This Article is From Oct 12, 2014

Amitabh Bachchan's 10 Most Underrated Performances

Amitabh Bachchan's 10 Most Underrated Performances

Clockwise, Big B in stills from Saudagar, Parwana, Sanjog and Bandhe Haath

Islamabad:

He's been the Angry Young Man and the Shahenshah of the Hindi silver screen. But in his over four decade-long film career, Amitabh Bachchan, who turned 72 on Saturday, has also delivered some performances which have been underrated.

Here's a look at top ten such works of the thespian:

Saudagar: Sudhendu Roy's memorable 1973 film, about a mercenary gur seller who marries village widow Nutan only to exploit her gur-making talent, is a classical study of patriarchal avarice. Big B, with his dhoti hitched to his kneecaps, looked every inch the authentic palm-climbing toddy merchant, enacted one of his best roles to date.

Parwana: The jealous and possessive victim of unrequited love who kills the girl Yogeeta Bali's father (Om Prakash) when he refuses to let him marry her, Parwana saw the Big B as a desperate lover, filled with sweaty angst. .

Bandhe Haath: This psycho-thriller directed by OP Ralhan came just before the Big B shot to fame with Zanjeer. He played the double role of a thief and a poet. This film brought the Big B face-to-face with the luscious Mumtaz.

Sanjog: The 1071 film focussed on the very talented Mala Sinha, who is married to and separated from the character played by Big B. Many years later, she returns in his life as his boss. It is a South Indian melodrama, directed by SS Balan, where the Big B displayed his acumen for surrendering his ego to a character.

Bemisaal: Of all the films that the Big B and Hrishikesh Mukherjee collaborated on, this one under-performed the most.Big B played the faithful adopted son in a middle-class family with a dark and dangerous past. The film was also notable for his chemistry with Raakhee who played his best friend's wife.

Faraar: Big B played a fugitive on the run who takes shelter in his former sweetheart's home where she's now happily married to her policeman husband. The bond that the fugitive forms with his beloved's little son, was astonishing in its filial authenticity. Faraar, a flop, remains forgotten today.

Alaap: The unsuccessful Hrishikesh Mukherjee-Big B collaboration oozed despondency and despair. Big B was utterly credible as a hotshot lawyer's son who prefers to spend time with a classical singer rather than practising his father's craft.

Main Azaad Hoon: Tinu Anand, one of the Big B's closest friends, fashioned this desi remake of Frank Capra's Meet John Doe. Big B personified the rise of Everyman to a national hero. It was a rousing performance rendered to perfection.

Manzil: This film, which brought the Big B together with director Basu Chatterjee, featured the actor as an over-reacher filled with destructive middle-class dreams of affluence. The shades of grey enhanced his performance.

Nishabd: As a 60-plus man desperately in love with his daughter's friend, Big B conveyed all the anguish of a hopeless passion, plus more. His monologue of guilt and repentance at the end as he looks straight into the camera is among his most accomplished performances in the post Mohabbatein phase of his career when he entered the second innings of his career. Ram Gopal Varma, take a bow.

.