HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentReview | 'Qala' delivers well on performance anxiety

Review | 'Qala' delivers well on performance anxiety

Anvitaa Dutt’s new Netflix film is about a tormented artist — and the gripping psychodrama about fear, love, abuse and generational trauma that unfolds through her journey

December 01, 2022 / 15:04 IST
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Triptii Dimri in a still from 'Qala'.
Triptii Dimri in a still from 'Qala'.

Qala in Urdu means evulsion or the act of extracting forcibly. The title of Anvitaa Dutt’s second feature film after her debut Bulbbul (2020; Netflix), a haunting, crisp period film about demons and women boxed in by male entitlement, plays on the theme of evulsion in a ruinous mother-daughter relationship. In this film, her lens is more piercing and more deep, into the emotional gangrene of her eponymous protagonist (Triptii Dimri). The film is also about the word’s phonetic equivalent kala or artistic talent, and how a gifted singer obsessed with proving herself to her mother — and in extension, to herself — surrenders herself to a vision of perfection and success at the cost of her own emotional and psychological destruction. It is the story of a possessive, demanding mother who fails to see her daughter, and of an absent father, whom Qala’s nervous gaze is constantly searching for — impossibly, desperately.

Swastika Mukherjee and Dimri in a still from the film.

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Qala is born in and grows up in a cavernous villa in the middle of a snowy expanse of undulating land in Debisthan, Himachal Pradesh, before Independence, when Calcutta was the capital of musical talent and success — when playback music was new but its commercial machinations were already ignited, when male music directors already began to capitalise on their power to exploit women’s talent, when Bapu’s visit to even snowy Himachal towns would mean a music performance would go attended. Urmila Manjushree (Swastika Mukherjee), Qala’s mother — flaunting an ornate bohemian sense of style and adornment — is a Thumri singer with a gifted voice and pitch, and a personal motherly wound that she nurses all her life.

Urmila is a ruthless disciplinarian, subjecting Qala to punishments and hard scrutiny since childhood. Urmila is a character whose taciturn allure and melancholic eyes hide enough self-loathing to emphasise over and over again that inheriting her legacy will be her daughter’s biggest undoing; unless Qala can be a “pandit” like her deceased father, her talent would be meaningless. Urmila channels her rage and disappointment into coaching the daughter with heartless rigour and taunts, all the while infantilising her. Qala internalises the pressure early on and subjects herself to relentless self-analysis.