
I was inspired to write this blog
post after watching a Bollywood movie called Jolly LLB, which was an excellent
social satire of Indian legal system. It is based on the true story of Sanjeev Nanda case, when a rich and
powerful businessman killed 5 poor laborers sleeping on a sidewalk and then
walked scot-free thanks to the loopholes in the law fully exploited by the defense
and conveniently ignored by the prosecution. This movie resonated to me because
the situations, characters, places, urban fabric, apathy and class struggles of
modern India (similar to almost all other development countries) were portrayed
without any sugar coating or emotional melodrama.
Jolly LLB., also showcases the frustrations
within the Indian penal courts, the way lawyers nickel and dime it and the way
rich clients can always go free by manipulating/removing evidence of their
crimes by bribing police officials and hiring expensive defense attorneys. Although
a good laugh, this movie was a very crucial reality check of the decaying
justice system in subcontinent that keeps getting worse. I chose to blog about
this movie because cinema and theatre are two very important tools to portray the
underlying development themes in any country and Jolly LLB., is a well-done
example of that. I recommend this movie to everyone. Watching it won’t be the
proverbial life changing experience but it will definitely teach you a bit or
two about the value of justice and how it’s miscarried in fact not provided at
all to the most needy in the darkest quarters of the world.
In Pakistan, I have seen lawyers acting as thugs and operating as a deranged fraternity on multiple occasions who will do anything to protect their interests even if it comes at the cost of making a joke of the very institution that they are representing.
So what do you think? Will you watch this movie? Have you ever had an interesting experience with police/ any form of law in any developing or developed country? Please leave your valuable comments in the section below.