Hitchki is another one of those refreshingly different movies
targeted at the multiplex thronging multitudes. A progressive movie, it
highlights several issues at different levels even as the movie too tries to
break new grounds by projecting as its lead cast an actress who had quit the acting
scene to get married and become a mother. Rani Mukherjee as a victim of the Tourette’s
syndrome is ably supported by Sachin as her father, and Neeraj Kabi as her
co-teacher in a school.
The movie begins with the scene where Rani Mukherjee,
playing the role of Naina Mathur, is facing an interview board for the post of
a teacher. Even as the interview board acknowledges Naina’s educational
qualifications and other certifications, Naina begins to produce strange noises
from her throat which evinces some kind of problem that Naina had. Naina is
shown to be explaining that she has Tourette’s syndrome and that her condition and
these involuntary noises emitted by her including the act of rubbing her throat
were as a result of Tourette’s, it becomes abundantly clear that she was going
to be rejected by the board. As one of the members advices her about not
applying for teacher’s position as her condition would probably render the task
of teaching difficult for her, she gives a befitting reply when she asks them
if they had ever heard of Tourette’s syndrome and as was to be expected, none
of the board members had. So, as she left the room, she told them that if she
could during the course of an interview teach something to the board members,
she could well imagine what she could do as a teacher. Despite, the don’t-give-up
attitude that she abundantly displays, at one level the movie shows Naina struggling
to get a teachers job due to her health condition.
At another level, the movie highlights the plight of parents
of such children. The real-life husband and wife pair of Supriya Palgaonkar and
Sachin play the role of Naina Mathur’s parents in the movie. So while the
mother is shown to be sympathetic towards her daughter, empathizing with her
condition, understanding the pain her daughter goes through at being rejected
by peers, and yet being able to do little, the father is shown as someone who
has problems accepting a daughter who is deviant from the normal. He is shown
as someone who would get embarrassed at her condition. In fact, in one of the
scenes where the young Naina Mathur is out dining with her parents at a restaurant,
and Naina breaks into these involuntary noise-making and head shaking, her
father is shown to get embarrassed and quickly places the order for food on
behalf of Naina. Naturally, the bond between the father and daughter is
strained. The father in fact, goes on to abandon his family, leaving them in a lurch.
Hussain Dalal playing the role of an understanding and empathizing brother is
almost portrayed as an epitome of acceptance, love and care – a character
almost utopian yet believable. The brother plays the role of the mediator
between the father and daughter every time the father is shown visiting them. Her
insistence to become a teacher is explained well in one of the scenes. It is
during one of her father’s visits to the family and he is shown telling her
that he has got her a job in a bank, and
she refuses it saying that she is keen to become a teacher. When her father ridicules her about this
insistence of hers, we are shown a scene in flashback, when Naina is very
small, and in her school’s auditorium. The principal in on the stage addressing
a large crowd of assembled children, teachers and parents. He is shown asking
the crowd about the noise that was being made when the programme was on – and he
encourages the child who ever was making the noise to won up and come up on
stage. Naina, prodded also by her mother, owns up and walks to the stage. The principal,
very sensitively, and probably aware of her condition, makes her speak to the
crowd about Tourette’s syndrome. By the end of this episode, the children of
the school, the teachers and parents had all been sensitized to her condition and
they had all become more accepting of her. Naina naturally went on to idolize her
principal and also dreamt of being a teacher, just as good and sensitive as her
principal.
The, at a different level, also deals with the divide in the
society between the haves and the have-nots. Naina finally succeeds to get a
job at a school – in fact her own school. When Naina, after five years of
struggle to land herself a job of a teacher, finally gets a call from her own
school, she is shown to be ecstatic, and why not. However, she gets far more
than what she had probably bargained for. The school was offering her a class
teacher’s job for Class XI F, a section that was not there when she was a
student of the school. On probing she gets to understand that this class
belonged to a motley group of children from the underprivileged society as part
of the Rights to Education policy of the government. The children had become
rebellious due to the divide in the school that they could perceive between
them and the rest of the school. They had realised that they would be treated
differently – that the rest of the school would never accept them as mainstream
students. To the movie’s credit, within the less-than-2-hour-long length of the
movie, it does do a credible job of portraying the divide to a great extent.
Neeraj Kabi, true to his repute of being a class actor, an
actor of a different league, pulls off the role of a teacher who is good and
yet not at all sympathetic to the cause of the children of XI F, with aplomb.
He is shown forever belittling the efforts of Naina Mathur and trying to
influence the principal of the no-worthwhileness of having the class of IX F.
Naina starts by constantly instilling in her children of
class IX F a sense of purpose and a sense of achievement. In fact, the first
few scenes of Naina with the students of class IX reminds one of the famous scenes
of “Sound of Music” where the seven children of Captain von Trapp played by Christopher
Plummer play out every trick in the book in order to shoo away Maria, their
newly appointed home tutor, played ably by Julie Andrews. Neeraj Kabi never ceases
to let go of an opportunity to highlight to Naina that she has on hand an
impossible task and that she would be better off without this new responsibility
bestowed on her.
Amidst all the trials and travails, including where acceptance
is made even more difficult due to her Tourette’s syndrome, Naina, not one to
give up, is finally able to win the trust of these children and to instill in
them a sense of purpose and self-confidence. She is shown as a teacher who
thinks out of the box and who uses teaching methodologies that are different
and suited for the children whose care she has been entrusted with. There are
scenes in the movie which look very outlandish as when the children do stuff
that make you gape with wonderment whether any school, worth its salt would
tolerate acts of such impunity by looking the other way. And yet, you would
want to dismiss them as the Director’s prerogative and the writer’s creative license.
The movie is an ode to all those teachers including Anand
Kumar of Super Thirty who do not give up on their students despite odds stacked
against them and in the process making their own journey as well as that of their
students a memorable one. From backbenchers and embarrassments to schools,
these children are made the pride of the school by the efforts and the
never-give-up attitudes of the teachers.
A dialogue of the movie where Rani Mukherjee says that there
are no bad students, only bad teachers succinctly describes the main thread of the
movie.
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