so dazzling that it seems we should root for him, but the movie seems to like cutting Gandu's ego down to size, illustrated most clearly when Gandu wins the lottery and gets the fame and women he desperately desires, which may or may not simply be a hallucination brought on by a drug given to him by Ricksha. Other material aims for the kind of low-key comic drifting of a Jarmusch film, but ends up playing more dull than funny. The inclusion of some explicit, unsimulated sex also makes the movie feel provocative without doing much to serve the story. Gandu is an extremely promising debut feature, but, like the movie's protagonist, Q's raw ambition is more impressive than the message.
The DVD
The Video and Audio A 2.0 Bengali stereo track is a little on the underwhelming side for a movie bursting with musical energy, but it's almost certainly tied to the movie's independent roots, so it can be overlooked. The mix is a little noisy, with vocals occasionally calling for more separation from the background, and one wishes for more surround activity (during the drug trip sequence, for instance), but the track gets the job done, delivering the music and dialogue with enough fidelity to enjoy the movie. A note about the subtitles: I often complain about "burned-in" subtitles, but that's when it has to do with the master provided to the DVD studio. In the case of Gandu, the subtitles are extremely stylized, appearing on screen in different places, different sizes, different colors, all to emphasize the emotional impact of the film. Given that this was an artistic choice, I have no complaints about the captions.
The Extras A bunch of shorter clips round out the package: A music video (3:22) of one of the rap songs from the movie, a trailer for Escape, a documentary on the band Gandu Circus, a short but energetic promotional featurette about the film's arrival in "Berlin" (6:41), a hybrid live performance / music video of Gandu Circus called "WTFRV" (10:42), and finally a promo for Gandu Circus (1:40). An original trailer for Gandu is also included.
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