Monday, June 6, 2022

5 STORIES FROM MODERN INDIAN HISTORY THAT DESERVE THEIR OWN MOVIE/SERIES

 

MODERN INDIAN HISTORY – FULL OF MURDER, MAYHEM AND MASALA

 

Truth, as we all know, is stranger than fiction. If peppered with the right amount of creative liberty, we get some amazing movies like The Big Short or series like Wild Wild Country. However, Hollywood has figured out the recipe for creating the perfectly balanced ‘inspired from a true story’ that encompasses everything from 300 to something like Charlie Wilson’s war or any biopic for that matter.

Bollywood or more appropriately Indian storytellers have been… a bit hit and miss about it. Well more miss than hit. True to the modern state of our cuisine, we keep adding so much masala to it that the original flavour is lost. Like 83 or Bajirao Mastani’s second half, the unnecessary amount of masala results in an indigestible and upsetting dish. However, we have had some good ones like The Tashkent Files, Gumnaami (2019 Bengali movie about the mysterious death of Netaji Bose available on Prime) and the surprisingly successful The Kashmir Files which delve into our rich and mysterious history with the right amount of creative liberty. Or something like the massive blockbuster RRR which is complete masala but in the best possible ways.

On the streaming front, Sony Liv has been scoring better than their peers Hotstar, Netflix and Prime. Instead of just adding crude language, violence and sex just because they can, Sony actually put its money and heart into producing series like Scam 1992 – about the Harshad Mehta scam and its recently released Rocket Boys – about India’s nuclear program and its architects : Dr. Vikram Sarabhai and Dr. Homi Bhabha. If you are a history buff (like yours truly), the life particularly the circumstances surrounding death of Homi Bhabha would have immediately had you intrigued about the series.

There is no need for much additional when our history is full of stories so strange and intriguing, that only a small bit of imagination would be needed. Here are 5 very real stories that deserve telling –

 

5. Chandraswami



Speaking of Scam 1992, the series has a scene of someone calling a politically influential religious man in Delhi about Harshad Mehta’s scam and requesting their intervention in it. The god-man in question was Chandraswami.

Born Nemichand Jain, Chandraswami supposedly learnt Tantra vidya and attained Siddhi after 4 years of penance. His proximity to politician and later Prime Minister Narsimha Rao was the source of the spotlight on him. It is said that Rao seldom took any important decision without consulting the swami first. Also, Chandraswami’s roots apparently went deeper than that since his ashram in Delhi was built on land allotted by Indira Gandhi. He was present in many international religious conferences. He was also dispensing advice to well-known figures like the Sultan of Brunei, Elizabeth Taylor, Margaret Thatcher and even some claim to Dawood Ibrahim.

Like most modern self-proclaimed Swamis- Chandraswami had a lot of hidden wealth. He had been subject to various IT raids and apparently, he had made payments of up to USD 11 million to an infamous Saudi arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi. The Jain commission even alleged his involvement in Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination.

His story has everything that a good series needs political drama, controversy, mystery but it may lack something which a great story needs- a blockbuster ending.

Sadly Chandraswami’s death was not as interesting as his life and he died of organ failure in a hospital.

However, imagine a movie inspired by this character with the right amount of masala would make for a perfect potboiler.

 

 4.SHFJ Manekshaw



 

Sam Hormusji Framji Jamdhesji Manekshaw a.k.a Sam Bahadur – His carrier and achievements are even bigger than his name. Perhaps modern India’s most celebrated military leader. Born in 1914 to a doctor and one of 6 children, Sam Manekshaw’s story comes built in as a proper script with excellent dialogue. I mean who says “I am always ready, sweetie” to the most terrifyingly powerful Prime Minister of India Indira Gandhi when asked if he was ready for the 1971 war?

Sam Manekshaw’s quotes alone make for the most witty and entertaining reading. (you can read them here *insert link). He had that natural Parsee wit and charm coupled with the no nonsense military outspokenness of a man who had seen all kinds of hardship. He was the architect of the 1971 victory over Pakistan that resulted in the liberation of Bangladesh. When asked what would have happened if he had opted for being in Pakistan army before the partition he merely answered –

“Then I guess I would’ve won the war”

Sam wasn’t just all talk and no walk. He suffered life threatening injuries when fighting the Japanese as part of the British Army in Burma. Even when being treated, he protested and asked the surgeon to treat the other soldiers first. He was also instrumental in reshaping the Indian army’s training manuals and techniques to a modern era.

 

It is of course no surprise that a movie titled Sam Bahadur is being made by Meghna Gulzar starring Vicky Kaushal on Sam’s life. However, his wiki page alone has so much content, a 6-7 episode limited series would do a better job of capturing the larger than life figure that was Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw.

 

3. Ajit Doval

 


Speaking of larger than life figures, Ajit Doval ‘s story is now in fact so well known and so interesting that don’t be surprised if Askhay Kumar is already starring in a movie about him. Jokes apart, what more can be said about India’s super spy that people don’t already know.

His 7 year stint living as a muslim in Pakistan is grounds for a series alone. Especially an incidence when a muslim man noticed his pierced ear (a Hindu practice of piercing the childs ear) but warned him in private about it. Doval had a plastic surgery done to remove it. His other lesser known exploits include handling intelligence during 1971 merger of Sikkim with India and also handling various Indian Airlines hijacking during the 1980’s. He was also involved in crushing the Khalistani terrorist movement along with KPS Gill.

His later political career is perhaps better known as the man who helped the Modi government come to power. The man whose plans have plans and those plans have plans as well. In a 2014 speech, he famously threatened to do to Balochistan what Pakistan was doing to Kashmir. That statement alone was supposedly enough to have Pakistani intelligence searching under their own beds.

James Bond meets Game of Thrones?! Who wouldn’t want to see that? The only issue with his story might be that we may never get to see the most mysterious of parts of it.

 

 

 

 2. Netaji Cult and the Sati Pati Cult

 


Coming to the more mysterious stories of India, Have any of you ever heard the name – Azad Bharat Vidhik Vicharik Kranti Satyagrahi? No? Okay how about – Swadheen Subhas Bharat Sena? Still no?

Any of you remember reading this news in 2016- about a mysterious cult who had made their home in Mathura’s Jawaharlal Park, who were involved in violence that killed 24 people? If still no, then oh boy, do you have a really interesting story on your hands.

There were 3000 people headed by one Ram Vriksha Singh Yadav – who was a disciple of someone called Tulsidas Maharaj. They had encroached upon the park and had created their own village for 2 years. They had their own currency, own constitution and producing their own goods. The bizarreness doesn’t end here. Yadav claimed to be disciple of a mysterious man named Tulsidas Maharaj a.k.a Jai Gurudev. Tulsidas Maharaj was a lesser known political figure whose birth and origin is shrouded in mystery. Gurudev apparently had amassed wealth of Rs. 12,000 crores before his death in 2012. His followers believed him to be the reincarnation of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose.

The cult led by Yadav had even weird demands were for discontinuation of the current Indian rupee and its replacement by the Azad Hind Sena currency notes promoted by Netaji. They also wanted 40 litres petrol for Rs. 1 and 60 litres diesel for Rs. 1. The cult also demanded the dismissal of the current Indian parliamentary system as they saw it as a remnant of British Colonialism.

Also, in case you want more masala, the cult was apparently there because they staked a claim over Jay Gurudev’s properties and were in a dispute with some other faction about it. Police later invaded the encroachment and 24 people were killed. However, the leader has apparently ran away and has not yet been found.

 

This story is just a writer’s free candy shop (or happy hours in a bar, because that’s what makes any writer really happy). So much built-in mystery and bizarreness that it would make for a perfect indoctrination story, conspiracy story as well as a political thriller.


 Sati Pati cult



Although not related to the Netaji cult, this is one story that is definitely equally bizarre and perhaps more mysterious. The cult has its origins in Gujarat among the tribals. They believe their founder Keshari Sinhji was gifted all the forest land of India by Queen Victoria herself before the British left India. They do not believe in the sovereignty of the Indian government

Well if that’s not the weird part, they completely reject any rules of the Indian government, they do not have Ration or aadhar cards and apparently many (some out of fear) don’t send their children to free govt schools or even give them vaccines. NGO’s and healthcare workers have tried but have been met with stern resistance. What is the terrifying part is that a cult which was present in parts of Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh, has now spread to the tribal and Naxal affected areas of Chhattisgarh as well.

Apparently some tribals in Jharkhand are not happy with this new cult invading their centuries old cultural ethos.

This story makes for a fascinating window into the lives of tribal communities of India.

 

 

1.      1.Anandmargis

How this story has escaped India’s pop culture is a bigger mystery than the organization itself. On the surface, the Anand Marga movement is like one of India’s many Hindu philosophical movements advocating meditation, Yoga sadhana etc. However, the story is full of action, political drama, extreme violence and oh yeah skull dancing –

 


 

Skull dancing isn’t even the most terrifying part. The organization was founded by Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar in the 1950’s in Bengal. It’s popularity and socio-political influence really grew in the 1960’s when missionaries were being sent to different parts of the country and also over the world. The organization also criticized the Indira Gandhi government and if we have learnt anything from history is that if you are not Sam Manekshaw, you can’t escape criticizing Mrs. Gandhi. The organization was banned and its founder was arrested in 1974. Sarkar was allegedly poisoned in jail but survived. He was released from jail after 4 years in August 1978. 

In September 1978, a bomb exploded in Sydney at the Hilton Hotel where a meeting of some international diplomats (including PM Morarji Desai) was going on. The accused were both members of the Ananda Marga. Morarji Desai had claimed had the Ananda Marga had tried to kill him for the imprisonment of their leader. There was also allegations of other attacks by Ananda Margis on other foreign diplomats in Australia.

 

The growing popularity of Ananda Marga brought it in conflict with the Communist Party which had its roots deep in Bengal. As is the Communist tradition, there were various incidences if ruthless violence between them. The most notable being the 1982 Bijon Setu Massacre in which 17 Ananda Marga monks and nuns were dragged out of their vehicle in broad daylight and killed in public. Of course no one was arrested.

 

 


 

But the most mysterious case regarding Ananda Margis is the 1995 Purulia Arms drop case. This story sounds so bizzare it might as well have been typed by a bot. A Latvian aircraft dropped several AK 47 rifles in Purulia district of West Bengal. The plane was later intercepted by the IAF and grounded in Mumbai. The crew arrested were ex British Military and a few Latvians. A Danish man named Niels Hock was also arrested who had been a social worker in West Bengal. The man claimed that the arms drop was intended for the Ananda Margis as the then Indian PM Narsimha Rao wanted to use the Ananda Margis to fight communist influence. However, for the sake of brevity , somewhere somehow the Bangaldeshi army is also reportedly involved in the case.

This story is a mix of John Le Carre’, Fredrick Forsyth, Tom Clancy and Dan Brown composed into one! Add in a good star cast and a good director and you have a certified hit on your hands.

 Many often treat history as this subject which is boring and has no real use. Come to think of it, how many of us still use algebra in our daily lives? While a debate can be had about the ‘real use’ part, history is never boring if you know where to look.

 

 

 


Monday, May 16, 2022

Kaun Pravin Tambe (spoiler free) movie review

 

Ok Hindi film Industry…I ll give credit where its due. You actually made an awesome movie this year.

 


 

 

KAUN PRAVIN TAMBE

DIRECTOR – JAYPRAD DESAI (THIS DUDE NEEDS TO START TEACHING CLASSES TO OTHER HINDI MOVIE DIRECTORS ON HOW TO SHOOT SPORTS MOVIES)


CAST- SHREYAS TALPADE, ASHISH VIDYARTHI, ARIF ZAKARIA AND OTHERS


While we have all been busy celebrating the massive and deserved success of South Indian sweep shots like RRR and KGF, this little leg glance of a movie got overshadowed by it. (No, the cricketing metaphors are not gonna stop in this review).  We all collectively agree that mainstream Hindi film makers more often than not SUCK at making biopics, particularly sports biopics. With the exception of Bhaag Milkha Bhaag and maybe Mary Kom to some extent, most of them either exaggerate too much or…they just exaggerate too much. That’s it. They put masala where its not needed.

I am tempted here to make this entire review about hating that absolute gutter trash of a film 83..a movie about India’s greatest cricketing moment...which it somehow managed to ruin. However, I will fight the good fight and praise this one. Kaun Pravin Tambe is the biopic of cricketer Pravin Tambe.  We have all heard that adage ‘Age is just a number’. Tambe lived and proved it when he entered mainstream cricket at age 41 defying his lower middle-class background.

However, its not just the typical rags to riches struggle. It is in the balanced manner which it is portrayed on-screen that makes a difference. The moments of emotion are undercut with levity, there are one or two bouncers here and there that threaten to derail the script, however it hits the pitch back again. The movie does have its fair share of stock sports movie moments like the stern but wise coach, family struggles and an unnecessarily hateful sports critic. But even these characters have a lot of nuances and you are actually given a reason as to why the sports critic is the way he is. The screenplay is perfectly paced – it isn’t too dramatic for it to feel ridiculous neither is it too realistic for it to feel like it’s dragging on.

Like it or not, but Shreyas Talpade is presently Marathi industry’s biggest export to Hindi film industry…and he knocks it out of the park here. Comparisons maybe made to Iqbal – another cricketing movie where he played a bowler- but I honestly feel this is much more balanced performance. At every given point of time, even though you are completely aware that the real Pravin Tambe is obviously not like this, yet it still works. His passion for cricket shines through in every frame without overpowering the scene. Also, the supporting cast works really well- especially Anjali Patil as his wife and seasoned actor Ashish Vidyarthi as the coach who sees in Tambe what Tambe himself hasn’t seen yet. Also, one must appreciate the casting director who cast the absolute perfect actor for Rahul Dravid’s role. The dude looks, acts and speaks exactly like Dravid.

 What movies like 83 and ANY future Indian sports movie needs to learn from this one is that you absolutely do not need to put everything in slow motion. This movie has some of the best and cleanest sports action without any jump cuts or speed ramping. It all feels natural, like you were actually watching them play shots. Seriously, this movie makes 83 look like a fucking joke. It was probably made at half the budget but delivers 200 times the cricketing action in a much better way. The scene towards the end where they merge real IPL footage with Shreyas Talpade in it is seamless.

 Director Jayprad Desai has apparently made documentaries and a web series on Zee 5 (it’s called Hutatma and its about the struggle for the creation of Maharashtra and I am about to watch it now). The whole feel of Kaun Hai Pravin Tambe is well..anti-Bollywood-ish. Almost feels like a Marathi movie or a regional movie where they know how to spend money and screen time wisely. (Maybe coz the director and the screen writers are Marathi). Very subtle aspects like the art direction- Tambe’s chawl home – things kept in the background tell their own story…the subtle dialogue with the exact amount of drama necessary has very..un-Bollywood like sensibilities to it. Let’s hope we get to see such intelligent and shrewd directors in the Hindi film industry more. To call this a typical mainstream Hindi movie feels a bit weird. (even though its produced by Disney).

 Kaun Pravin Tambe is like a beautifully bowled leg spinner- with the exact amount of flight and twists necessary to have you stumped. (Yes, why would you think I wouldn’t end this with a cricketing metaphor).

 

STOP WHATEVER YOU ARE DOING TODAY AND WATCH THIS MOVIE ON DISNEY HOTSTAR RIGHT NOW.

 


PS - Only negative I can think about the movie is why I didn’t I watch this before. It apparently came out in April. They should've marketed this better. 

Saturday, May 14, 2022

A Tale of two-part movies - the best way to spend a lazy weekend

 

A Tale of two-part movies - the best way to spend a lazy weekend


After making a grand entrance, Thor has finally pierced Thanos with his strombreaker axe, the Avengers – the protectors of the Earth had thoroughly been shocked and nearly defeated by the alien demi-god Thanos’ invasion…the terrifyingly imposing villain needed the six infinity stones to make his wish come true…cause a universal genocide to restore balance…snap away half of the population…surely villains don’t succeed to this extent in any Marvel movie, they always end short of real tragedy…but Thanos actually snaps his fingers…and he succeeds…half of the universe’s population including many avengers…just turn into dust…the Avengers fail… a title card appears on the screen - 'Thanos will Return

That moment, that tease of having to wait a year to see how at all can Avengers succeed…the build -up and hype up to that moment is what made Endgame such a huge success despite being nearly not as good as Infinity War. This is the power of the two parter – or duology as we will be calling it for the purposes of this article.

While the trilogy- a beginning, middle and an end- whether planned like Lord of The Rings or unplanned like The Dark Knight trilogy (yes it was never planned as a trilogy) is a very popular format especially in mainstream franchise driven Hollywood, the two-parter or the duology has not been so. One could say the trend may have begun when Tarantino’s epic Kill Bill was split into two and released a few months apart in early 2000’s. Even the Matrix sequels – Reloaded and Revolutions were shot as one movie but released months apart.

But the trend really caught on when, Harry Potter split its last movie – The Deathly Hollows- into two parts. In terms of story-telling, it allowed for better fleshing out of the characters and the plot points instead of the usual Hollywood way of compressing a large story into 2 hours. But in terms of box office numbers, it REALLY worked its magic. Soon after many other franchises like Twilight, Hunger Games, Divergent etc. did it with their series finale but didn’t see the same results as Harry Potter.

However, the duology hasn’t caught on as much as the trilogy. Of all the mainstream Hollywood movies – Horror movie It Chapters 1 and 2, the animated movie The Dark Knight Returns and Lars Von Triers’ Nymphomaniac are the only ones that tell their stories in two parts. Denis Villenueve’s faithful adaptation of Frank Herbert’s Sci-fi classic novel Dune is surely going to be a duology as confirmed by the Director.

 

UNDERUTILZED FORMAT

If you ask Hollywood about utilizing the format, their answer to any thing is a question – what will make us more money? Just like they did with the Hobbit movies, they would rather everything be a trilogy or more if they know they can mint money in it.

But the duology is a highly under-utilized format even from a commercial angle. In this attention starved world, a set of two movies lasting let’s say 4-5 hours are much a better format than a trilogy which lasts 7-9 hours, thus making it more binge worthy. As was the case with Infinity War or It, the cliff-hanger ending offers instant in-built hype for the second one. Also, the movies can be released within a shorter time span if planned accordingly, thus avoid any risks of delays etc.

 

 


 

INDIAN IMPACT

However, surprisingly the Indian film industry (we are NOT calling it Bollywood anymore) has been ahead of Hollywood in this manner. Not only do we have many duologies released and planned to be released, they have actually been planned sequels for the sake of storytelling and not an afterthought for a quick cash grab.

 

So, on this extended weekend, if you have a afternoon to spare check out these Indian Duology of films –

 

 


5) NTR : Kathanayakudu and Mahanaykudu 

A Telugu movie based on legendary movie star turned politician N T Rama Rao, starring his son Bal Murali Krishna in the title role. This duology was released in 2019 a few months apart. As they say truth is stranger than fiction and NTR’s life story is a testament to it. The first part concentrates on his rise to stardom when the entire south film industry including Telugu and Tamil were situated in Madras. The movie follows NTR’s journey in becoming its first super star and giving it the respect, it deserves.

The sequel follows his rise as a politician. Although obviously written through the eyes of hero-worship and conveniently glossing over his later affair with a much younger woman etc. the politics alone is worth a watch. Rana Dagubatti stars as Chandrababu Naidu and delivers a subtle villainish performance. Though not the best, it is certainly worth a watch.

 


 

4) Raktha Charitra 1 and 2 

This was the probably the first Indian movie to be released in two parts and also the most underrated. Vivek Oberoi’s last good performance and one of Ram Gopal Verma’s last sane movies, Raktha Charitra as the title suggests is of course an epic tale of blood, violence and politics. Based on the unbelievable true story of Naxalite Rebel turned Politician Paritala Ravi and the Andhra Pradesh politics of the 80’s.

Packed with a multi star cast of Vivek Oberoi, Radhika Apte, Shatrughan Sinha, Suriya, Sudeep and many others, everyone delivers subtle yet explosive performances in keeping with RGV’s directing style. The pick of the lot is Abhimanyu Singh (who would later star in many movies like Ram Leela, Gabbar Singh (telugu), Sooryavanshi etc.) Abhimanyu Singh plays the dangerous and downright horrifying villain Bukka Reddy based on real life Obul Reddy.

There’s TV bombs, land mines, revenge killings for two generations…which all might appear fictional…but 99% of the movie is actually true. If you can bear through some violence, this is definitely an epic worth looking into. Its available for free on Youtube or on Amazon Prime. Prime has a slightly censored version for the faint hearted.

 

 


3) Gangs of Wasseypur 1 and 2

Rakta Charitra might have been the first, but this cult classic was the one that introduced Indian audiences to the duology format. Originally released as a single almost 5-hour movie in film festivals, the movie was split into two parts for commercial release and it makes the story better. The multi-generational story inspired from Godfather and Mahabharat takes its time to set up its range of eccentric characters and dialogues as the story grows along slowly but without ever losing its grip.

Having the now well-known names like Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Huma Qureshi, Richa Chadda, Pankaj Tripathi paired with experienced acting powerhouses like Manoj Bajpayee, Reema, Sen, Tigmanshu Dhulia, Piyush Pandey and others. This is the movie where Anurag Kashyap found that golden middle between his brand of experimental cinema and commercial success. The duology is single-handedly responsible for making Hindi film industry take an interest in telling rural stories. The movie is obviously known for its dark humor and meme worthy dialogue even after so many years.

The first part with its cliff hanger ending perfectly sets up the sequel which ups the ante in the best possible way.

 


2) Bahubali 1 and 2

This was the Infinity War of India…not just in terms of its commercial success but the Katappa ending to the first one had the entire nation theorizing and memeing for 2 years straight. There’s nothing much to be said about Bahubali. I mean either you have watched it or you don’t watch movies at all. The movie has some rough CGI, but it still holds up even after 5 years. The war scene from part 1 and the coronation ceremony from part 2 remain some of the most epic moments ever put to screen in Indian cinema.

More so than the spectacle, it’s the immortal characters like Sivagami, Bhallaldeva and of course Amarendra/Mahendra Bahubali that always make a story memorable. Rajamouli’s father K Vijayandra Prasad takes inspiration from ancient Hindu epics like Ramayana and Mahabharata and it is visible in the nuanced characterization in what could otherwise have just been a mere spectacle of a movie. Rajamouli’s Snyder-esque skill of visual storytelling makes the movie anytime watch and universally appealing. A reveal that a soldier who was helping in battle is actually Bahubali himself, could merely have been a dialogue. But Rajamouli even makes that into an epic visual scene. The background score by M M Keeravani is a mighty pillar holding this art work aloft.

Watching the first one for the epic cliffhanger and then watching the even more epic conclusion is surely a great way to spend an afternoon.

 


1)       1) KGF CHAPTER 1 AND 2

Bahubali is definitely a better made duology in terms of screenplay, characterization, editing etc. This is not even a countdown of the best Indian duologies but…call it recency bias… but holy fucking shit is the KGF duology is epic! Without even needing to be! If Bahubali is inspired from our ancient epics, then KGF is definitely inspired from the Salim-Javed created genre of the angry young man from the 70’s but taken to the max…with Snyder-esque visuals (yes, no wonder we Indians are Snyder fans) and with epic Back ground score. On paper a rehash of Amitabh Bacchan inspired character from the 70’s point out to the fact that it shouldn’t work at all. In theory, it should be another run of the mill common masala movie which feels shallow but looks good.

KGF however doesn’t just look good..it looks great! Just like Mad Max Fury Road or 300 what could’ve been just a visual epic is in fact an adrenaline packed journey about love, promises, ambition and POWER. The second movie oozes power and loud extravagant ambition in every frame and this is maximalist cinema at its absolute best. The character of Rocky is the new age Vijay but again on steroids. People literally open doors but in slo-mo and set to Ravi Basrur’s rocking background music.

The movie singlehandedly put Kannada movie industry on the map despite existing for so many years. Although they have teased a chapter 3…it’s not at all needed after such an epic conclusion.

 

From the looks of it, this format seems to have worked. Pushpa : The Rise is definitely going to be another duology with Pushpa : The Rule releasing late in 2022.

So there you have it, the perfect way to spend a 5-6 hours on a weekend. A trilogy is so outdated...give us more epic two parters please! 

Sunday, May 8, 2022

Dr. Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (spoiler free) review

Director – Sam Raimi

 

 


Dr. Strange in the Multiverse of Madness

CAST- Benedict Cumberbatch, Benedict Wong (no he’s not a multiversal variant of Benedict Cumberbatch. He plays Wong. Yes, even am wondering if he was cast because of his real last name as well), Rachel Mc Adams, Xochitl Gomez (No, I have no idea how to pronounce it) and SOME GREAT CAMEOS.

 

Why is Sam Raimi’s name before everything else in this review? Coz we finally have the rare Marvel movie which feels like it has a unique director’s vision behind it. Raimi is the Madness in the Multiverse of Madness.

THE MULTIVERSE

We were properly introduced to the Multiverse concept for the MCU (Should we even call it the Marvel Cinematic Universe at this point? Or the MC Multiverse?) in the series Loki. If you haven’t seen it, then definitely you encountered it in Spiderman: No Way Home, which united all the Spidermen of the past movies with the current one for the one finally good MCU Spiderman movie. Dr. Strange was an integral part of that movie and this is a logical progression from that one  movie in some aspects. Dr. Strange 1 remains one of my favourite solo MCU movies to date. Not just because it introduced magic into the MCU but because it didn’t follow the typical 1 joke per 10 minutes and big soulless third act battle formula.

The trick about making sequels is that there is always the dilemma of whether to do more of what worked with the first one or to take a completely different direction. The Dark Knight is the gold standard of making sequels and it showed the solution to making a great sequel especially to comic book movies – escalation. It showed us the consequences of the choices made by the hero in the previous movie and how the heroic choice comes at a cost. Dr. Strange 2 follows a similar template.

The movie actually picks up pace from the word go, where in we are introduced to America Chavez – a girl with the power to travel the multiverse. She is unable to control the power herself only accidentally using it when afraid. She is being chased by monsters who are being controlled by someone who wants her power for their personal goals. Dr. Strange takes it upon himself to protect her. But they enemy they are fighting is so powerful that the solution to their problems, may not lie in their own universe. We also see the consequences of Dr. Strange having to always make the risky play or the tough decision. 

 

THE MADNESS

One of the best things about the screenplay is, it establishes the villain very early on. There is no twist moment later. This actually makes the chase very interesting. However, what makes the movie truly unique is of course Sam Raimi. For those not in the know, Raimi directed the Spiderman movies starring Tobey Maguire. You could technically say he is the father of the modern comic book movie. CBM’s didn’t have any respect or big budgets until he showed up. Also, in case you didn’t know – he was previously known for directing the horror Evil Dead movies.

That is perhaps the reason Producer Kevin Feige wanted him for this one. Without really spoiling the movie, lets just say this is the first major horror tinged comic book movie. Be ready to see some PG 13 rated gore and violence along with some creatively shocking moments.

However, its not just about the horror elements. What Raimi brings to the table are fascinating visuals like early 2000’s guitar riffs, slow motion scenes, creepy music, moody montages, slow transitions and yes…a sweet Bruce Campbell cameo. The Raimi touch itself makes the movie worth watching for a fan like me. There are certain scenes which are cut so brilliantly well, that the violence and shock comes from the movement on screen and not through actual gore. The third act battle much like his Spiderman movies is less about two superpowered beings just putting spells on each other and more about helping people realize the consequences of their actions. That is the central theme of the movie and it does a great job of sticking to it.

THE MEDIOCRITY

 Although, the journey through the multiverse is stunning, it is limited. For a movie titled Multiverse of Madness, there isn’t much of the Strange-ness (yes. Intended as always) of that concept being explored. We do get a lot of spell casting and magic but the multiverse aspect could have been explored better.

Another issue is the pacing. It’s a bit rushed at times and the movie could have done a better job of establishing some concepts or character motives. There are closures to certain character arcs in the climax that feel very abrupt. There are also certain concepts that could have been established better. (sorry I have to mildly spoil this – but the ‘music as magic’ concept is brilliant and has relevance to the ways mantras are actually supposed to work. Some establishment of this concept would have been fantastic when the battle actually happens). There is a battle in the middle, where we finally get some VERY LOOOOOOONG awaited Marvel comic book characters finally showing up in the MCU....but they die 5 minutes later for some very stupid reasons. A cheap death to some really awaited characters felt a bit disappointing to the comic book nerd inside me.

Reportedly the original cut is 2 hours and 20 minutes which Disney cut down to 2 hours. (nothing new). This is hoping against hope but the original cut may have some better fleshing out of characters and themes and hopefully we get to see it one day.

THE MAGIC

However, having said all that- Do you understand how much of a relief it is to not see every character crack some dumb joke every time something serious happens? The humor is so well timed and actually makes you chuckle at least. The movie though having its horror elements manages to strike a balance with its comic book side…which again Raimi is the master of. I mean He basically invented the genre to begin with. He knows how to balance character moments and spectacle.

This phase of Marvel movies is perhaps the best phase. They have finally reached that level of popularity where they don’t have to worry about losing an audience. They are doing movies like The Eternals and fantastic TV shows like The Moonknight (seriously go watch it on Hotstar. Its one of the best shows about a superhero with a split personality). They are taking more risks and am loving it! Basically they are doing what DC was supposed to do and am not complaining at all. Directors with their unique style like Raimi or Gunn (even if I don’t like his style at times) need to be introduced more into the MCU instead of cookie cutter directors like Peyton Reed (Antman movies).

 

What this movie has also done is made Dr. Strange the axis of the MCU. It was Tony Stark during the Infinity saga. Dr. Strange showing up in No Way Home and his power and choices affecting the multiverse is one thing. But more than that he is becoming the emotional spine of the MCU and also one of my favourite characters. It would be great to see where we go from here. Also, please give Sam Raimi more comic book movies to direct!

 

The movie is Total Timepass!

 

 

 

PS- They showed the Avatar 2 trailer before the movie and….I think James Cameron is gonna rule the box office again!

 

  

Thursday, April 14, 2022

KGF : Chapter 2 (spoiler free) movie review

 The Audience : “Kya chahiye re tereko?”

Indian movie directors - “DUNIYA…”

 

 


 

KGF: Chapter 2

Director – Prashanth Neel

Cast- ROCKING STAR YASH, Sanjay Dutt as a mix of a Viking chief and Bane, Raveena Tandon as Pseudo Indira Gandhi, Srinidhi Shetty and BUCKET LOADS OF HYPE AND ENERGY

 

We are living in the era of renaissance of Indian cinema. That’s right Indian cinema. Not Marathi, Bengali, Tamil, Telugu or Kannada…but INDIAN cinema. For long Indian movies have been defined by the word-  Bollywood. Not anymore. Bahubali, Pushpa, KGF, RRR and now KGF 2 have shown us what it takes to make intelligent yet entertaining films. Technically, emotionally, they just have cracked this formula of how to actually make epic stories come alive. These films are enjoyed by audiences all over not just India but also the world as well. In interviews during RRR promotions, director SS Rajamouli has often said he dislikes the term South Indian film industry or Telugu or Tamil film industry, he says he likes it to be called Indian film industry since he tells stories about Indian characters and with Indian values who primarily speak a regional language. Perhaps same can be said of Kannada director Prashanth Neel.  

KGF 1 was a surprise for everyone. Because of Rajnikanth and Kamal Hassan, people all over India were well aware of Tamil industry’s ability to entertain, Bahubali had opened the floodgates for Telugu cinema (though Nagarjuna and Chiranjeevi had done that to smaller extent before), Bengali, Malayalam and Marathi movies have been admired often for their artistic and subtle storytelling. Kannada films however had not left a big impact on the national scale yet. Neither did they air on Set Max or any other channels for popular consumption, nor did their stars particularly capture national imagination like their other counterparts did. However, KGF 1 not only surprised the entire country but surpassed the expectation. The mix of a Scarface like gangster story coupled with Mad Max and 300 style visuals and good ol’ desi masala was the perfect cocktail that turned it into a mega hit.

The excitement for KGF 2 was perhaps shot in the arm by the Covid pandemic and the resulting delay in its release. In fact, it was so delayed that another movie about a fearless, bearded, ambitious smuggler released in between and took the nation by storm (Pushpa – The Rise). But just like Rocky Bhai, the hype came back. And Holy shit…being born into a film crazy family, I always used to ask my father how it was to experience the hype when Amitabh was in his prime and he said… it was madness. I had tried to experience that by watching Vijay and Rajnikanth movies FDFS with Tamil audiences when in Mumbai and got a taste of it. I got a taste of it when Salman was actually making fun movies like Dabanng and Wanted. But Holy shit…(coz one Holy shit isn’t enough to describe this)….the excitement surrounding KGF 2 had the theatre full at 8:30 on a Thursday morning. There was so much hooting, whistling and shouting that you couldn’t hear anything for the first 10 minutes!! And I had ZERO complaints. I mean THIS is the experience you wanna have when you watch a movie full of hype and energy like this. KGF 2 delivers on the hype in truckloads.

 

In KGF 1 we saw the rise of Rocky Bhai from a small-time street criminal to a gangster and then to a monster…who had managed to gain control of the secretive KGF gold mines singlehandedly. KGF 2 is obviously the conclusion to that story. Now overall, it goes as you would assume a movie like this goes. But a great man once said- its not about the story, its about how it’s told. KGF 1 smartly used an unreliable narrator device in which a old, senile journalist – Anand Ingalgi (played by Anant Nag) is telling the legend of Rocky and KGF to a TV journalist….often missing parts, often embellishing it, drifting off. This proved to be a fascinating element that kept the mystery going. The story on-screen told by Director Prashanth Neel was told with panache, jump cuts, slo-mo and mind- blowing background music. The movie made Yash a national star overnight. With his presence so manly that had ladies drooling over him and men wanting to be a bearded badass like him.

 

In KGF 2, Prakash Raj replaces Ananth Nag as the narrator. The in-film reason we get is that Ananthh Nag’s character gets a heart attack and Prakash Raj is his disgruntled son who comes in reluctantly to complete the story. The movie changes its story-telling technique here and becomes a sort of hidden history of India often made believable by newspapers reports of incidents which were covered up. Because the powers that were did not want Rocky’s story told. As two-part movies usually go, the first one is the set-up, the second one the punchline. Chapter 2 punches you so hard emotionally and visually it gets you pumped up throughout the movie. The many pieces set up on the board in the first one (a bit too many to be honest) all start moving for the king in this one from the word go. The movie does not waste time at all. Every frame of the movie is oozing with energy, emotion and hype. Every line of dialogue delivered just to add to that legend, the myth, the saga of Rocky.

The movie elevates itself slightly from making a tale about a hero who is a God to his people into the evils of unchained ambition and the consequences of violence. But sadly, to its detriment it sligthly loses that point somewhere. Without spoiling much, it can be said that this strong emotional thread could’ve given the movie more nuance and weight. It also would’ve given actress Srinidhi Shetty something else to do than just stand around and look good. She is somewhere the feminine that can compliment and counter the untethered masculine aggression of Rocky…but sadly the script compresses that entire arc into a completely boring and unnecessary song in the second half of the movie just prior to the climactic struggle. The movie just loses a bit of focus here unlike the first one.  

But what it lacks in focus sometimes, it makes for in action and visuals. Prashanth Neel uses color, contrast and shot composition in a great way in that every frame is a painting. The lighting is immaculate and the use of jump cuts and shaky cam (though a bit too much for my liking) was great and makes the action kinetic. Yash being the star of the movie- completely carries the movie. The ruthless ambition-knowing full well that these violent delights have violent ends- shines through his body language and his eyes. What could’ve been a typical Indian indestructible hero kinda boring character is compensated for by his charming humor and the big Daddy attitude. A good hero is nothing without a good villain and Sanjay Dutt again delivers by the truckload as Adheera. With his Viking inspired look, the script allows to portray all shades from evil to rage to defeat to disappointment to being a sword carrying badass. Raveena Tandon as Prime Minister Ramika Sen is great and her interaction with Rocky is particularly good. Its great to see her back and she should do more roles in my opinion. The movie has Prakash Raj but other than that deep voice, there’s not much use for him.

Although a slight bit more bloated than the first one, KGF chapter 2 is definitely a theatre experience. Think of it like the Infinity War and Endgame. While Infinity War is clearly the better movie, Endgame is still an epic conclusion. But unlike Endgame the movie does deliver on its hype. There is a scene towards the climax where I was praying – Mr. Neel you better bring that reference back from the 1st one because that would symbolically tie up the story perfectly and you know what…it actually happened. This is the equivalent of you wanting a masseuse to use the right amount of pressure on the right spot and without saying they just do that.

If you scratch the surface a little, the movie is a bit meta in the sense it talks about the power of myth making while making a myth on screen as well. The very legend of Rocky has people shaking in their boots even before he arrives. Adheera knows this and does something that will make a God bleed (A ‘Do you Bleed?’ BvS style parallel which my wife caught and I didn’t! Catching hidden Snyder and Nolan parallels in a story is the sexiest thing a woman can do in my opinion), PM Ramika Sen knows this and stops him from ever being mentioned in history. Whether intentional or not, Prashanth Neel clearly understands the power of story -telling and myth making to a deeper level and uses that understanding really well on screen. The movie even has a Marvel style mid credits scene that keeps the hype going even as you exit the theatre.

 

KGF : Chapter 2 is TOTAL TIMEPASS!! Watch this on the biggest screen with the loudest of crowds possible!

 

 

P S : They showed a trailer for Heropanti 2 starring Tiger Shroff before this movie and well..  Bollywood, Beta tumse na ho payega. 

Sunday, April 3, 2022

RRR (spoiler free) movie review

 

In SS Rajamouli we trust...

 

 


 

RRR – RISE ROAR REVOLT

DIRECTED BY – THE ONLY INDIAN FILMMAKER WHO CAN MAKE SOMETHING LIKE THIS LOOK COOL AS FUCK WITHOUT IT LOOKING CAMPY

 

CAST – RAM CHARAN, NTR, AJAY DEVGAN, ALIA BHATT, SHRIYA SARAN AND OTHERS

 

When I first saw the trailer for this movie, I wasn’t moved. It looked like a typical - Indian freedom fighters fighting against the British who are white devils movie. Lots of action, zero sense. If it was any one other than S S Rajamouli directing it, I wouldn’t have looked twice at it. But after Magadheera, Eega and especially Bahubali- in S S Rajamouli we trust. And that trust isn’t betrayed.

Now Indian film makers are known to take extra liberties with historical stories. I watched 45 minutes of the Kabir Khan directed 83 – about our 1983 cricket world cup victory- and turned it off. It was a real story which didn’t need this much masala to make it work. It was a lot of showing off without any substance.  But as Bloodsport in The Suicide Squad says “No, one likes a show-off” to which he gets the reply – “Unless what they are showing off is dope as fuck”.

RRR is completely fictional story about two of India’s revolutionary freedom fighters meeting to fight the oppressive British regime- Alluri Sitaramaraju and Komaram Bheem. But this isn’t just masala movie making- it is myth making of the classiest level. The entry scene for A. Ramaraju (Ram Charan) for example, involves almost zero dialogue from the hero and starts out very much like a typical South Indian mass entertainer scene. There is the hero’s entry set to heart pumping music, you get to see the fire and the conviction in his eyes before he jumps into an angry mob to catch someone. A huge crowd piles on top of him. Normally, you would expect the typical hero pushes everyone off and all people fly in different directions kinda scene...like that oft-copied scene from the Matrix Reloaded. But that doesn’t happen at all. Instead, he actually realistically fights his way out of it...almost reminiscent of that awesome prison fight scene in The Raid 2 and catches the target with a lot of damage to himself.

This I feel is the greatest skill of Rajamouli. This is why Bahubali worked and many other copies of it failed later. Even if there is a lot of masala, just like a perfect Indian cook- Rajamouli knows where to hold back and where to let go. No wonder his movies have so much universal appeal. Even if you were watching this movie in a language foreign to you, you would still understand what is transpiring on screen. There are so many amazing visual scenes here that I risk spoiling the movie out of sheer excitement.

Getting two of the most popular stars from the Telugu film industry together – Ram Charan and NTR Jr. isn’t easy. To give them equal enough screen presence is even more difficult. To honestly get them both to act so well is nearly impossible. Again, Rajamouli pulls it off with finesse. The intensity of fire in Ram Charan and the depth and fluidity of water in NTR Jr. just stands out. One is a trained cop and the other is a Gond tribal. Rajamouli is a visual story-teller and he uses everything from color shades to costumes and body language to create the characters on screen. So, the English-speaking police officer is well shaved, his moments around the goras more confident, he has a gym trained well cut body and his eyes have this sharpness of purpose to it. While the tribal is unshaven, unsure of his moments in the city, he looks at tigers in the eye without blinking and has a trusting but fierce demeanor. Even without dialogue, you understand these characters so well. The way Rajamouli uses themed lighting for the characters – Yellow symbolizing fire for Ramaraju (Ram Charan) and blue symbolizing water for Bheem (Jr. NTR) is something which is noteworthy. Its these little details that make the movie special. Rajamouli uses well known actors for small roles – Shriya Saran, Ajay Devgan etc. but they make the most of the screentime they have been given.

That’s another noteworthy thing about the movie. Its runtime though almost 3 hours- never seems like a dull moment. Even when there is no big visual set piece on screen. The movie is about the chemistry of the main characters and their love for their country and their people. This is the thread which holds together the gems of the visual poetry together. Credit must also be given to K V Vijayendra Prasad (S S Rajamouli’s father and legendary screen play writer) for creating a nearly impossible screenplay where action and emotion are equally balanced. Everything is there on screen for a reason and barring a extra bloody whipping scene, there is no time wasted for anything. Everything flows, everything rhymes.

Poetry is nothing without its inherent rhythm, not only the contrasts and visuals dance and rhyme with each other- but so does M M Keeravani’s music. This may seem like hyperbole but M M Keeravani and Rajamouli are a bit like Zimmer and Nolan. They just come together to create magic on screen. If it wasn’t for M M Keeravani’s rousing tracks and soulful melodies, half of the scenes wouldn’t have hit the way they do. The dance number (Natu Natu in Telugu or Nacho Nacho in Hindi) is infectious and had my whole civilized theatre almost ready to dance.  From Rajamouli’s Magadheera to Eega, Bahubali and now RRR- they just bring the best out of each other. They use different themes for the characters and while it is the oldest trick in the book to let characters have their own musical motifs, I feel it just isn’t used enough these days in Indian movies. RRR makes the best use of it just like Bahubali did.

While comparisons to Bahubali are inevitable, but even as a story onto itself one of the only drawbacks in the movie is the lack of a good villain. The villains are of course the British- who are one dimensional and evil. There is of course one sympathetic memsaab… but that’s about it. I had tweeted halfway through the movie that S S Rajamouli is Zack Snyder on steroids and I am not backing away on those words. The visual style, the operatic dialogue, the use of slow motion is very reminiscent of Snyder’s style yet refreshingly Indian and original.  Come to think of Zack Snyder comparisons again- think of this movie like 300. Not necessarily historically accurate or meant to be a multi-faceted drama, but more as a Ballad…a hero’s song, a Powada if you will.

The movie is a clear tribute to India’s revolutionaries. It is sometimes extra bloody and extra violent, but perhaps that’s the point. If in 2022, you are dumb enough to believe that our freedom was gained just through Charka spinning and turning the other cheek, then you seriously need to watch this movie. A LOT of people, a lot of unspoken heroes literally gave every drop of blood they had and then some more to get us to where we are. The movie celebrates them in the end.  

Like Sadhguru says, the point of our Itihaasa- our mythical epics like Mahabharata or Ramayana- isn’t that if it happened or not. The point is what you learn from it. We know Komaram Bheem and Alluri Sitaramraju probably never met in real life, but the point is what we are learning from this movie. To add to it, it’s entertaining as fuck. Like Rajamouli’s previous movies- it is unashamed of its own Hindu culture. It uses the Vande Mataram flag designed by Madam Bhikaji Cama and Veer Savarkar, it exhibits many aspects of our undiscovered tribal culture, the movie has perhaps the best use of the famous shloka “Karmanye vadhikaraste…” from the Gita, there is a scene which is a reverse parallel of the Ashokvan scene from Ramayana where Rama is the one being held in captivity, and…the climax has some Lord Rama imagery that absolutely convinces me that S S Rajamouli is the only director capable of directing a Ramayana movie.

Indian regional cinema is honestly light years ahead of Bollywood. If you want subtlety and simplicity- Bengali, Malaylam and Marathi cinema explore the nuance of human emotion to their deepest. If you want the panache, epic, operatic storytelling while stretching our imagination to the furthest- South Indian movie makers are the best at it. Success of movies like Bahubali, KGF, Pushpa and now RRR has proved that when you are ready to accept your strengths, you can accomplish wonders.

 

RRR is undoubtedly a not just a movie, but a theatrical experience. It’s meant to be had with loads of whistles and claps and screaming people around. The movie is CLASSIC!

Sunday, November 7, 2021

Sooryavanshi (spoiler free) Review

 

Have you ever wondered why Bajirao Singham and Veer Sooryavanshi are referred to as Singham and Sooryavanshi even by their wives, mothers, friends etc? Technically it’s their surname not first name.

 


 

SOORYAVANSHI

Cast- Akshay Kumar, Katrina Kaif in saree dancing to Tip Tip Barsa Paani (Coz lets face it Katrina is a hot dancer, not a good actor), Javed Jaffrey, Jackie Shroff, Gulshan Grover, lots of flying cars and others...(well if you watched the spoiler filled trailers you already know who else in the movie)

 

Rohit Shetty has become my favourite mainstream Bollywood director. Mainstream being the key word. My favourite Hindi movie directors are Sriram Raghavan (Johnny Gaddar, Badlapur, Andhadhun) and Abhiskek Chaubey (Ishqiya, Dedh Ishqiya,Udta Punjab). But you know the proper mass entertaining (sometimes mindless) Bollywood masala movies that are meant to be watched in a crowded theatre with hoots and whistles...Shetty has perfected that art of just the right amount of masala with the right amount of meat.

I personally wasn’t a huge fan of his Golmaal series. But ever since Singham, barring something like Dilwale, he just doesn’t miss. He is delivering actually entertaining blockbuster after blockbuster- Chennai Express, Singham Returns, Simba and make no mistake Sooryavanshi is a blockbuster. Despite the year and a half delay owing to the pandemic and the restricted seating capacity, Sooryavanshi has already grossed 100 crs in 3 days of release. And its not just hungry audiences coming back to theatres, it deserves the response it is getting. Because it is a damn good movie. 

Taking inspiration from Marvel and DC comics cinematic universes, Shetty expanded upon Singham’s popular appeal by making Ranveer Singh starrer Simbaa (a remake of Telugu movie Temper) a part of his ‘Cop universe’. The move was unique and welcome. Not that Bollywood hasn’t had a cinematic universe before. (Baby, Naam Shabana, Ayyare and by extension Wednesday are technically Neeraj Pandey’s own cinematic universe). But Shetty has that similar yet slightly different formula of action, music and comedy traits in his universe specific tailored to the hero of that movie. While Singham and its sequel were intense and the light comedic traits were suited to Ajay Devgan’s on-screen persona, Simbaa was naughty yet intense suited to Ranveer Singh. Sooryavanshi is action filled, fast paced and has sarcastic comedic elements- suited to Akshay Kumar’s persona.

The action..oh boy...the action in this movie is Michael Bay level. Not even exaggerating. Shetty has truly amped up the action quotient here to suit up to Khiladi Kumar’s action talents. There is a Bangkok chase sequence that though mildy exaggerated, might be at home in a Bad Boys movie. In the second half, there is a particular rotating slo-mo shot from the bottom angle that is almost trademark Micheal Bay. The chase sequences are not just cut fast to give the illusion of speed, they are actually well shot and edited. There are a few solo long shot action sequences near the end, involving combination of hand to hand and gun fights that are very evident of John Wick style Gun-fu. This is some of the cleanest and the best original (yes thankfully no Hollywood scene was copied that I can recall) action sequences I have seen in Bollywood in a long, long time. While there are obvious cinematic liberties that do not make sense, but hey...baby steps Bollywood...baby steps. If you came into the theatre expecting complete sense during a Rohit Shetty movie, I suggest you take a long look at yourself in the mirror.

The story is written by Rohit Shetty himself and..just like his most underrated movie –Singham Returns- it is surprisingly layered. Though it starts with a info dump at the beginning that can be a bit heavy and the editing keeps cutting back initially to moment we just saw 5 mins ago in typical Bollywood style. However later it settles down and gathers a slightly slow but intense pace. There are exaggerated messages of national and communal integration peppered throughout the movie, which am not a fan of to be honest. I personally prefer a bit of subtlety. But hey, what the fuck is subtlety in a Rohit Shetty movie? (I should have taken that look in the mirror myself). However, the drama actually works and there is a Hindu-Muslim unity dramatic scene in the second half that had me emotional and the theater clapping as well.

 As I said, just the perfect amount of masala...it rides that fine line between falling into melodrama territory but just recovers. Also, it’s not just the hero but supporting characters who are well rounded and shine as well. The flow builds up perfectly till the interval with all the chess pieces slowly falling in place and...do yourself a a favour - don’t watch the trailer. Because the second half is...its like the Steppenwolf fight from Zack Snyder’s Justice League or the portals scene from Endgame Ok,. I mean at least the Bollywood equivalent of it. Haven’t had so much fun in a Bollywood movie since ages. Trust me, the second half alone is worth the price of admission.

The basic plotline is Veer Suryavanshi lost his parents during the 1993 Mumbai bomb blasts. He is now a Inspector for the Anti-Terrorism Squad. 1 ton of RDX had been smuggled into Mumbai in 1993, but only 400 kgs was used. The rest is still buried somewhere. Lashkar Sleeper cells plan to use it. Not only to create terror. But to humiliate the ATS as well which has been a thorn in their flesh since 27 years. How our hero tackles this threat while balancing the personal risks this involves is the crux of the story. But there are several other character arcs that are peppered throughout. It manages to balance a large number of characters while keeping the plot moving along. Even the villains are given somewhat understandable backstories to make them multidimensional and not just random bad guys. The script has great balance of comedy, some very intelligent dialogue driven comedy and great action.

When we saw him being teased in a MCU style scene at the end of Simbaa, I knew he Akshay Kumar would OWN this role. And he 100% owns it. From the action to comedic timing, it’s perfect. The risk in any franchise is often the repeatable aspects of it. However, Shetty and his team manage to craft an entirely new and original cop hero which is similar to yet distinct from Simbaa and Singham. The way the action is filmed and especially the humor is original to each movie. There is a scene here  involving with Sooryavanshi forgetting names that’s just hilarious as hell. There are also a ton of meta jokes that poke fun at action hero traits that are just my kind of humor. Katrina Kaif acts as she best can, she gives a not too bad performance. But dances the shit out of Tip Tip Barsa Paani. (Thats all that matters I guess). The rest of the cast (THE REST- Ok I think most of you know who I am talking about) are fantastic and the chemistry between them towards the end is just...fucking amazing! They also set up a sequel in the best way possible. I can’t wait for the next instalment in Shetty’s cop universe.

 

You know what, Go watch this movie. Not on Netflix, in a full fucking theatre with all the whistles etc. This is the grand mass entertainer that deserves to be enjoyed like this. Welcome back to Cinemas. This movie is – TOTAL TIMEPASS!

 

PS- I frankly believe that Rohit Shetty has done more for popularizing Marathi culture than any Marathi artists or the Shiv Sena combined. The liberal and perfect use of Marathi language and culture in his ‘Cop universe’ is heartening to see.