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'Thou
shalt not break' - Ambuja Cement's new 'Muskan'
TVC
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By SUJOY GHOSH
Indiantelevision.com
Team
(7 February 2008 7:30
pm)
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The
warden is reading "Project Muskan,"
while a bald, bespectacled gentleman sitting opposite
her palpates the edge of a glass full of water.
His crooked smirk tells of the game he is up to
- demolish Muskan Anathalay and build a hotel
in its site.
As
the builder gets up to leave, one of the little
boys who has seen and heard what was going on
ventures to tell him some secret but is dissuaded
by an older boy standing next to him.
But
there is something about Muskan that no one knows,
something that makes the warden and its inmates
proudly nonchalant about Project Muskan, about
its imminent demolition by Mr Chaukse.
Morning
comes, and so does Chaukse with his henchmen to
pull down the old building of Muskan. They start
by removing the old board at the entrance that
says "Muskan Anathalaya - A Ray of Hope."
With a gesture of tacit arrogance, the orphans
led by the warden look on as the ruthless builder
gives his evil signal to his bulldozing friends.
But
the first strike fizzles out; it only scares away
a pigeon that, like the little boys and girls,
has made Muskan its home. The smirk on Chaukse's
face now turns into an expression of concern and
disbelief. This time, too, the same little boy
tries to tell him something but is again silenced.
What
is it that he tries to communicate to the old
man? Some untold story about Muskan?
And
the second, third, fourth strikes
all go
in vain. Frantic and confused, Chaukse cannot
believe that the Muskan walls stand erect even
after volleys of blows. Now the nameless little
boy comes to his rescue. Pulling at his coat,
the tiny tot tells him, "The same thing happened
before - the walls didn't break."
Now,
it is the inmates' turn to whoop it up. Chaukse
has failed to steal Muskan from the children.
Review:
One of the qualities of the ad is its dramatic
rendition of the story. The tell-tale atmosphere
it creates at the start is maintained till the
climax. The characters of the builder and the
warden act as a foil to each other: the apparently
proud but essentially good warden is a perfect
counterpart to the evil but ultimately foolish
Mr Chaukse. In between them remains the little
boy of the orphanage - innocent yet knowledgeable.
The
script has been handled with finesse, and the
background score lends filmy credibility to the
story. It is filmy because it uses all the paraphernalia
of movie making to tell a simple tale in a simple
way. The tone and voice in which the message is
conveyed at the end - Ambuja Cement - Yeh
deewar nahi tutegi - adds to the overall theatricality
of the film.
Agency:
Grey Group
Production house: Ramesh Deo Productions
Running time: 60 seconds
ITV rating: * * * * *
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