Detective
Byomkesh Bakshy! – Intricate Plot but No Dazzling Deductions
The main problem with
Dibakar Banerjee’s 2015 film Detective
Byomkesh Bakshy! is that in the film Byomkesh practically does not do any
detecting at all – he does more leg work than brain work. Detectives like
Sherlock, Feluda and Byomkesh are special because they are sharp – their powers
of deduction take our breath away. Sadly, this is not the case with Dibakar
Banerjee’s Byomkesh who is engaged by Ajit Banerjee to trace his missing father.
The search for the father leads to a complicated plot where the villain plans
to centre his transnational heroin trade in Calcutta and to that nefarious end
masterminds a Japanese takeover of the city with the help of gullible anti-British
activists.
The entire film passes
by as we wait for Byomkesh to dazzle us with his ability to deduce. Will he see
through Anukul Guha’s disguise? Will he see through Anguri Devi’s ploys? But
no! This Byomkesh requires too much help from others – it is the police
commissioner Wilkes who informs him of the existence of the Chinese Green Gang
and that Yang Guang is alive. It is the police informer Kanai Dao who leads him
to the Green Gang. This Byomkesh also needs a dollop of good fortune – it is
sheer chance that the guys at the boarding house mention that the newspaper
arrives late every morning – Byomkesh
who lives in that very boarding house never noticed till then!! And it is sheer
luck that his ex-girlfriend is now married to a chemist employed in the same
Hind Chemicals where Ajit’s missing father had last worked.
Dibakar Banerjee has
plucked names from Sharadindu Bandyopadhyay’s classics Satyanweshi and Arthamanartham
while completely changing the original characters. Viewers who have already met
these characters in Sharadindu Babu’s stories are in the danger of being
seriously disconcerted throughout the film. An irritating voice at the back of
the head is likely to keep up a steady stream of comments – Oh but Ajit was living in the boarding house
and not his father! Oh but Sukumar is an exceptionally intelligent medical
student – this gullible activist who falls easy prey to Anukul Guha’s
shenanigans could never be Sukumar! Oh but Ashwini Babu was murdered – not a
heroin/paan addict. Dibakar Banerjee could have easily avoided these
distractions because he had a promising script which would have worked much
better if it had Byomkesh interacting with characters that had their own unique
names.
However DBB! has its attractions. The Calcutta
of the 1940s is carefully recreated and is a treat to watch. The heavy metal
music contrasts well with the old-world setting. The introduction of the Green
Gang as the sinister mob is really interesting. Not many know about this secret
society operating out of Shanghai in the early to mid 20th century, responsible
for a range of criminal activities including political assassinations and opium
smuggling in South-East Asia. Most importantly, the film recalls the forgotten
history of the Japanese bombings of Calcutta towards the end of the World
War-II between 1942 and 1944. A detective story conceptualised around those
dark and uncertain times of air raids, sirens, death and destruction is
definitely worth watching.
Sushant Singh Rajput
playing a young Byomkesh to the hilt lifts the film. In the very last scene
after a maimed but alive Anukul Guha aka Yang Guang declares his visceral
hatred for him, we see Byomkesh standing on the roof watching the dawn coming
upon Calcutta. Then he suddenly turns around with an intense expression as if
he has just remembered something important - perhaps a piece of unfinished
business that needs urgent attention. It is the last scene which is the most
memorable of all.
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