I came out of Anurag Kashyap's No Smoking asking 'What were they thinking?' No make that 'What were they smoking?'
The movie unfolds like a bad dream and spins into a downward spiral that's unreal, incomprehensible and leaves you dazed.
The movie begins innocently enough. K (John Abraham) is a heavy smoker and an unapologetic one at that. His wife Anjali (Ayesha Takia) is fed up with his habit and is set to leave him. There are early signs of the trouble ahead, when K, in his bathtub, has a surreal dream of being lost in Siberia without his cigarettes.
But trouble starts when Anjali finally leaves him. K decides to consult a Baba to help him quit the habit.
K's life and the movie descends into chaos from here on. From the depths of the Baba's (Paresh Rawal) dungeons (for lack of proper word for it) deep in the bowels of Dharavi or some such Mumbai slum, the movie goes out of control.
You can bet it's not your average Bollywood flick. It's a flick like no other, trust me.
If this is the much touted noir genre of filmmaking, then two hours of this is enough for me.
This is self-indulgent filmmaking. It's narcissistic and vain-glorious -- that totally ignores the sort of audience that may end up watching it. It may be cheered at some out-of-the-way film festival -- but it sure won't either at a suburban multiplex nor a tent cinema in Tamil Nadu or Bihar.
And as you may have gathered, I still have no clue what the movie was about. And quite frankly, I don't want to know.
Stay as far as away from this one.
Rediff Rating: No stars