<a href="http://www.hindustantimes.com/2006/Mar/26/181_1658958,00110003.htm">http://www.hindustantimes.com/2006/Mar/26/181_1658958,00110003.htm</a><br><span style="font-style: italic;"><span style="font-style: italic;"><span style="font-style: italic;">
<span style="font-style: italic;"><br></span></span></span></span>The Hindustan Times<br><span style="font-style: italic;"><span style="font-style: italic;"><span style="font-style: italic;"><span style="font-style: italic;">
</span><br></span></span>Being Cyrus</span> surprises, engrosses<br><br>HT City/ Vinayak Chakravorty<br><br>New Delhi, March 25, 2006<br><br><strong><font color="#ff80c0" size="3">Being Cyrus<br></font>Cast:</strong> Naseeruddin Shah, Dimple Kapadia, Saif Ali Khan, Boman Irani, Simone Singh, Manoj Pahwa
<br><strong>Direction:</strong> Homi Adajania<br><strong>Rating</strong>: ***<br><br>Five minutes into <em>Being Cyrus</em>,
and you realise why the debutant director probably chose to make this
film in English. It's not just his language of communication that's
niche, his celluloid idiom itself is hatke — <em>poora hatke (different - completely different).<br></em><br><em>Being Cyrus</em>
is quite unlike anything that you have seen on the Indian screen. If
Indian alternate cinema in English was reaching a point of slump of
late, this film should be the veritable kick in its shin.<br><br>Debutant
Adajania sets the mood from the very first frame with peculiar panache.
His is a cinematic style that's irreverently wicked, brimming with a
tickle of humour that edges on the black.<br><br>Adajania's narrative
swings between picturesque Panchgani and Mumbai. A young man Cyrus
(Saif Ali Khan) arrives at the Sethna household in Panchgani, to learn
pottery from Dinshaw Sethna, a recluse and retired veteran artist.
Dinshaw lives with his wife Katy (Dimple Kapadia) who, as the voiceover
tells us, doesn't believes in 'eye contact' — she prefers 'breast
contact' with any man she comes across straightaway. Back in Mumbai,
the Sethnas own a residential building — it belongs to Dinshaw's father
(Honey Chhaya) actually, a neglected old man who is tormented by his
younger son Farokh (Boman Irani) and daughter-in-law Tina (Simone
Singh), who live with him.<br><br>Things aren't all rosy of course on
the Sethna family front, we soon discover along with Cyrus. But things
aren't what you expect either in this film. Post interval, as the film
races to a bizarre climax, a new, dark dimension to the tale will
emerge.<br><br><em>Being Cyrus</em> is a film that teases its viewers —
in the way it unfolds in layers, in the way it keeps you guessing. But
probably Adajania's biggest tease play lies in having successfully made
a film that defies genres — you can't pin down <em>Being Cyrus</em> as any particular 'type' of movie.<br><br>Performance-wise,
half of Adajania's battle was won with his casting. Talking
individually about the actors would be giving away nuances of the
characters — I'm not getting into it. Put simply, it's a perfect
credits roster.<br><br>Watch the film. Watch out for its director.<br>