A bunch of college guys – Rajesh (Kiran Kumar), Baldev (Narendranath) and Raghu (Pran) and others – accompanied by their strict ex-Army Colonel in-charge (Pran, again) land up at the same guest house where Professor Laxmi (Sonia Sahni), a misandrist, has camped along with her assistant, Sister Sophia (Meena Roy), a nun, and her girls - Leela (Reena Roy), Saroj (Jayshree T.) and Lata (Meena T.). While the boys start wooing the girls the elders end up falling for each other while trying to keep them apart and running parallel there is a plot of Sophia’s father, Thomas (Barlaj Sahni) being murdered in the same village but later revealed to be alive and imprisoned by the local strongman and the villagers fighting him to retain the treasure that was found while excavating an old temple in the area. The three boys end up supporting the villagers and alongside there is a ghost that is out on a killing spree.
The multiple plotlines converge towards the end and the mystery unravels but at its core Jangal Mein Mangal is an unapologetic madcap entertainer made better with 1970s’ campiness thanks to tie-dye, bellbottoms and the multicolored shiny shirts, et al. The film had a few memorable Shankar-Jaikishan tunes like Tum kitni khoosurat ho (Kishore Kumar, lyrics- Gulshan Bawra) and utterly absurd Ae baagh ki kaliyon sharam karo (Md. Rafi, Kishore Kumar, lyrics: Hasrat Jaipuri) with lines like – Hai rang nirala gori ka, Hai ghosla sar pe panchhi ka, aur usme anda murgi ka murgi ka, haye kya hai tukda barfi ka barfi ka (Her complexion is rare, she has a cuckoo’s nest on her head with a hen’s egg in it, what a barfi (dense milk based sweet) this one is). On the popular blog Memsaab Story, Memsaab calls Jangal Mein Mangal ‘zany’ and offers Scooby Doo and Friends as a brilliant comparison to the antics in the film, which pretty much sums it up.
It is often said that the template that mainstream Hindi cinema or Bollywood adapts often renders it impossible for the narrative to include any messaging but that isn’t entirely true. Even in an absurd film like Jangal Mein Mangal where characters are typical and barely layered such as an old-school Colonel can’t be anything but a strict disciplinarian and a misogynist, the college boys mischievous, bratty and sex starved, the girls coy and playful and the spinster lady professor distant, there are instances where not only does the character transform but also offers social messaging. The scenes where Pran’s Colonel Das confesses to Laxmi that men should change their attitude with time, the three good for nothing college boys prance into the thakur’s den and command the local corrupt cop (Bharat Kapoor) to not harm the villagers and such illustrate that social messaging doesn’t need to be high brow.
Be it Masti, No Entry (2005) or Kya Kool Hai Hum or Hunterrr (2015) most sex comedies end up standardizing men as perverts and women as objects, thought the last in the list did try, and to some extent succeed, in treating the female characters as something more than items, which is disappointing thing considering that it’s been over forty years since a Sabse Bada Sukh and Jangal Mein Mangal. Comparatively recent films try to be cool and contemporary with copious amounts of sexual moments and yet don’t achieve an iota of what Jangal Mein Mangal managed even without trying.
- Gautam Chintamani is the author of the best-selling Dark Star: The Loneliness of Being Rajesh Khanna (2014) and Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak – The Film That Revived Hindi Cinema (2016)
Cinema Obscura-A weekly space that celebrates films obscured between the unforgettable and the long forgotten.
Picture source
- https://i.ytimg.com/vi/oqZbAr6lilU/maxresdefault.jpg
- http://www.pransikand.com/photo/movies/image13.jpg
- http://www.pransikand.com/photo/movies/image65.jpg
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