I watched Bollywood hit ‘Half Girlfriend’ so you won’t have to
This article was first published in my column for Ekalavyas.com on May 31, 2017. Read the original piece here.
Warning: Spoilers ahead.
Less than half an hour into the Mohit Suri directed film Half Girlfriend – based on popular novel
by Chetan Bhagat – the two lead characters Madhav Jha (Arjun Kapoor) and Riya
Somani (Shraddha Kapoor) take on the court in a semi-flirtatious one-on-one
basketball game at an elite university in New Delhi. As Madhav dribbles the
ball from the top of the key, threatening to create separation for a jump-shot,
Riya marvels at his slow, plodding dribbles.
“Kevin Durant?” she asks.
“LeBron James,” answers Jha.
Riya commentates on the moment just like an NBA commentator
would while also attempting to guard him. Swish.
Madhav makes his shot. A few seconds later, he dribbles it out to the
three-point line. “Steph Curry!” Riya announces. Swish. Madhav scores again, and turns around confidently before the
ball goes through the basket, true to the Mr Curry’s most
disrespectfully-brilliant moments on the NBA court.
Half Girlfriend is
primarily a story of class and language barriers. Riya comes from a rich Delhi
family, is fluent in both English and Hindi, but chooses to ignore the latter
even if it makes her sound painfully pretentious. Madhav is from a respected
family lineage from the small (fictional) village of Simraon in Bihar, speaks
beautiful Hindi, but struggles in English.
He is attracted to her but scared to talk to her at first;
on the basketball court, however, all of their barriers dissipate. Madhav and
Riya both know the language of hoops. While he half-fawns over Riya and
half-plays the game, his inner monologue tells us that the NBA – not the
Narmada Bachao Andolan but the National Basketball Association – has been his
obsession since childhood. Now, that obsession has helped him start a friendship
with the girl of his dreams.
Basketball facilitating Bollywood romance? Stop me if you’ve
heard a similar story before. Nearly twenty years ago, Rahul (Shah Rukh Khan)
and Anjali (Kajol) in one of Bollywood’s greatest romances – Kuch Kuch Hota Hai – rekindled their
former friendship into romance through one of the most iconic/ridiculous
scenes ever. It was an unconventional move for a culture that rarely had
any mainstream basketball visibility, and yet
it worked to create a classic moment.
Basketball
and Bollywood have been a rare combination. Several years after Rahul and
Anjali’s hoops flirtations, Hrithik Roshan played in a basketball game as
‘Rohit’ in the film Koi Mil Gaya, which
turned out to be a weird mix of E.T., Space Jam, and A Beautiful Mind. A few
years later, Roshan was balling (awkwardly) again in Dhoom 2, one-on-one against Aishwarya Rai in the rain, talking
about basketball thinly-veiled as international espionage thinly-veiled as
romance.
With a plot closely-revolving around basketball, assistance
from the NBA in India, and deliberate attempts to promote the movie via its
hoops connections, Half Girlfriend has
joined the rare club of Indian films with basketball mentioned above.
But first, a disclaimer: I have not read the Chetan Bhagat
novel that this film was based on and I don’t plan to, because Chetan Bhagat’s
prose is equal to a double Achilles injury to the brain. The novel’s Wikipedia
page tells me that the basketball subplot existed in Bhagat’s writing too.
Otherwise, I treated the film as its own independent entity.
Here’s a brief summary of Half Girlfriend, and if you plan to watch this film and hate
spoilers, shoo away. Madhav Jha joins “St. Steven’s College” (not St.
Stephen’s) in New Delhi on a sports quota. He falls for Riya Somani based on
both her looks and shooting ability and the two begin a friendship of
one-on-one, half-court basketball games. But, even though they are both from
respected families in different extremes of India, there is a clear class
difference between the couple, and Riya can only be Madhav’s “Half Girlfriend”
(whatever the hell that means). Madhav tries to take the relationship further
physically but she resists. A couple of days later, she has a shaadi-invitation
for him. Her shaadi. To an English speaking NRI guy in London. She’s 19.
Then, the film goes completely off the rails. Their paths
cross again in Patna, Bihar, and Riya has by now gotten a divorce. Now, they
use learning English as an excuse to flirt instead of basketball. A lot more
happens. Riya finds it laughingly easy to sneak into the top of the India Gate
and dreams of being a New York based live-music performer. There is a
horrible-CGI appearance by Bill Gates in Bihar and drunken pub crawls in New
York City. Frequent flashes of rainfall to let viewers know which moments are
more dramatic than others.
But our concerns here are not with the film itself; it’s
with the film’s specific basketball moments and references. While Half Girlfriend was being filmed,
production information revealed that the two Kapoor leads (unrelated) were honing
their basketball skills for the movie in New Delhi. The two appeared to
have taken their immersion into becoming star college basketball players
seriously, and worked
out with NBA coaches in India in preparation for their roles. This level of
involvement in the sport and with the NBA in a movie was unprecedented in
Indian cinema. The hoops promotion
continued up to the movie’s release and the Kapoors kept appearing on my
Sony SIX TV screens while I peacefully tried to watch the Golden State Warriors
sweep the Western Conference. With some serious doubts of my sanity, I decided
that it would be irresponsible as an Indian basketball journalist for me not to watch this movie.
In the film, Madhav’s love-at-first-sight, or at least
lust-at-first-sight, moment happens when he sees Riya on the basketball court.
She’s wearing a white tank-top, hot pants, and tightly-braided hair to look as
basketball-y as possible. This seems like a girls’ team tryout at Steven’s and
her side is losing. She is missing shots and not paying attention on defence.
When she tries to quit the game, Madhav, on the bench, decides to tell her
something inspirational in his broken English about “defeating defeats” (“Har
ko haraana” is a running theme). Riya returns to the game, hits an outside
jumper, drives in for a behind-the-back assist, and then drives in again for a
tough lay-up in three consecutive possessions. Her team wins. She glances a
happy look at Madhav and he throws up two dorky thumbs back.
Minutes later, it’s his turn to take the court for the boys’
team trials. Madhav strips into his jersey (muscle-shot mandatory) and starts
off by knocking the ball off the backboard for a Tracy McGrady style pass
to himself and then finishing with an unbelievably fake windmill slam. Seconds
later, he does it again, but this time the finish is a between-the-legs dunk.
We are not shown here if he has other skills (shooting, passing, defence,
court-awareness, rebounding, etc.). He can dunk like Vince Carter at the 2000
Slam Dunk Contest, so he must be good at basketball.
Eventually, basketball brings them closer together and
bridges cultural gaps. Madhav sees Riya give her teammates fist-bumps in
celebration, and the rest of the movie has an unnecessarily large number of
awkward, slow-motion fist-bumps between the two lovers/not-lovers. They role-play
moves by their favourite NBA players on court. Both of the actors move slowly
and dribble carefully, but their skills are mostly passable given the rough history of Bollywood
actors playing the game.
To prove how much of a true basketball fan he is, Madhav’s
dorm-room at Steven’s is swagged out with all sorts of NBA memorabilia:
posters, small flags, bobbleheads and mugs with logos of the Warriors and
Cavaliers mostly (he’s not really loyal to a particular team/player), a
surprising Patrick Ewing photograph, a Bulls’ collage featuring Jimmy Butler,
and a large Steph Curry poster.
Curry’s specific skills would’ve specifically helped
Madhav’s romantic intentions in the next scene. He wants to take Riya out on a
movie date – turn friendship into something more – but she will only agree if
he can make a half-court shot. Madhav, who happens to be a sniper from the
three-point line range, is suddenly helpless. He forgets all form and simply
begins to chuck the ball in wild abandon. Somehow, Riya is impressed by his
failed efforts and agrees to the date anyways. For future reference, Madhav, here is a compilation of
Steph Curry’s half-court shots.
Unfortunately, as their romantic problems get more serious,
basketball takes a backseat. When Riya and Madhav have a fight, Madhav
struggles in an inter-college game against “Rajhans” (and definitely not Ramjas
University). This is the only time we actually see him in competitive action
and he’s terrible. Maybe we shouldn’t judge a book by its slam-dunking
abilities.
(As an aside, Arjun Kapoor and Shraddha Kapoor – definitely
not related – are 31 and 30 years old respectively, playing 18 to 19-year-olds
in the beginning of the film. And it shows).
The movie, predictably, takes a more sombre turn after the
intermission and both Madhav and Riya move on to different professions – Madhav
returns to his village to help facilitate girls’ toilets in his mother’s school
and Riya joins PR for Close-Up toothpaste.
Eventually, the film ends up in New York, with Madhav moping
around the city in yet another addition to the never-ending genre of movies
about Indians being depressed abroad. In a shocking turn of events, our
basketball-loving protagonist has ended up in the ‘mecca’ of hoops and never
plays basketball or acknowledges of existence of the Knicks or the Nets. One
time, while he is walking around in depression (there is a lot of this), he
crosses a streetball game and the ball bounces out to him. He’s too sad to take
a shot and gives the ball back. Sigh.
The ending, however, offers a silver lining. Madhav and Riya
are reunited and living in Simaon in Bihar. They are training young boys and
girls dressed in Warriors, Cavaliers, and Thunder gear how to play basketball.
The makeshift backboard in this tiny village court has a small NBA logo. Their
daughter takes and makes a jump-shot. The film ends on the emotion of
basketball making people in India happy.
But even this end doesn’t solve my larger qualm with the
film’s use of basketball. Earlier in this movie, viewers are led to believe
that Madhav and Riya are two of the best basketball players for their college
teams, and thus, some of the most exciting prospects in New Delhi. Madhav was
six feet tall and still putting NBA dunk contests to shame – and their decision
to “mature” away from the game was a massive waste of talent. Did they not wish
to play for state or national tournaments? Were they not invited for India
camps?
I understand that for both of them, basketball didn’t really
need to be a priority: Riya’s family is rich enough for her to not need a
basketball career to make a living, and later, she is able to earn an
independent and presumably high-paying job for herself. Madhav’s priorities are
duty towards his village and his community, and basketball for both of them
becomes only a thing of the past.
Even as the young village players are playing the game in
the end, there is no real talk of it as a feasible potential career, or of how
Indian basketball can change lives. Instead of having a CGI Bill Gates in the
movie, the producers should have invested in inviting cameos from Indian
basketball stars like the Singh Sisters, all of whom are from a small-town
Varanasi (where much of the film was shot, pretending to be Patna) and made it
to the national team. Sure, it is great to idolise LeBron and Curry, but what
about Amjyot Singh or Amritpal Singh, who made it from small cities or villages
to become international professional players?
Of course, the other issue is the viewers’
suspension-of-disbelief. Most of the basketball scenes are believable, but
Madhav’s ridiculous athleticism is simply too far-fetched. The action
coordinators for those scenes should’ve toned down on those McGrady/Carter
dunks a little bit. There are no signs of basketball facilities in Simraon
except for the court Madhav built himself. It was hard to believe how he became
that good: even Satnam Singh – India’s first NBA draftee from a small Punjabi
village Ballo Ke – had to be recruited and trained at the Ludhiana Basketball
Academy at age 10. I’m not saying that the Madhav backstory isn’t possible; I
just feel that the writers missed an opportunity in telling us that story
altogether. Hey, if he’s that good,
what the hell is he doing playing for Steven’s? Why isn’t he getting a call-up
from India? NCAA? The D-League?
All minor issues aside, I’m glad that a movie so invested in
basketball and NBA got made in India – even if the rest of the film was pretty
much an airball. Beyond the basketball-as-a-vehicle-for-romance storyline in Half Girlfriend most fans won’t be
seeing any more similarities between this film and Kuch Kuch Hota Hai. Arjun Kapoor and Shraddha Kapoor – I have to
report – are not captivating stars like Shah Rukh Khan and Kajol, even though
their basketball skills are far more advanced.
Basketball is new to Bollywood, but guess what: every
Bollywood film to incorporate basketball – Kuch
Kuch Hota Hai, Koi Mil Gaya, and Dhoom
2 – has been a superhit. The game is a lucky charm to Indian cinema. Half Girlfriend, despite being the film
version of James Harden’s defence, has enjoyed positive box office collection
since its release. Will basketball help it have an impact like its predecessors?
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