Medical dramas and legal dramas
both make for compelling viewing – Robin Cook and John Grisham both sell
millions of books; ER and The Practice both attracted millions of
eyeballs; and Outbreak and A Few Good Men both sent viewers’
adrenaline racing. Then how can a film that combines aspects of medical drama
and legal drama, and is based on a sensational true story that rocked the
nation, leave one so cold?
The answer lies in the writing.
Every character – the strong mother, the
earnest intern, the arrogant doctor, the determined lawyer, even the eponymous
child – is a stereotype, an example of shoddy, cliched, hackneyed, lazy
scripting. And the answer lies in the unnecessary padding of the two love
stories that are dragged unnecessarily into the narrative just to bring the
film closer to the Bollywood archetype.
The common man has a capacity of tolerating scams and corruption, but finds it difficult to condone cases of medical negligence. Probably it is because the common man is loath to accept that god-like figure – the medical practitioner – as a human figure with feet of clay. Ankur Arora Murder Case is such a tale of medical negligence – the story of how a child Ankur Arora (Vishesh Tiwari) dies because of Dr Asthana's (Kay Kay Menon) negligence, and how his mother (Tisca Chopra) fights for justice with the aid of the doctor’s protege (Arjun Mathur), and a lawyer (Paoli Dam).
The common man has a capacity of tolerating scams and corruption, but finds it difficult to condone cases of medical negligence. Probably it is because the common man is loath to accept that god-like figure – the medical practitioner – as a human figure with feet of clay. Ankur Arora Murder Case is such a tale of medical negligence – the story of how a child Ankur Arora (Vishesh Tiwari) dies because of Dr Asthana's (Kay Kay Menon) negligence, and how his mother (Tisca Chopra) fights for justice with the aid of the doctor’s protege (Arjun Mathur), and a lawyer (Paoli Dam).
The one good thing about the movie
is the performances. Kay Kay Menon is incapable of a poor performance, while Tisca
Chopra is always a delight to watch. Vishesh, as evinced in Ek Thi Daayan, is a natural talent. Paoli
Dam tries her best, while Arjun is earnest. Manish Chaudhari, Harsh Chhaya, and
Sachin Khurana add their usual competence. Which makes it all the more pitiful
to watch actor after actor try desperately to rise above the shackles of the comatose
screenplay.
So what does this film have in
store for members of the medical profession? A cautionary tale of how pride and
overconfidence can lead a doctor to overlook a routine, mandatory procedure
before a surgery, Ankur Arora Murder Case
tries to add adage to the old saying: “Physician, heal thyself!”
The movie tries to look at an
emotional issue from every aspect of the noble profession — from the young
interns' side, from the reputed senior doctor’s side, from the side of the
people who run hospitals, and from the perspective of parents who have children
in the medical field. There are enough medical terms thrown about to provide
evidence that at least some research had been done into the world the movie
tries to portray.
Just a pet peeve: why could the
movie not have been called Ankur Arora Medical
Case? That way, there could have
been at least a modicum of suspense about the tale, a desire to stay and watch
a story unfold. Is it because director Suhail Tartari had earlier helmed a
movie titled My Wife’s Murder, and
perhaps ascribed the moderate success of that venture to the talismanic
presence of the word “murder” in the title?