Dinesh Raheja
'Clear your mind of "cannot"' said Hollywood actor Samuel L Jackson. And that is what filmmaker Manmohan Desai did on screen repeatedly, but most notably in Amar Akbar Anthony. He got away with it to the merry tune of jingling cash registers.
In the pre-credit sequence of AAA, three brothers Amar, Akbar, Anthony, unaware of each other's identity, offer blood to their mother, simultaneously!
Two sparks of bright light emanate from Sai Baba's statue and restore the sight of a blind woman.
While all hell breaks loose in the climax Akbar plays the accordion while Amar and Anthony toss the villain to a one-storey high ledge as if he were a volleyball.
With its moments of inspired lunacy (running around giant Easter eggs and singing songs), platitudes, miracles, maudlin sentimentality provided by Ma Nirupa Roy and oversimplified secularism -- Amar Akbar Anthony is one multi-starrer spectacle that has a riotous palette.
But most of all Amar Akbar Anthony invokes a sense of infectious, let's-whoop-it-up fun that Manmohan Desai tried to recapture in all his subsequent films but succeeded only intermittently.
AAA begins with the Machiavellian moves of an underworld don Robert (Jeevan at his twangiest best), which results in his chauffeur Kishenlal (Pran)'s life steering out of control.
Kishenlal's family, comprising three sons and his tuberculosis-afflicted wife Bharati (Nirupa Roy), get estranged from each other on Independence Day. On the eve of the separation, two children are shown sitting below a Gandhi statue. You can, if you want, draw deeper inferences from these touches and the fact that the mother is called Bharati. Desai, himself, is too busy rushing through the initial formalities of establishing his characters so that he can plunge neck-deep into his entertainer.
CREDITS | |||
Producers | Director | Music Director | Stars |
MKD Films | Manmohan Desai | Laxmikant-Pyarelal |
Amitabh Bachchan, Vinod Khanna, Rishi Kapoor, Parveen Babi, Shabana Azmi, Neetu Singh. |
Song | Singers |
My name is Anthony Gonsalves |
Kishore Kumar |
Parda hai parda | Mohammed Rafi |
Taiyyeb Ali pyar ka dushman | Mohammed Rafi |
Shirdi wale Sai Baba aaya hai | Mohammed Rafi |
Hum ko tumse ho gaya hai pyar | Kishore-Mukesh-Rafi-Lata Mangeshkar |
Anhonee ko honee kar de | Kishore-Mahendra Kapoor-Shailendra Singh |
The three heroines play second fiddle to the heroes and are basically required to sing and dance. Parveen looks the most fetching of the three with a fair display of cleavage and leg. Neetu, as always, enjoys being in front of the camera and in the company of her beau Rishi Kapoor. But Shabana Azmi stands out like a sore thumb.
Ultimately, the show belongs to Amitabh Bachchan. In a tailor-made role, he has the audience in stitches. Despite his playing an implausible character, one quickly surrenders one's reservations in favour of a rollicking romp.
Famous dialogue:
Amitabh (when he sees Jeevan running with a briefcase of gold biscuits): Aisa toh aadmi do hi time bhagta hai. Olympic ka race ho ya police ka case ho. (A man runs only in two situations: when he is running an Olympic race or fleeing from a police case).
Sidelights:
*After AAA, Manmohan Desai went on to direct Amitabh in seven other films: Parvarish, Suhaag, Naseeb, Desh Premi, Coolie, Mard and Ganga Jamuna Saraswati. In fact, from AAA onwards, Desai worked exclusively with Bachchan.
*Rishi Kapoor wore a double-knit fabric trouser, a netted see-through shirt, chappals purchased from Mumbai's Linking Road and carried a paan ka dibba to get under the skin of Akbar Ilahbaadi.
Music:
*Mohammed Rafi enjoyed a career resurgence after the success of his two robust hits, Taiyyeb Ali pyar ka dushman and Parda hai parda. Rishi's enthusiastic performance to these songs enhanced their appeal tremendously.
*Amitabh's polysyllabic jabbering ('You see the coefficient of the linear is just a position by the haemoglobin of the atmospheric pressure in the country') in the midst of the 'My name is Anthony Gonsalves' song is one of the unforgettable moments of Hindi cinema.