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Colours of corruption

When you talk about an Anurag Kashyap film, you've got to be prepared for some hard-hitting drama.

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What it's about: When you talk about an Anurag Kashyap film, you've got to be prepared for some hard-hitting drama. His new offering, Gulaal is not about the festival of colours. For Anurag, Gulaal or the colour red symbolises blood.

Don't expect to see women in colorful clothes dancing on the sand and drawing water from wells because this one's all about the murky nexus between the youth and politics. The central characters are played by law student Dilip Singh (Raj Singh Chaudhary) and fundamentalist Dukey Bana (Kay Kay Menon), who wants a separate Rajputana state for radical Rajputs; to be ruled by the royals who'd lost their power to the government.

Rananjay (Abhimanya Singh) is Dilip's roommate who introduces him Dukey Bana and corruption, after he is ragged at his college. A few humiliating lessons later, Dilip finds himself contesting the election against Kiran (Ayesha Mohan) who along with her brother Karan (Aditya Shrivastava) drive him away from Dukey and Anuja (Jesse Randhawa) who's in love with him. He soon realiSes that he is merely a pawn in the hands of all the people around him and decides to fight back.u00a0u00a0u00a0

What's good: The film was in the making for nearly nine years but doesn't appear dated as it is based in the past a time when the princely states were dissolved after India's independence. All of Anurag's films have been unique, but this one seems like a story you've heard before at least parts of it.

However, Anurag manages to engross and involve you in the first half. The dialogues are good and the cinematography is excellent, capturing the mood of the film. Kashyap deserves full credit for a choosing a brilliant cast and drawing breathtaking performances from them.

Abhimanyu Singh is superb as a rebellious Rajput prince. Kay Kay is impressive once again. The other two notable acts are Deepak Dobriyal (Batti) and Piyush Mishra (as Dukey's mentally unstable brother). Jesse Randhawa, who has very few lines, successfully conveys her pain and anguish through her body language.u00a0

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