IF you didnât know the source material of Rajat Kapoorâs play, Karamjale Brothers, before walking into it, then chances are high youâd be confused for some time while watching it, too. Because, an adaptation of Fyodor Dostoevskyâs The Brothers Karamazov, it is less Russian vodka and more desi daru. It retains the originalâs story and spiritârevolving around a patriarch and his four sons; the identity of his murderer; the questions of free will, rationality, theism (Dostoevskyâs eternal preoccupation)â but, set in Delhi, it unfolds in a hilarious, quasi-farcical tone.
Karamjale Brothers itches for a chance to crack a (silly) jokeâits tomfoolery makes the play hilarious, compelling, and endearing. Here, Dostoevsky isnât treated as a highpriest of modern realismâsombre, sincere, severeâbut like a dost, a friend, with whom you can have a swig (or three). In a crucial scene, when the cops bust a party, a character says, âYeh Noida waalon ko bulana hi nahin chahiye tha (We shouldnât have called these Noida-types).â The third Karamazov brother, Alyosha, becomes Alok (or âAlooâ), who hears the compliment, âTu toh sweet haiâyouâre like a sweet potato.â A forlorn lover says, âIshq ne humein nikamma kar diya, warna humaari bhi Kamla Nagar mein kapde ki dukaan thi.â
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Soft Ruins
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