The opening scene of director Zoya
Akhtar's Luck By Chance sets the mood for the two-and-half hours or so that follow. In this scene Konkona Sensharma who stars as a struggling actress
finds herself being indirectly and indecently propositioned by a sleazy film producer. It's a humorous scene because the casting couch is one of
Bollywood's oldest clichés and because Aly Khan who plays the producer in question, performs that scene remarkably, giving her just the kind of
smarmy lines you know you should never believe. But that scene is also dark and disturbing at the same time, especially when the camera stays on
Konkona's uncomfortable expression in the end. You realise she wants the job so bad, she's going to accept his advances knowing fully well she's
doing something wrong.
Luck By Chance is an insider look at Bollywood, and about making it in the big, bad world of showbiz. And indeed it's a
bad world. A world where friends are used and abused, where lovers are replaced overnight, where mothers manipulate their daughters, and where you're
only as important as your last hit. At the same time, director Zoya Akhtar's affection for the film industry is evident in her comic, often lovable
take on the business and its people who she's observed so closely as an insider herself. The film then is a deeply layered portrait of an industry
quite unlike any other, a sharp observation of the grime behind the glamour, the insecurities behind the smiling faces.
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