Cast: Sidharth Malhotra, Sana Saeed, Alia Bhatt
Director: Karan Johar
The hardest job on a Karan Johar film set must belong to the
cleaners, who I imagine spend most of the day on their knees scrubbing
floors, dusting furniture, and basically making sure everything is
spotless. The director’s new film, Student of the Year, is set on an
impossibly chic campus where good-looking teenagers are invariably
breaking into song or breaking into fights. Yet you’ll never spot a
carelessly strewn cola can or even a stray sheet of paper lying around
in the corridors or in the canteen. Oh those poor cleaners!
At St Teresa High School in Dehradun (think that Riverdale-like
setting of Kuch Kuch Hota Hai, only swankier), trust fund brat Rohan
(Varun Dhawan) is the coolest kid with all the hottest toys – a flaming
red Ferrari, designer togs, and the prettiest girl in school, Shanaya
(Alia Bhatt). That is, until Abhimanyu (Sidharth Malhotra) roars in on
his bike. He’s the one with modest means – which is relative in a Karan
Johar movie, because while Abhi’s family may not have enough makhan for
their parathas, he can still afford the brands. After the typical
teething troubles, the two boys become fast friends despite their
drastically different ambitions.
What tests their friendship is the Student of the Year
competition, an annual event devised by the school’s gay dean Yogendra
Vashisht (Rishi Kapoor) to pick the one student who will land a full
scholarship to an Ivy League college. Typically, however, it’s the
girl...or rather their ishq wala love for Shanaya that drives a wedge
between the friends.
Unapologetically aspirational, wearing its pedigree on its
sleeve, Student of the Year plays out in a Gossip Girl-like universe,
where feelings are surface-level and everyone’s a frenemy. The rich kids
live it up extravagantly, while the rest (and even their families)
aspire for membership into this exclusive club. In Johar’s world,
clearly your biggest crime is being poor. This is the kind of world
where the rich kid’s obnoxious dad flies half the campus to Thailand on
his private jet to attend his son’s marriage.
But it’s also true that Student of the Year doesn’t ask to be
taken seriously. This is Johar's "holiday movie"; intended to show you a
good time. So you have Glee-style introductions to the three leads in
snazzily choreographed set pieces, a soundtrack of bubblegum hits,
crisply edited sporting sequences, and outrageous humor like a track
involving the dean’s crush on a strapping (and married) football coach.
Johar’s secondary players may come off as stereotypes on paper –
the rich kid’s chamcha, the heroine’s nerdy best friend, the fat boy
everyone makes fun of, and the opportunistic girl who makes a play for
someone else’s boyfriend – but more than likely you’ll find traces of
yourself or your friends in each of them. And therein lies the film’s
secret weapon – look beyond the shiny classrooms and the sun-kissed Thai
beaches, the brightly lit song sequences and the repeated shirtless
shots of our heroes…and there’s heart to be found, particularly in the
film’s second half when Rohan and Abhi truly lean on each other.
Karan Johar displays his trademark flair for light-hearted laughs
and prettified emotions, capturing a world he knows inside out. This is
the most extravagant launch any newcomer could have asked for. Good for
them, Johar doesn’t know how to do things small.
The debutants, in turn, put their best foot forward: Sidharth
Malhotra is earnest and has a pleasing presence, while Alia Bhatt is
cute as the clueless Shanaya, if a little raw. It’s Varun Dhawan who
stands out with a confident, charming turn, able to tackle both comical
and vulnerable scenes with ease. Yet if there’s a performance that glues
together this film, it’s Rishi Kapoor’s. He never flinches in an
unusual role, playing the part for laughs yet also infusing soul into
what might have otherwise turned into a caricature.
Too long by about twenty minutes, the film could’ve done with
some tightening – perhaps the clunky treasure hunt sequence could go?
Nitpickings aside, this is a breezy, enjoyable film by a director who
knows his craft.
I'm going with three out of five for Karan Johar's Student of the
Year. If fun is what you’re seeking, you won't be disappointed.