2018 is the year of  bio-pics in Bollywood. Barely have we gotten  out  of the two back-to-back hockey sagas Soorma and Gold when it’s time to  relinquish the  sportive spirit  for  a spot of  sunshine in  the literary world.

First things first What shines the brightest in the trailer of Manto is the  art direction and  the  cinematography. Swathed in sepia tones and bright rusty colours denoting a time that has clocked   the past but not been forgotten  in the present,   the  LOOK  of   the film is  so vivid and nostalgic,  it conveys  both regret and urgency.

Female directors, be it Reema Kagti in Gold or now Nandita Das in Manto reflexively gravitate towards the correct  colours to convey a past that could well return sometime  very soon  in the future. Manto’s controversial writing, his vivid description of sexual violence and political turmoil  have been discussed and damned for  decades. He is relevant to our times even if we have moved  on to Chetan Bhagat.

Manto never fought shy of describing bodily fluids and their outflow from one individual to another.  Nandita Das’s film seems  to focus on how Manto’s writing and his unorthodox views  on love sex intimacy and  religion  influenced his own life and those around him.

It may be the year of  bio-pics. But by jove, I want to see how Nawzuddin pulls off two such  ideologically  opposed personalities as  Manto and Thackeray during the same  year.