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  Dak Bangla (1987)
Cast: Swapna, Ranjeet, Narendarnath, Mazhar Khan
Director: Keshu Ramsay
Music Director: Bappi Lahiri
Synopsis:
a ghastly Mummified Zombie lurks in the dungeon below waiting...
Reviewed by: Omar Khan
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The film begins, like so many Ramsay’s with a scene of an amorous couple making out in a typically imposing structure – The Dak Bangla. The couple are interrupted in their foreplay by some strange sounds and upon investigation it appears that the sounds seem to be emanating from a hidden dungeon below. All is revealed soon enough as something ghastly suddenly emerges from below to slaughter the horrified and fleeing couple.

Time moves on and the attention focuses on a family quite unrelated to the Dak Bangla but who fate is soon to draw into its murky aura. The head of the family Ajay has been job hunting and finally he has to make a decision – scouring the papers he finds very few opportunities and just as he is about to give up he notices an ad for the position of manager at the notorious Dak Bangla. He isn’t too thrilled about leaving the city but has a family to support, so decides to accept the job. When Ajay and his wife arrive at the adjacent village to the Dak Bangla they find that the villagers are incredibly rude to them when they find that Ajay is to take up a position at the Dak Bangla. The villagers here despise the presence of the Dak Bangla in their midst just as the folk of Transylvania despised Dracula’s castle on its soil. Anyway, Ajay is undeterred as he has a much needed job at hand.

The influence of Hammer’s excellent Dracula – Prince of Darkness shines through in the following scenes where the couple arrive at the mysterious Dak Bangla and find that dinner has been laid out for them beforehand and then they discover that their luggage mysteriously finds its way to their appointed bedrooms. It is very clear that someone has been expecting the couple and have made prior arrangements accordingly. Ajay is quite happy though but suffers some strange visions and nightmares which suggest that something terrible once happened here. Gorgeous niece Swapna arrives from college for a vacation and brings along some of her girlfriends, and two guys manage to tag along unexpectedly. It's not long before Swapna starts to feel as though she has been to this Dak Bangla before and her dreams are also filled with disturbing visions of herself being murdered and later she and her boyfriend stumble upon a sort of “Book of the Dead” – written in blood, which expalins the dark secrets of the hidden Taekhana. It appears as though Swapna is the reincarnated version of the ex-Rajkumari who once ruled over these parts.

The story goes that the free spirited Rajkumari had foolishly decided to stop her entourage in an area known for its devil worshipers. As if stopping in the area wasn’t bad enough, the Rajkumari skips off for a frolic in the local shrubs without informing anyone and is soon attacked by one of the local goons known as Ozo. The Rajkumari survives but Ozo is apprehended and sentenced to a most horrible death following which he is to be walled into the Taekhana. However, later one of the devil worshipping overlords manages to dig up Ozo’s rotting remains and proceeds to mummify him and then, through the great dark powers he brings the ghastly dead thing back to life triggering a gruesome cycle of revenge. It seems that the two of them were caught at it yet again and walled back into the Taekhana but clearly something stirs in the dark domain below and with the arrival of Swapna who is the reincarnated Rajkumari – a most gruesome revenge is kicked into motion.

The shady chowkidar of the Dak Bangla who we saw stuffing a corpse into a closet earlier turns out to be the head of a criminal gang who have just robbed a bank and who now all congregate at the Dak Bangla ostensibly to find refuge from the law but actually to provide killing fodder for the marauding Mummy cum Zombie that is unleashed from the bowels of hell in the Taekhana below. Ajay, Swapna and friends have already discovered that the Dak Bangla is not a place to spend a further night but now they are held captive by the criminals who hold them hostage not realizing that they themselves are in extreme danger for staying at the Dak Bangla.

Soon the ghastly Mummy with a strangely glowing head and telekinetic powers emerges from the Depths and wreaks a most grisly revenge on anyone who happens to be ill fated enough to come into its blood stained path. There are a bunch of quite well staged killings including a man whose head is impaled on a spike sticking out of a wall, a head being squashed to head including eyes popping out and jets of blood flying off in various directions. One unfortunate soul is pulled underground by the mummy and eaten! However as the body count mounts and desperation levels reach breaking point, a chink in the armour of the mummified Zombie is discovered and Swapna’s dashing young suitor aided by a robust Ajay manage to give the Mummy a worthy fight in an exciting climax to what is on the whole an above average Ramsay horror yarn.

The strengths of the movie are in that some members of the cast perform their roles rather well including Swapna in her role and the actor playing Ajay also does well. The locations are stock Ramsay stuff with the imposing Dak Bangla with its swinging chandeliers and dodgy electrical circuits. There is the usual Ramsay horror masala including disco dancing in the outdoors, a striptease, long protracted rape scenes, improbable monsters, flashbacks, fangled folklore cum religion…the usual concoction. It’s a fairly run of the mill effort; nothing outstanding nor particularly innovative. It is interesting to note though that the biggest influences on this film are clearly the old Hammer stuff especially Dracula – Prince of Darkness rather than the newer wave of Elm Street and Evil Dead clones. The standout scene from Dak Bangla is a scene that is also inspired by the resurrection scene in Prince of Darkness. In that film, the blood of a victim is poured onto the dusty ashes of Dracula’s remains breathing deathly life into them once again. In this film the overlord slashes his own wrists in a trance like state, sending mini jets of warm blood onto the zombie in order to bring it back to life!

Another big factor in this film being elevated to the above average category is the absence of the insufferable Jagdeep, unbelievable though it may seem. Clearly he must have been too busy to sign on for this particular film and his absence in the cast is one of the major plus points of the film though the dapper and equally unfunny Narendranath is very much in evidence though thankfully even his role is somewhat tapered. The Mummified Zombie is rather impressive though and a good thing that the Ramsay’s favourite faithful hairy beast was given a well-earned break.


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