In 11 minutes, a sequence of seven bomb blasts attacked Mumbai’s lifeline—the local trains—on the Western line, killing more than 200 people and wounding approximately 700. Two popular Hindi films inspired by the bombings, Nishikant Kamat’s Mumbai Meri Jaan and Neeraj Pandey’s A Wednesday, were released, within a few weeks of each other, a few years later.
Both, however, reacted to the gravity of the human tragedy in fundamentally different ways, with the former choosing a steadfastly peaceful stance and the latter suggesting a more daring way out.
Kamat’s brief film career has been mostly associated with South Indian film remakes (the Tamil film Kaakha Kaakha as Force in Hindi and the Malayalam original Drishyam as Drishyam in Hindi) and adaptations (Dombivali Fast loosely based on the Hollywood film Falling Down, Rocky Handsome on Korean blockbuster The Man From Nowhere).
All of his films, whether original or inspired, have one underlying theme: the righteous indignation of the dispossessed middle class.
It’s either set loose on screen by a principled individual opposing systemic injustices and corruption, or it’s let loose for the personal wrongs perpetrated against the protagonists by wicked drug lords, organ smugglers, child traffickers, crooked cops, nasty landlords, and other bad guys. It’s a struggle to the finish between a baaz (hawk) and a chooza (chicken), as described in Kamat’s last film as director, Madaari (2016).
We, the residents of India, are the prototypical chicken in ‘Mumbai Meri Jaan’, battling it out with too many hawks on too many fronts. The film, on the other hand, is an outlier in Kamat’s body of work. Although themes of injustice and inequity persist, vigilantism fades. The core rage is interiorized and restrained, seething in a tense silence and becoming all the more visceral.
The film weaves together the stories of five people whose lives are forever changed by a single terrible act of terror. It’s strange how all those issues that it put before the audience in that specific environment still stare us down 13 years later, making the present picture as distressingly as it was back then.
On the occasion of 13 years of Mumbai Meri Jaan, here are some lesser-known facts about the film:
- The plot of this film follows the aftermath of the Mumbai train bombings on July 11, 2006, in which 209 people died and over 700 were injured.
- Many well-known Marathi actors appeared in minor roles in the film.
- His shoes identify actor Sameer Dharmadhikari’s body after the bomb. Emailer views
- Despite being significant characters in the film, Irfan Khan and Kay Kay Menon, just like in Life in a Metro do not share screen space in this movie too.
- Irfan Khan spreads stories by calling the police about bombs being kept in a specific location; similar incidents occurred before and after the attack, keeping Mumbai on high alert.
- At the 2009 Filmfare Awards, it received three Filmfare Awards: Best Screenplay, Best Editing, and Best Film (Critics Choice).
- The film was released two years and one month after the 2006 Mumbai train bombings.
- The renowned song from Dev Anand’s classic CID ‘Bombay Meri Jaan, Yeh Hai Bombay Meri Jaan, Yeh Hai Bombay Meri’ was played at the film’s climax.
- In the year before 2006, Soha Ali Khan is pictured covering the news of the Mumbai downpour on July 26, 2005.
- The 9/11 twin tower terrorist attack in New York is also depicted in the film, with a friend of Madhavan stating that terrorists target not only India but many other countries around the world.
Watching Mumbai Meri Jaan after so many years is about coming to terms with these unchanging realities, as well as a sense of loss. Despite Mumbai Meri Jaan’s rage, hopelessness, and discontent, there is a belief and commitment to repairing the present and future.
The iconic Hindi cinema song “Aye Dil hai mushkil jeena yahan, Zara hatke zara bach ke, ye hai Bombay meri jaan” makes a full circle from its cynicism to the positive turn its lyrics take towards the end—”Aye dil hai aasaan jeena yahan, Suno mister suno bandhu yeh hai Bombay meri jaan”.
We’ve come a long way from Kamat’s film, which ends with a naive yet tranquil vision, the promise of continuities, and faith in the spirit of Mumbai. Everything is eventually resolved over some shared cups of tea, which is what tea symbolizes. And, in the middle of all the chaos, very little has changed for the average person. His sorrow has become more searing, and his despair has become louder. The tea vendor tries to lead his family up the frightening escalator in the mall in a bitter-sweet Chaplinesque scenario in the film.
Their struggles to ascend the moving stairwell have become evocative of the challenges of rising the social ladder; now much more so. A timeless metaphor that reminds us that the more things change, the more they stay the same.
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