Thursday, April 18, 2024
ADVT 
Exclusive

Beeba Boys : An Exclusive with Deepa Mehta

By Jorge Ignacio Castillo, 24 Sep, 2015
  • Beeba Boys : An Exclusive with Deepa Mehta

Gangs, gunplay, sociopaths in suits, Paul Gross in a ponytail. Deepa Mehta goes deep in her next film.

 

While it never really went away, gang violence in Surrey reached its peak at the end of the past decade and beginning of this one. For a few months it seemed every week someone would get gunned down in drug-fueled turf wars.

In what it seems like a departure from her gentler, more sentimental output, writer/director Deepa Mehta goes deep into the subject in Beeba Boys.

While never abandoning its cultural roots, the film is reminiscent of Martin Scorsese’s most crime-soaked filmography, with a drop of Scarface and Hong Kong noir Infernal Affairs.

While inspired by real events – some may recognize known criminals photobombing camera crews – the film is also interested in talking about the immigrant experience from a fresh point of view. Mehta spent almost a year doing research on gang warfare for the script, mostly by reading non-fiction and the Vancouver Sun, but also Daaku.

“I met a former gangster”, reveals Mehta, “that’s now an immigration lawyer. According to him, this is a phenomenon very culturally specific. This is not the Mafia, the Triads or the Hell’s Angels. Punjabi gangsters are very rooted in their culture. The boys live at home with their parents and they have strong ties with their mothers. Can you imagine a Hell’s Angel mother feeding her son? I don’t think so.”

The Beeba Boys in question are a group of sharply-dressed 20-somethings of Indian descent. The leader, Jeet, is simultaneously a loving family man, a proud Sikh, and the most coldblooded gangster this side of the Fraser River. Jeet is a thriving drugs and ammo trafficker, so much so, he wants to take control of the entire area. In order to succeed, he must take down Robbie Grewal, a veteran gangster who is as tactical as Jeet is hot-headed.

The wild card in this conflict is Nep, the newest member of the Beeba Boys, who may have an agenda of his own. The game they play is uniquely dangerous. Punjabi gangsters life expectancy doesn’t go beyond 30.

MEET THE BOYS

For the main roles, Mehta went with Bollywood up-and-comer Randeep Hooda (previously seen antagonizing Salman Khan in Kick) and local credit Ali Momen (The L.A. Complex). The supporting cast is filled with recognizable names: Wes Anderson’s favourite Waris Ahluwalia as Jeet’s right hand, Inception’s Dileep Rao as the proverbial cop aiming to take Jeet down and Canadian film staple Paul Gross (Men with Brooms) as an sleazy associate.

While there have been documentaries dealing with gang violence southeast of Metro Vancouver, Beeba Boys is the first fictionalized feature to tackle thesubject. While the boys look straight out of GQ, the violence is not glamourized in any form: It’s ugly and messy. In Beeba Boys, every death counts and reverberates through the rest of the film.

“I love the genre”, confesses Mehta. “The Godfather, GoodFellas, Reservoir Dogs, Infernal Affairs… They are all in my consciousness. While Beeba Boys is a genre film, it’s also different because it’s Indo-Canadian. It hasn’t been done before.”

The structure of Beeba Boys is somewhat unusual. For the first third of the film, theaudience is led to believe Jeet, the classic anti-hero, is the one to follow. From his shadow emerges the more morally-inclined Nep, who ultimately becomes the one who takes us all the way to the end.
 

THE IMMIGRANT EXPERIENCE

Deepa Mehta’s last three films are aesthetically quite different from each other. The underrated Heaven on Earth (2008) was shot with in 16mm, a handheld camera and black-and-white. The adaptation of Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children (2012) was a glossy production filled with warm tones and curated compositions. Beeba Boys is a more dynamic piece, modern-looking and sharply edited.

“Every film dictates its own style. Heaven on Earth was intimate; it had to look as if you were in somebody’s house. Beeba Boys was shot entirely with steadycam, because I wanted to have a lot of movement, like the boys themselves.”

That said, Mehta would be the first to tell you the film is more closely related to the rest of her filmography than it looks likeat first sight. “Two of the elements all my films have in common are identity and immigration. That’s at the heart of Beeba Boys: It’s so important for them to be “seen” in a white-dominant society: How does a marginalized group gets recognized in this context?

When you rob people of their complexity, it becomes very difficult.”

Beyond all the thorny subjects Mehta tackled on Beeba Boys, she acknowledges having the best time making the action-packed drama: “If I don’t learn anything in the process, it’s boring. With Beeba Boys I learned about guns, I learned about
cocaine, about the mothers and children of gangsters, so much. It was fantastic.”

MORE Exclusive ARTICLES

Neeru Bajwa the Darling of Punjabi Cinema

Neeru Bajwa the Darling of Punjabi Cinema

She faced challenges and obstacles along the way, meeting them head on and through determination, talent and charm; she has proved herself and today is the darling of Punjabi cinema.

Irrfan Khan – Keeping it Simple

Irrfan Khan – Keeping it Simple

Irrfan Khan doesn’t look at all as on screen. Films like “Life of Pi” and “The Namesake,” let alone the show “In Treatment” (in which he played a withered retiree), give the impression that Khan is deep into middle age.

An Afternoon with Jason Kenny

An Afternoon with Jason Kenny

Known as one of the most powerful men in Canada, Jason Kenny, the Minister of Citizenship, Immigration and Multiculturalism has been an integral member of Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Cabinet and is redefining Canada’s immigration policy. According to public perception and media experts, he is also a likely contender to lead the Conservative Party and perhaps, fill the role of Prime Minister one day.

Jason Garrison: Vancouver Canucks’ Newest Star

Jason Garrison: Vancouver Canucks’ Newest Star

DARPAN Magazine had the exclusive opportunity of sitting down with Jason Garrison and learning more about the newest Canuck. Garrison, who was born in Burnaby and raised in White Rock, British Columbia, says “it means a lot” to be playing back “in your hometown. Growing up, I was always a Canucks fan.”

Squamish Valley Music Festival Lineup Announced: Eminem, Bruno Mars and Arcade Fire

Squamish Valley Music Festival Lineup Announced: Eminem, Bruno Mars and Arcade Fire

Considered as one of BC’s best outdoor music festivals, the Squamish Valley Music Festival announced Wednesday morning had some pretty big names in its lineup. Scheduled as a three day event in August, the festival is being projected as the biggest till date.

"My Soul needs Comedy" Akshay Kumar

Movies like OMG: Oh My God, Special 26, and Baby have helped him diversify from a mere action hero to an actor with substance, and though he totally adores this action-drama kind of serious cinema, his soul still craves for its usual dose of comedy, says Akshay Kumar in a candid chat.

PrevNext