Luka Chuppi review: A progressive comedy with just right dose of laughter

Luka Chuppi doesn’t try too hard to generate humour. It doesn’t always make us laugh. But it never fails to amuse

Photo courtesy: Twitter
Photo courtesy: Twitter
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Subhash K Jha

Just when  the small-town comedy threatens to sag under the weight of over-statement,  there comes a fresh feisty take on a live-in relationship in this  progressive comedy (not to be confused with the regressive comedy as in Total Dhamaal)  .

Luka Chuppi doesn’t mind bending the rules of the rom-com genre as long the tilt  doesn’t make the script look cross-eyed and waylaid. A sense of  madcap adventure is constantly projected into the narrative without losing grip over the grammar of growing giggles.

Luka Chuppi doesn’t try too hard to generate humour. It doesn’t always make us  laugh. But it never fails to amuse, as Guddu and  Rashmi, two Mathura-based  TV journalists,  get hitched,  fall in love and decide to give ‘live-in’ a chance before settling in permanently.

Egged on by his best friend/sidekick Abbas (Aparshakti Khurrana bang-on with his  deadpan expressions),  the couple decides  to give live-in a try. The adventures  thereafter are not as smooth as, say Badhaai Ho where middle class mores were projected with unflinching  accuracy. Luka Chuppi sometimes goes awry in its search for  satire, but is not the least fearful of stumbling  .

Guddu wants to do “everything” that  live-in couples do. Rashmi isn’t biting the bait. But they do end up in bed and soon she whispers the  four magic words, “Do we have  protection?”. Guddu is ready with an assortment of condoms. Pyar kiya toh dalna kya?

In breaking the wall that separates love and sex in Hindi commercial cinema and in showing the lead couple  with  healthy hormonal instincts Luka Chuppi raises hopes for the Bollywood comedy where kissing is still seen as big deal, and audiences are  actually said to count the number of times lips lock on screen.

Come to think of  it, there are no kisses between Kartik Aryan and  Kriti Sanon in this film. And yet they communicate a warm easygoing alliance that comes not from singing songs together but from recognizing your life partner for what she is.

Most of the humour is generated organically and without making  strenuous efforts  to  induce humour into social statement.

Make no mistake about it. Luka Chuppi  is  a comedy with an underlying layer of dark satire and social statement on moral policing and communal biases in small towns.  Director Laxman Utekar who has done the lucid cinematography in Gauri Shinde’s English Vinglish and  Dear Zindaagi, has a keen eye for small-town quirks. He gets the  mood right specially in the frequent aerial shots of  the small-town rooftops. But the  stellar supporting cast is frequently let down by the persistent attempts to make them seem chronically hyper. Do these people have to say or do something all the time?

While some amount of hue-and-cry is raised over the vigilante treatment of romance, the subtle but sharp digs at the Muslim character is admirably on target. The way the  Muslim film star at the film’s prologue is treated for espousing live-in relationships and  in the way characters react when the hero’s Muslim friend is introduced,  the film tells us we are a long way from getting away from our biases.

But hey, in the meanwhile there is the laughter. Probably not  the  best medicine. But it works in the right  doses. Most importantly,  Lukka Chupi works for the lead pair. Kartik Aryan is endearingly guileless and eager to score, while Kriti Sanon is more worldly-wise and slightly annoying in her will to be the dominant partner. Together, the couple  is a scream. Albeit a stifled one.

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