It may seem like that right now. But racial discrimination is not peculiar to America. In India many communities and cultures have suffered generations of prejudice and violent attacks.
It’s a sign of the times that a film on the hardships faced by North Eastern students in Delhi has come for cinematic scrutiny in a film that combines culinary distinctiveness with cultural immersion in a cinematic language that’s interestingly hybridized .Not everything fits. There are portions when the writer-director seems to put too much on his plate.
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But the pungent North-eastern pork dish named Axone serves well as a metaphor for culturally distinctive people who fail to create a sense of belonging when away from home and insist on creating their own cultural island in the metropolitan bustle. Admirably, director Nicholas Kharkongor takes no sides. If his North-eastern characters are victims of an ethnic subversion, they are also responsible for their plight.
Sayani Gupta, a fine actress when given some meat in her part, sinks her teeth into the pork dish with a deep understanding of the dynamics that drive migrants into an abyss. Gupta plays a Nepali and hence a bit of an outsider even in her North-Eastern circle of friends. But from outside she’s one of ‘them’ facing rude comments like, ‘All of you look the same.’
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The director’s strong views on segregation come through in some well-written scenes of street violence.Chanbi(Lin Laishram,beautifully sullen) is slapped by a Delhi lout for protestiong against his eveteasing.Later when the perpetrator’s father intervenes to discipline his son, Chanbi remarks sarcastically, “Aap hi se sikha hoga.”
Most uncalled-for and symptomatic of the constant victim syndrome that people from outside the mainsteam suffer from. In the beginning there is poor Bendang(LANUAKUM AO) trying to learn a Hindi song(Uthe sab ke kadam from the film Baaton Baaton Mein).Symbolically, he masters the words and the tune at the end. But not before he insults a helpful over-friendly Delhi boy Shiv(Roshan Joshi) who’s seen trying to help the North-easterners all through the narrative only to be rewarded with smirks and rolling of the eyes.
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Prudently the narration suggests that perhaps a part of the problem being faced by minority communities is their own persecution complex. Perhaps if marginalized people stop licking their wounds all the time they can inculcate a sense of belonging in the mainstream of society.
The film has some lovely contemplative moments and the culture-specific cast captures the spirit of the script. While the marginalized characters bustle their way through a series of misadventures the director pulls back, lets the characters breathe.A luxury they can rarely afford in real life.
Axone is a film that must be seen by every one who has suffered discrimination or abuse . It may not have achieved the heights of self expression that it seems to have set for itself,But it’s a brave admirable attempt.
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