Monday, July 6, 2026
ADVT 
Bollywood

June: Hard as nails yet sensitive

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Jun, 2021 10:57 AM
  • June: Hard as nails yet sensitive

June (Marathi film of Planet Marathi OTT), Cast: Nehha Pendse, Siddharth Menon, Saurabh Pachauri, Nilesh Divekar, Kiran Karmarkar; Direction: Suhrud Godbole and Vaibhav Khisti; Rating: * * * (three stars)

BY VINAYAK CHAKRAVORTY

Suhrud Godbole and Vaibhav Khisti's coming-of-age film is hard as nails while conveying its message, yet sensitive while driving home the point. The script focuses on issues such as bullying, teenage confusion, self-harm and suicide, and also touches upon wider issues as sexism and generation gap. The storytelling is commendable for the way it deals with the gamut of subjects within a runtime of a little over an hour and a half without losing focus, although certain situations and characters could seem unidimensional.

Nikhil Mahajan's script would seem relevant also because it is based in the small town of Aurangabad. Insecurity, uncertainty and angst among youngsters can often be more acute within this age group in smalltown India than the metros, owing to drastic conflict of culture and mindsets.

The story unfolds in an Aurangabad housing society, and the mood of conflict is set right away. A young girl Neha (Nehha Pendse) drives into the society from Pune, to move into one of the flats. As she lights up, the 50-something society president Jaiswal (Nilesh Divekar) tells her women are not allowed to smoke publicly within society premises.

The story, of course, isn't about Neha's clash with conservatism that the likes of Jaiswal define -- though that forms an interesting sub plot. The focus, rather, is on Neel (Siddharth Menon), the youngster who gave Neha vague directions about the location of her flat in the society when she arrived, confusing her.

As we step into Neel's world we discover he is in an angry, depressed space, tormented by the suicide of his hostel roommate, for which he holds himself responsible in a way, as well as the constant clashes with his father, who has been concealing the fact to neighbours that he failed engineering exam.

Mahajan's writing is impressive for the way it builds up Neel's dark world, and the entry of Neha lets the young boy find a companion he can talk to. The screenplay accords Neha a subtext of her own, which suitably runs as an undercurrent story but never distracts from the basic plot.

The film uses the smalltown set-up as an important third character, along with Neha and Neel. It's not just Jaiswal, who defines the neighbourhood bully and who wants people to follow what he believes is the moral code of conduct in life, but we find specs of smalltown mindset in Neel's father (Kiran Karmarkar), too, in the way he tries dominating his son. The father-son relationship lays down a familiar, albeit dramatic, track of generation gap. Interesting vignette bring alive smalltown mindset around sexuality -- Neel's girlfriend trying to shave with her father's razor and cutting herself because Neel told her she is a "bear" and he hates the idea of having sex with her. Or, the coy reaction Neel's best friend Pritesh (Saurabh Pachauri) gives, when a girl asks him to kiss her. These are all scenes handled without going over the top with emotions.

You could spot the flaws. A few protagonists (Jaiswal comes to mind) don't get any arc at all, and fall within the purview of black-and-white characterisation. In the case of Neel's father, his change of heart in the end seems too sudden and filmi to be true. The overall sombre mood of the film, although necessary, could be discomforting for some, for there are few moments of relief.

Overall, though, "June" is convincing in what it states. Powered by a strong cast, The film represents a new wave of introspective cinema triggered by the rise of OTT culture in India, not hesitant to initiate conversations that were deemed taboo even a while ago.


 


 

MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

My Father Was Born In India And Died In India: Adnan Sami Has An Epic Reply To A Pakistani Trolls Who Questioned His Nationality

Singer Adnan Sami has replied to a social media troll, who asked the singer about his father.

My Father Was Born In India And Died In India: Adnan Sami Has An Epic Reply To A Pakistani Trolls Who Questioned His Nationality

B-Town Stars Celebrate Sibling Love On Raksha Bandhan

Bollywood celebrities like Amitabh Bachchan, Sara Ali Khan and Ajay Devgn on Thursday celebrated Raksha Bandhan with much fervour.    

B-Town Stars Celebrate Sibling Love On Raksha Bandhan

Kangana's I-Day Message: Don't Get Entangled In Personal Identities

The actress' manager and sister took to Twitter to share a video message from Kangana.

Kangana's I-Day Message: Don't Get Entangled In Personal Identities

Alia Bhatt Ties Rakhi To Karan Johar's Son Yash. The Internet Loves Pic

It's Raksha Bandhan, and actress Alia Bhatt took out time to tie a rakhi on the tiny wrist of filmmaker Karan Johar's son Yash.

Alia Bhatt Ties Rakhi To Karan Johar's Son Yash. The Internet Loves Pic

Inside The Bachchans' Raksha Bandhan Celebrations. See Pics

The Bachchan family celebrated Rakha Bandhan with much gusto and Shweta Bachchan's Instagram account is the proof of the same. The Bachchan daughter took to Instagram to share an adorable picture of her with brother Abhishek Bachchan.

Inside The Bachchans' Raksha Bandhan Celebrations. See Pics

Obituary: Rest In Peace, Vidya Sinha

In an era when the Bollywood heroine was getting a dash of emancipation and westernised oomph, Vidya was the sari-clad Bharatiya naari who exuded resolve and resilience on screen.

Obituary: Rest In Peace, Vidya Sinha