Fri. Apr 19th, 2024
Kadvi Hawa's movie review!

Sanjay Mishra starrer movie titled ‘Kadvi Hawa‘ which is directed by the Nila Madhab Panda. The movie is set in a small village of Rajasthan, Mahua. The movie will be focusing on the story of the old blind retired farmer, Deu (the role played by the actor Sanjay Mishra) and the apprehensions towards the drastic climate change and that is because of the global warming. In the movie his son, Mukund (the role played by the Bhupesh Mishra) has a huge amount of loan which he has to repay to the bank.

In the movie, Gunu Babu (the role played by the Ranvir Shorey) will be essaying the role of a loan recovery officer who is also known as a Yamdut- The God of Death in the village. However, his alias is not in a funny way but that is a very depressing one. Gunu is from an Odisha and he has already sacrificed his house and his father in the flood. Now, his main aim that his remaining family to move with him before the next cloud bursts his life. It is just not an easy thing to recover the money from someone and that too from someone who himself is exhausted from his life. By the time he realizes that this will be a very tough for him to recover his money from the villagers. He has also offered him a hefty commission for this.

The remaining story of the movie will be dealing it with the how this deal helps and destroys the already messed up the situations in both of their lives. There both the hands are handcuffed with the chains of nature. The movie is just not about the tackles the climate change but it will also show that poor state farmer is in the crisp 100 minutes of a runtime. During the movie, the director will explain that the why Gunu is in Rajasthan, however, the one thing is very much clear that he wants the dwell in the area where there is no fear of water destroying people’s lives.

The movie has a scene in which the teacher asks the student that how many seasons are there? The boy replied that there are only two seasons and that is Winter and Summer and the teacher asked that what about the Monsoon? On this, he replied that it does rain twice or thrice in a year sometimes in the winter and sometimes in the summer. However, it is the truth that we all know that the scarcity of rain and it is not a laughing matter now.

Later, Gunu has opted to relocate to the place which is miles away from home because of the lure of a double commission on very recovery on behalf of his bank and it bents upon forcing the farmers of the village Mahua to pay up so that he can one day make money to return to his part  of the world and will move to his family, a widowed mother, wife and two daughters to a safer place.

In the movie, Gunu’s coastal village will learn some way into the movie and that was wiped off the face of the earth by the sea and by talking his father along to a watery grave. However, his mother has left the hope that her husband will return someday. Gunu’s move to the drought-prone Bundelkhand is an act of self-preservation that reeks of extreme duress.

The movie will be talking about the several problems in its limited sweep. The movie will be talking on the matter of climate change, extreme weather conditions, the agrarian crisis, the intensity of the banking system, farmer suicides. The movie will also reveal the magnitude of the environmental disaster that stares us in the face through the eyes of wisely man who can not see but can not see but he can feel and knows the enormity of the challenges ahead as much as through the scalded conscience of a heartless bank employee who pursues his quarries with the dourness of a bloodhound.

The movie ‘Kadvi Hawa’ has been designed in such a way to provoke contemplation and action and the movie has a mission that it achieves without any of the serious slips. It is requested to watch the movie because it is an important film that will offer an essential takeaway.