The Zest Of Both Worlds
Outlook|November 27, 2017

At home with commercial slapsticks as much as with ­nuanced indies, Sanjai Mishra is a heart stealer

Giridhar Jha
The Zest Of Both Worlds

STRADDLING the diametrically opposite worlds of popular and offbeat cinema is an art tricky enough even for a veteran actor to perfect. But versatility comes in handy for Sanjai Mishra, who does the balancing act between the two extreme poles with the expertise of a trapeze artiste.

On one hand, Mishra is completely at home mouthing inanities through a loud character in a comic caper of Rohit Shetty; on the other, he is equally at ease portraying a sensitive elderly man in a Manish Mundra production—a feat few of his peers are able to pull off with such conviction. The NSD alumnus now braces himself for yet another litmus test of his acting prowess with Kadvi Hawa, arguably the most important movie of his career, releasing on November 24.

Produced by Mundra’s Drishyam Films, the trail-blazing banner behind movies like Ankhon Dekhi(2014), Masaan (2015) and the Oscar-bound Newton (2017), Kadvi Hawa deals with climate change.

Directed by Nila Madhab Panda of I Am Kalam(2011) fame, it is being touted as the first Hindi movie to have tackled such a theme, in all its stark manifestations, through the central character of Mishra, who plays a 70-year-old visually-imp­aired man living in an arid zone who ­experiences how the air he breathes has turned from being a life-saver to highly toxic in his lifetime only.

This story is from the November 27, 2017 edition of Outlook.

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This story is from the November 27, 2017 edition of Outlook.

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