Starring: Tom Alter,Ishita Sharma,Girija Oak
Director: Shashi Silgudia
Producer: Subhash Ghai
Banner: Mukta Searchlight Films
Music: Shashi
Rating: 2.25/5
In the clamorous clutter of releases  this week, “Cycle Kick” stands out for being the least  fashionable/trendy and the most original. Yes, it has its flaws – it is  excessively syrupy in places and often amateurish in parts. But the  sum-total of the components adds up to a heartwarming take on  coming-of-age in the back of the beyond.
In fact, the qualities of mawkishness  and over-simplification only add to the film’s simplicity of purpose and  transparency of presentation.
Debutant director Shashi Sudigada  transports us into the world of the young in a sleepy scenic seaside  town. Unlike the hip boys and girls in some other recent young-is-fun  films where the students seem to belong to Archies comic books rather  than real life, the protagonists in “Cycle Kick” crave for the simple  pleasures of life.
That one glimpse of the girl from the  window, that stolen hug with your adorable little sibling (there are two  such moments squeezed into the baggy narration), and a ride on the  bicycle through the dusty lanes.
The bicycle acquires a strange life of  its own. It’s almost like the hero beyond the human. In its recreation  of world of simple pleasures of the young and the confused, “Cycle Kick”  echoes Vittorio de Sica’s “Bicycle Thieves”. There is a bedrock of  sincerity in the presentation carried to some depths of lucidity by the  fabulous locations and the spirit of kinship, camaraderie and  sportsmanship that runs in a soporific trickle through the quaint film,  like a stream that isn’t really bothered about where it is heading.
The supple screenplay centres on a  stolen bicycle and the two protagonists Ramu(Malayalam actor Nishan) and  Ali (Sunny Hinduja) who claim a mutual ownership of the in-demand  bicycle.
Parts of the film’s romantic tracks and  the rivalry between the low-income school and the ‘high’ school recall  Mansoor Ali Khan’s “Jo Jeeta Wohi Sikandar”. These faint echoes do not  take away from the film’s positive energy, its artless candour and its  penchant for a state of equanimity in the narration that strives to  achieve neither an under nor an over statement.
Shot in the tranquil seaside town of  Sindhugarh in coastal Maharashtra, the virgin locations lend a  sun-kissed freshness to the goings-on, as does the cast.
Nishan as the cycling dreamer,  protective elder brother and love-stuck Romeo brings an endearing  sincerity to the proceedings. His relationship with his kid-brother  (Dwij Yadav) underlines the film’s most precious moments. The man-to-man  talk between the siblings on women makes you smile.
An undercurrent of naivete characterizes  the film. Some of the cast is rather stiff before the camera. But there  is that fine veteran actor Tom Alter effortlessly making a space for  himself as the football coach, echoing Naseeruddin Shah’s role in Nagesh  Kukunoor’s “Iqbal”.
Indeed it won’t be erroneous to describe  “Cycle Kick” as a successor to “Iqbal”. This film carries a heavy  hangover of the earlier film. But does so with grace and honesty.
“Cycle Kick” is not quite the  kick-in-the-groin take on the non-urban youth’s aspirations that “Iqbal”  so successfully happened to be. But it has its heart in the right  place. And it doesn’t puts its foot in its mouth.