One of the fringe benefits of watching a lot of movies made in a
language I do not speak, from a country where I do not live, produced by
an industry that I don't really follow, and advertised on TV channels
that I do not watch is that often when I sit down to watch a movie, all I
have to go on is the Netflix summary and maybe a few familiar names
listed in the cast. Even today, I can be surprised. Ek Ladki Ko Dekha Toh Aisa Laga (2019)
surprised the hell out of me. That said, I'll be spoiling all of the
things, so if you want to be surprised too, stop reading, turn on
Netflix, watch the movie, then come back. I'll still be here.
Let's get the obvious stuff out of the way first. There's a boy,
struggling Delhi playwright Sahil (Rajkummar Rao). There's a girl,
small town garment factory heiress Sweety (Sonam Kapoor.) Boy meets
girl, girl tells boy his play sucks because he's obviously never been in
love, boy helps girl escape from an angry man who turns out to be her
brother Babloo (Abhishek Duhan). Boy discovers that girl is from a
small town, and decides to produce his next play there, with local
talent, assisted only by the theater company's caterer (and wannabe
actress) Chatro (Juhi Chawla, who, I believe I have mentioned, is the
absolute best.)
And at first, everything happens just as you would expect. Sweety's
father, Bablbir (Anil Kapoor, Sonam's actual dad) is strict but loving.
He also always wanted to be a chef, but was prevented by his own strict
parents, so naturally Sahil meets him while he's cooking and assumes
he's the family chef. Rumor has it that Sweety is in love with a Muslim
man, and everybody (including Sahil) assumes that man is Sahil. It's
not. Drama! Complications! Then Sahil confesses his love, and Sweety
tells him the truth: she's not in love with a Muslim man, she's in love
with a Muslim woman, Kuhu (Regina Cassandra.)
Sahil quickly gets over himself and resolves to help Sweety. (One of
the more subtle Good Things about this movie is that this isn't
presented as an act of amazing nobility or anything; Sahil's just being a
decent person.) Of course, when all you have is a playwright, every
problem looks like a stage, so Sahil comes up with the fairly terrible
plan of producing a play about a young Indian woman played by Sweety in
love with another woman, played by Kuhu. Sweety's family will be so
moved by the play that they'll accept Sweety when she comes out to them.
Things fall apart in short order, with Sweety outed ahead of schedule,
but she insists on continuing the play anyway, not because she thinks
it will help her now, but because it would have been a lifeline to her
younger self, something to show her that she's not completely alone.
Ek Ladki is not much of a romance. Sweety and Kuhu are already in an
established (if secret) relationship, and the onscreen relationship is
incredibly chaste, to boot; there's some hugging and some earnest
conversations, but Chatro and Balbir get to display a lot more
chemistry. But that doesn't really matter, because Sweety is right;
this is not a movie about romance, it's about representation. The
emotional climax happens before the happy ending, during the play's
performance, as the audience realizes what the play's actually about.
Some people stay, some people storm out, but the camera lingers on one
young girl's face as she suddenly realizes that she's not alone.
It was a nice surprise.
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