Happy
to pen this blog on the film Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro (hence forth we shall
refer it to JBDY). This blogpiece is unlike any film review in the
sense that we give a very small space to the actual film plot but we
shall talk a lot about the making of this cult comedy. Part of the
reference work done for this article includes the Harper Collins book
Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro,Seriously Funny Since 1983-written by film
journalist Jai Arjun Singh.
Kundan
Shah took the lead in directing this low budget film (made at a cost
of a little less than7 Lakhs!) at the behest of NFDC. NFDC those
days stepped up as a patron to young filmmakers, it started off as
a film finance corporation to infuse fresh breath into Indian
cinematic visionaries and eventually it got renamed as NFDC (National Film Development Corporation) and had delivered great low budget
quality movies later on played on Doordarshan, the only home
entertainment channel that we had then in the 80’s.
Many
of the contributors to this classic piece of art are now ‘big
names’ in the film fraternity, and some of them left their earthly sojourn!. Kundan Shah himself passed away in 2007, Om Puri and Ravi
Baswani also left us recently.
The
other big names that I am talking about, Naseer (Naseeruddin
Shah) was just awaiting to throw away his “serious actor” image,
Vidhu Vinod Chopra now famous for the Munna Bhai series, PK and
3-Idiots was a production controller for JBDY, Neena Gupta (of
Bhadaai Ho fame) plays a comic part, Satish Kaushik who is now a
famous producer and director played one of his first comedy roles in
this movie. Besides we have the versatile Pankaj Kapur.
The
film plot involves a satirical comedy to unearth a nexus between
administrators and corporate bigwigs. Here is the plot in
brief , it is a story of two upcoming photographers Vinod and Sudhir
(played by Naseer and Ravi Baswan) who get a job (or a contract) of a
News-magazine , to work on a
scandalous story or rather dig some dirt exposing the dealings
between an unscrupulous builder, Tarneja and the corrupt Muncipal
commissioner D’Mello.They accidentally see Tarneja shooting
someone. In their job of covering the story of Tarneja, they find a
coffin containing dead body of Muncipal Commissioner D’Mello who
according to common knowledge had died of a terminal illness. Now it
is a suspicion that the person whom Tarneja shot was in reality the
Muncipal Comissioner. They take several photographs of the dead
person and confirm that it is indeed Mr D’Mello , and then they
push the coffin into a hidden place. But later they find the coffin
is missing from that place. Vinod and Sudhir find out that the body is
with Tarneja's rival, Ahuja who had, in an inebriated condition,
carried the coffin to his farmhouse. They somehow get the coffin but
meanwhile Tarneja, Ahuja, the new Municipal Commissioner and several
others also get involved resulting in a series of comic mix-ups.
This
movie also is remembered for the musical rendition of the cult poem
‘Hum Honge Kaamyaab’...written by Girijakumar Mathur who
translated from the English original - ‘We shall overcome’.
Reminiscing
on
the good old days of its shooting most of the crew members of JBDY say
that it was utterly chaotic many were left confused all the while as
to what kind of a film it would turnout to be. The film had only
Naseeruddin Shah as a known face although Ravi Baswani had one big
release namely Chashme Buddoor. Ravi Baswani in fact won the Filmfare’s best comedian award for JBDY, while Kundan Shah
won the Indira Gandhi National award for the best debut as director.
Most
of the actors were Kundan’s friends from FTII with the exception of Pankaj Kapur who was from NSD. Another
trivia is that the names
of the lead characters Vinod and Sudhir were those of the Production
controlloer Vinod Chopra and the writer Sudhir Mishra.
The
movie did not see big success at the time of its first release but in
subsequent releases it attained a cult status according to film
critics.
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