Chauthi
Koot: Leaves You Awestruck!
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Reviewer’s
Thumb Mark
Gurvinder Singh’s
Punjabi feature film ‘Chauthi Koot’ is undoubtedly the best crafted film we
have seen in recent times. Chauthi Koot which has many feathers on its cap
including a National Award apart from receiving critical acclaim worldwide has
finally released in the theaters for the general public.
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The separatist
movement that shook the peace of living a normal life in Punjab and the rest of
the country in the 1980s and later on which led to the killing of one of the
most powerful political figures in India as an aftermath of her decision to
flush out terrorists from the sacred Golden Temple under the garb of Blue Star Operation is very well woven in Chauthi Koot as the base of its narrative.
Cinematographer Satya
Rai Nagpaul captures fear, silence, helplessness, resistance, belief, revolt
and hope through his lens so well that the film leaves you awestruck. Bhupesh Micky Sharma's editing is noteworthy. Chauthi
Koot breaks the set norms of traditional structure of storytelling.
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Gurvinder Singh’s
film is a fusion of two stories – Chauthi Koot (The Fourth Direction) and Main
Theek Thak Haan (I am Feeling Fine Now) written by the Punjabi writer Waryam
Singh Sandhu who won Sahitya Akademi Award in the year 2000 for his collection
of short stories - ‘The Fourth Direction and other Stories’. The film begins with
two Punjabi Hindu men rushing to a railway station to catch a train to Amritsar
and missing their train by a minute. Their wait on a desolated platform for
hours, the checking of an empty Amritsar bound train by a bunch of army men,
pulling down the shutters of the windows of each and every coach of the train
by the army men and not allowing them to board the empty train raises your
curiosity to know what is happening and why?
The silent train journey without
the consent of the conductor and finding a few other passengers already huddled
in the compartment looking at each other with mistrust and sometimes for
assurance galvanizes the sense of fear and uncertainty to a greater level.
There are moments we as audience also feel the fear of the unknown.
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The film takes us a
few months back to tell us another story about a Sikh farmer called Joginder (Survinder
Vicky) and his family. The tale of political and social disruption and lack of
peace in a commoner’s life is very well depicted. A barking dog that sense every
rustle in the dark as a threat to the family is hell bent to protect its
master’s family and the family who loves the canine is equally disturbed by its
bark because it attracts the ire of passing militants at night. Caught between
the patrolling army in the day and by the militants at night the family
portrays the plight of a commoner. The threat that looms largely in individuals
and their social life is beautifully captured and in every frame we pray for
their safety and are equally tensed to know what is awaiting next. Gurvinder
Singh and his team have done a brilliant work because their work diminishes the
barrier of the screen between the viewers and the characters in the film.
In short, Chauthi
Koot which was screened in Cannes 2015 and later on won a national award should
not be missed. Every single actor is distinct and stays in your mind especially
Survinder Vicky as the farmer under stress. The film stands out because of its craft,
storytelling and the realistic recreation of the disturbed times of Punjab in
the 1980s. Chauthi Koot doesn’t have high
emotional melodrama, political statements, news splashed on the screen by
various newspaper cuttings, or a revolutionary to speak about the importance of
rights and freedom rather it is the silence, the dark nights, the rattling
train, fear in the eyes, the dogs bark, the turbaned heads and non-turbaned
heads that convey the message you want to carry home with you - a message if we
walk together closely then no turbulence and internal turmoil can disturb the
unity of our countrymen.
Life
Connoisseur Movie Rating: 4/5
Cast:
Survinder Vicky (Joginder), Rajbir Kaur, Harleen Kaur, Taranjit Singh,
Kanwaljit Singh (Jugal), Harnek Aulakh, Nakul Vermani, Gurpreet Bhangu, Tejpal
Singh
Genre:
Drama
Director:
Gurvinder Singh
Producer:
Kartikeya Narayan Singh
Written
by:
Waryam Singh Sandhu, Gurvinder Singh
Screenplay:
Rohit Dhawan, Tushar Hiranandani
Based
on Stories: Chauthi Koot and Main Theek Thak Haan
by Waryam Singh Sandhu
Music
by:
Marc Marder
Cinematography:
Satya Rai Nagpaul
Edited by: Bhupesh Micky Sharma
Edited by: Bhupesh Micky Sharma
Production:
Film Cafe
Release
Date: 5th July, 2016
Duration:
115 Minutes
Language:
Punjabi
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