Goopi Gawaiya Bagha Bajaiya review: #SayNoToWar

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Namrata Joshi :
Goopi Gawaiya Bagha Bajaiya (GGBB) is a rare Indian animation film that doesn’t have anything mythological about it, no Hanuman and Bheem thankfully. Based on Upendra Kishore Roychowdhury’s iconic characters Goopy and Bagha and inspired from the first of Satyajit Ray’s trilogy – Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne – Shilpa Ranade’s GGBB was first screened at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2013. The years of wait for it to reach the theatres hasn’t taken the shine off it nor made it look dated. If at all it’s anti-war, pro-peace message resonates stronger this weekend, unintentionally so.
GGBB holds true in today’s day and age – Hundi-Shundi (two neighbouring kingdoms) in conflict, with the king of Shundi bemoaning the fact that his own twin brother, and the ruler of Hundi, has let him down; the talk about fascism, greed for power, how a war results in women turning widows, kids rendered orphans and young men incapacitated. The important question is why should two people fight when they can be friends?
It’s for Goopi-Bagha then to change the perspective of a “cruel man”, avert war and help Hundi’s mute citizens get their voices back. Food is one weapon of peace-the dal khichdi, chokha, ghee, dahi, mango pickle and mint chutney-act as an unifying force. Then there are the fabulous songs-‘Ishq Kar’-asks people to reason, question, think and dissent, to fight helplessness and kill hunger, not to destroy what is in tact but mend the broken. It asks for pen and the hammer and sickle to be held up as against weapons. This song sequence could well be made mandatory viewing in today’s turbulent times. Not to forget another significant song-‘Bas yehi kranti ho; sab jagah aman shanti ho’ (Only revolution should be to have peace and harmony everywhere).

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