The joyful spirit of India and Bollywood isn’t a natural fit for film noir, but one Tamil-language classic, Sundaram Balachander’s Andha Naal, with its murder investigation and eschewal of songs, fits the bill for open-minded noir fans. Jawar Sitaraman stars as police officer Sivanandam, who is leading the investigation into the murder of Rajan (Shivaji Ganesan), a successful radio engineer shot to death in his home by his own handgun the same night the city was bombed by the Japanese. With a minimum of five suspects, Sivanandam discovers, of course, that just about everyone close to Rajan had a clear motive, and the film enacts each theory as a hypothetical flashback, while the third act interestingly veers into a political narrative that serves to debate the merits and means of gaining independence for a nation “crippled by the British Empire.” (A portrait of Gandhi even takes center stage.) A cast highlight is S. Menaka as Hema, the victim’s short-fused, unstable sister-in-law who occasionally adopts a menacing Lady MacBeth persona (she’s even caught scrubbing a damned spot). Much of the film is set in daytime, but several scenes (a moonlit assignation, the discovery of the body) make use of thick shadows and dazzling back lights.
By Michael Bayer
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