Dunki (2023) is Bollywood megastar Shah Rukh Khan's third starring role after his recent Zero-driven hiatus. There's a difference, though; both Jawan and Pathaan featured Action Shah Rukh, but Dunki has to do without beautifully choreographed violence, cool gadgets, or Deepika Padukone in a bikini. Instead, the movie relies on Shah Rukh's affable charm, a strong supporting cast, and a clearly stated thesis.
The movie opens with Manu (Taapsee Pannu), a woman of a certain age, escaping from a London hospital. She's determined to return to her home village in Punjab, but she can't get an Indian visa, so her lawyer Puru Patel (Deven Bhojani) puts her in touch with the one man who can help, her old flame Hardayal "Hardy" Singh Dillon (Shash Rukh Khan). Hardy is thrilled to talk to her again, but when she asks him to meet her in Dubai, he says that he won't. Manu knows better, and she gathers her friends Buggu (Vikram Kochhar) and Balli (Anil Grover) to join her on the trip.
And the film flashes back twenty five years. Manu is desperate to get to England, hoping to earn enough money to pay off her father's debt and buy back the family home. And she's not the only one; Buggu and Balli both want to earn enough money to support their respective mothers and escape the dead end jobs they're trapped in. They've tried various shady visa brokers and been cheated every time, but there's always hope. Manu is actually looking for a wrestling coach for the latest immigration scheme when she meets former soldier Hardy, who traveled for miles to return a tape player to her late brother, the soldier who saved his life.
Hardy is moved by her story, and agrees to train her as a way to repay his debt to her brother. When the latest immigration broker vanishes, Hardy gets them all enrolled in an English class run by Geetu (Boman Irani), hoping to earn a student visa. In class they meet meet Sukhi (Vicky Kaushal) who wants to get a visa as quickly as possible in order to rescue the woman he loves from an abusive marriage. This means that the core cast includes a group of five friends, but one of them is in a wildly different genre than the others. This will not be the only example of an uneven tone.
Balli passes the test, but everyone else fails. Balli promises to look up Sukhi's love Jassi as soon as he reaches England. He keeps his promise, but it's already too late; Jassi has taken her own life. Sukhi is heartbroken, and immolates himself. At the funeral, Hardy vows to get his friends to England, no matter what. Rather than wait for a visa that may never come, they'll take the "dunki" route, hopping from country to country until they are smuggled onto British soil.
Up until now, the film has veered between charming comedy and Sukhi's tragedy; now it becomes a full-fledged drama. The trip to England is brutal. People die, including characters who were introduced earlier as comic relief. As a former soldier, Hardy has to use violence to protect his friends along the way, but the violence isn't cool, it's brutal and unpleasant and leaves everyone involved shaken. And yet there are some flickers of hope; Hardy manages to confess his feelings for Manu, and she loves him as well, though they want to stay focused on the journey until they reach their destination.
And then England, which is its own kind of brutal. Balli hasn't been as successful as he lead the others to believe, and life as an undocumented immigrant is hard. hardy finally manages to contact Puru Patel, who offers a few possible routes to legal status. Trying to get Manu married to a British citizen is a disaster, though, so the only option left is to seek asylum, claiming that they will be persecuted by the Indian government if they try to return home. Hardy is a patriot, and he absolutely will not lie about his country, but he can afford to have convictions, since he's only in England for Manu. The others have families to provide for, and they all claim asylum while Hardy is deported.
And then the flashback is over, we're back in the present, and the movie is a comedy again, with Hardy scheming to smuggle his friends back into an India which doesn't want them because of their asylum claim. Mostly a comedy, that is, because Manu was in that hospital for a reason, and that's what's driving her to get back to Punjab before it's too late.
This is obviously a deeply political movie; it pretty much has to be, given the topic. The film is very much on the side of the little people seeking an opportunity to provide for their families, and has a lot to say about a system which is designed to keep poor people out, and the brokers who take advantage of the desperate. Shah Rukh gets a good speech, angry in the Terry Pratchett sense.
The tone here is wildly uneven, but that is not that uncommon in Bollywood, and writer/director Rajkumar Hirani's earlier films, such as the Munna Bhai franchise and 3 Idiots, also mix moments of joy with unexpected tragedy. The cast makes it work, especially Khan. This is an unusually disciplined performance for him, and there are no winking references to Khan's earlier films to remind the viewer that they're watching a big star. Like Hardy, Shah Rukh stays focused on the moment until he reaches his destination.
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