In Satyakam of Hrishikesh Mukherjee, a film unexpectedly reflect in the new Rao Rajkummar experience, when Dharmendra, the Stubborn Idealist, asked me why he was second in his examination, he replied, "Because the student is best as I"
Newton Kumar is exactly the idealistic film Hrishikesh Mukherjee, who fights with political irony in a country where most are too poor and illiterate to vote. Newton of Rajkummar is the type that will shine if he does not surpass the competition by the power of his convictions.
It is a more triumphant performance for Rao, who has given a brilliant story to every character he plays. In fact, it has become a habit for this actor.
On the surface it does not seem to come to Newton. The author and director Amit Masurkar is not sold out of the crucible of his plot in the creation of the drama. Instead, the characters leave this speech exposed to corruption with the use of propaganda propaganda. Newton does not fall into the trap of making his idealist hero in the making of the democratic system as a messiah.
On the contrary, our little hero often seems ridiculous in his stubborn adherence to the rules and rules. There is a sequence at the end where a friend of Newton leveled a wise girl quietly Adivasi (Anjali Patil), headed into his office and suggested she go to tea. But Newton will not be out of 5 minutes until his official break begins. In the course of time we see the couple wait, while we unfortunately have to say goodbye.
This is the kind of cinema in which the characters never have to entertain us. The scenario is an electoral district of Lok Sabha in the heart of Chattisgarh, where Maoist violence has made the voters superfluous. Who would have thought that a formal excited idealist choices brisrait suddenly laziness of inequality in the jungles of Chattigarh.
Rao Rajkummar stands out as the picky picky Babu try to do as hard the right thing finally ends up on the wrong side of the shot line. These nervous eyebrows Rao took to his character and squeezed his indignation seething only confusion of idealism, the actor stands out in a role without strengths that resembles life.
Pankaj Tripathy as an avid official to the election to accompany her and Anjali Patil as a local girl who accompanied Newton (from the name for himself because he was not like their original Nutan name) in the jungle inaccessible with a local government in the Election campaign, penetrates his usual brilliance of the action.
The narrative is not in a hurry to put a convincing argument for Newton's rigid idealism. He is what he is and we accept his qualities in the hope that he will finally surprise us. And he does it
Adding to the taste of an immovable realism is the authentic location. The jungle speaks to us practically in every frame. The cinematography of Swapnil Sonawane undresses the splendor of the place to concentrate on the drama of the world.
As Newton and his troublesome colleagues travel to places where choice is unthinkable, it makes sense that the democratic process at the bottom of the bureaucratic ladder must go well before Newton Kumars must see the dawn of a new era. So if we want to make a difference, we can not remain indifferent.