Starring: Amitabh Bachchan, Saif Ali Khan, Manoj Bajpai, Prateik Babbar, Deepika Padukone, Tanvi Azmi
Directed by Prakash Jha
Rating: **
Starring: Amitabh Bachchan, Saif Ali Khan, Manoj Bajpai, Prateik Babbar, Deepika Padukone, Tanvi Azmi
Directed by Prakash Jha
Rating: **
The heart of the problem, of course, is the confused and convoluted script. It takes way too long, and many a happy family scene, to introduce the characters and set up the action. Saif Ali Khan is a Dalit fobbing off caste biases despite being educated and empowered. Big B is a conscientious principal of a college who believes in equality for all. The Mandal issue divides the students of the college and eventually Big B is eased out of the institute, which then gets taken over by the ‘evil’ Manoj Bajpai who, as a character points out, has taken Saraswati to the stockmarket and turned education into a multi-crore business with his private coaching institutes.
It’s not just the script that lets the film down. Aarakshan is also tackily mounted, the most tension-filled scenes play out flat and even an actor of the calibre of Bajpai is made to ham outrageously. Khan thinks being intense implies talking in whispers and sporting a laconic look and Prateik Babbar is uncomfortable even when he is on the periphery of a frame. Part of the problem is that the actors don’t essay rounded characters but half-baked caricatures. The only well-realised role is Big B’s and the proficient actor could well be the only reason to watch the film—apart from a lovely Tanvi Azmi who plays his wife and a beautifully grey and graceful Hema Malini who enters the acting frames only at the fag end, after being a photo on the wall for the movie’s entirety.
High Fives
Bollywood
Hollywood
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Courtesy: Film Information
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