More than the accent, it’s the actor’s ability to emote in front of the camera and sink his teeth into the character that makes him believable. Never does the accent feel forced or fake.Īs an audience, you are convinced that Mayur Chauhan speaks the same way. The actor uses the Saurashtra dialect to his character’s advantage. This time around, he plays Tilok, the caretaker of a public toilet who makes a living by helping people answer the nature’s call. ‘Karsandas Pay and Use’ effortlessly replaces toilet humour with dark humour, a rare feat to achieve.Īn actor with brilliant screen presence, Mayur Chauhan, who had earlier essayed a brief role in Krishnadev Yagnik’s previous blockbuster, ‘Chello Divas’ (The highest grossing Gujarati film), as a Saurashtra accented tea vendor. Well, I was told there was a double entendre there in its title but let’s not get there, as the film’s director, Krishnadev Yagnik, too, refrains from the indulgence of toilet humour in his film. The title here is justified by the fact that the public toilet was christened after the name of a local politician. How different can a plot this archaic be translated into an engaging film? Watch ‘Karsandas Pay and Use’ to know.