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BVFF 2023 | ‘Before Spring’ movie review: A poignant tale of tender hearts fighting to escape realities

BVFF 2023 | ‘Before Spring’ movie review: A poignant tale of tender hearts fighting to escape realities

The Hindu
Tuesday, December 19, 2023 03:46:09 PM UTC

Shrutismriti Changkakoti’s ‘Before Spring’ tells a heartbreaking yet hopeful story about three characters coping with three distinct situations; the empathy shown to the characters, an impressive subversion, economical use of dialogue and music, and tenderly captured frames make it all the more impressive

Three young men bathe and swim ashore in the mighty Brahmaputra, put on clothes and walk away, one of them picking up a discarded shirt from the river bank. This drone capture of an everyday routine is how filmmaker Shrutismriti Changkakoti welcomes us to her world of Before Spring, but this is no mere introduction; we realise later that it’s a wonderful metaphor for the story she is about to tell, and when that aerial angle comes around towards the end to complete a circle, you are pushed to tears. The tenderly captured Assamese film Before Spring is a poignant tale about escaping realities, written with a lot of empathy for the characters the story chooses to follow.

When we see Jun (Abhijit Roy), taking his crush, Dulu (Himbarsha Das), out on a date to the river bank, his eyes glint with hope and you might just miss all the world-weariness he carries within. Dulu, hailing from a rich, upper-caste family, shows Jun, a dropout working at a boat service, any attention only because...he’s just there. And so when she stops visiting him, Jun is hit with the reality of his life, the pangs of love, how society sees him and the regret of failing in his exams.

Meanwhile, Majoni (Upsana Priyam), a teenage schoolgoer, is obsessed over Pradeep (Monuj Borkotoky), her 20-something tutor whose love letter she just can’t stop re-reading. The obsession, however, pulls her into a lonely pit when he stops visiting her. When she can no longer take it, she rushes out to find Pradeep, a quest that only breaks her more.

It is in the introduction of the third lead of the story that Shrutismriti uses a simple, impressive subversion. We see a middle-aged woman, irked by the inquisitiveness of a neighbour about her personal affairs, rush into her house, just as her young teenage daughter comes out to go on a date with her lover. The girl, Rekha, then tells her boyfriend that she simply cannot stay at her home anymore.

Like Majoni and Jun, the middle-aged woman and Rekha also struggle to cope with the world they live in, but the film’s lens fascinatingly zooms in on the male of the house. Monikanta’s (Dipjyoti Kakoti) life is at a point of stagnation. He struggles to keep his grocery store afloat and is well aware that his marriage to his wife has long fallen apart. His wife, much younger and the sole earner of the family, emasculates him with chides for not being able to fend for the family. Old Moni da cannot even assert any parental authority over his daughter when he finds a cigarette among her belongings; he’s aware of her displeasure with the life she’s leading.

The film seamlessly cuts between the three tracks, nothing inorganic or out of the ordinary interrupting its flow. Shrutismriti exercises a wonderful economy in dialogue, camera movement and background score, emphasising only what the scenes need to convey. Take, for instance, a single shot that pans around Majoni’s room; on the surface, it shows the daydreams of a hormonal teenager in love but it also ambiguously coveys that Pradeep at some point might have gotten too close to the minor girl, which is all he has ever cared about. Only the scene that has Jun visit Dulu’s house and find out some heartbreaking truths sticks out like a sore thumb due to its dramatic, conventional staging.

Shrutismiti performs an intricate balancing act in how much to tell and how much to let the audiences build their assumptions around. A scene that has Dulu trying her sister’s saree and jewellery tells you why she does what she does but you are left to wonder why she could never break out of her family’s conditioning and if Jun was really just “a boyfriend to go on bike rides with.” Why Majoni falls for Pradeep is almost too obvious; at her age, for someone living such a desolate existence, any showcase of affection should be life-affirming. The lack of a support system is also why she is not ready to believe that Pradeep is merely lusting after her. With Monikanta, the cards are all kept open, but something more about Rekha and her relationship with her boyfriend would have made the whole affair feel more complete.

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