Film review Zanjeer: You watch this one and you get started with the whys
Movies Review: Zanjeer (Still)
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Director: Apoorva Lakhia
The Indian Express rating: * 1/2
This film brings with it a series of whys, the first being the biggest: why remake an iconic film which has never disappeared from view? Forty years ago, Prakash Mehra made his Zanjeer, with Amitabh Bachchan as Inspector Vijay Khanna, a cop with serious anger management issues, brought on by a murder he witnessed as a child, Jaya Bahaduri as a reluctant witness to a gang killing, Pran as the noble-hearted Pathan-ka-bachcha, the marvelously mannered Ajit as Bad Guy Teja, and Bindu as the bursting-out-of-her-sequinned-slinkiness Mona Darling. That 1973 Zanjeer turned into a superhit, and kickstarted Bachchan's rise and rise in Hindi cinema.
That 40-year-old flick is to be seen forever running on a loop on a movie channel or two. Despite its hamminess (Pran took the word 'ham' to sublime levels with his dire auburn wig-and kohl-eyed goonda-turned-good Sher Khan), and its quotient of melodrama, that Prakash Mehra film remains a zinger. It gave us the Bollywood hero with the longest legs, in all senses of the word, and a prototype plot -- cops vs robbers-- which never tires unless done badly.
And then you watch this new Zanjeer and you get started with the whys.
Implicit in all remakes is the idea that you are refreshing the film, both for those who may have seen the original, as well as for newbies ( in the screening I was at, I found someone who, gasp, hadn't seen the old one).
The filmmakers have been carefully calling it a "tribute", and they have added a couple of elements which weren't in the older film, but to me it was a neither here-nor-there thing: it's neither faithful remake nor campy, knowing tribute. It's just a poor copy. So why?
Cast: Ram Charan,
Prakash Raj, Priyanka Chopra, Sanjay Dutt, Atul Kulkarni
Director: Apoorva Lakhia
Ramgopal Varma Ki Aag, which I consider the worst Hindi movie ever made,
now has company in the annals of film history. It's a coincidence that
the second worst Hindi film I had the misfortune of watching is also a
remake of a classic 70s hit - 'Zanjeer'.
Directed by Apoorva Lakhia, who has previously unleashed such atrocities
on our senses as 'Mumbai Se Aaya Mera Dost' and 'Mission Istanbul', the
new 'Zanjeer' isn't just a bad film, it's a shameless exercise in
laziness. As anyone who watches movies for a living will tell you,
there's some merit to be found even in awful films...a nicely picturised
song perhaps, or a decent performance from a random supporting actor,
possibly a relevant message buried somewhere in the mess. But I'm afraid
there's nothing polite that can be said about 'Zanjeer'.
Prakash Mehra's 1973 film starred Amitabh Bachchan as an upright cop
pitted against a corrupt system. Superbly written by Salim-Javed, the
movie shrewdly tapped into the nation's collective frustration, and the
Angry Young Man was born. Lakhia's version features Telugu star Ram
Charan as ACP Vijay Khanna, hot on the trail of oil Mafiosi Teja
(Prakash Raj). Priyanka Chopra is Mala, an NRI girl and sole witness to a
gruesome murder that could link Teja to the adulterated petrol scam.
Closely following the blueprint of the earlier film, Vijay is helped in
his mission by reformed illegal car dealer Sher Khan (Sanjay Dutt).
There's an informant too, in the form of an honest crime reporter (Atul
Kulkarni), who at one point gives Vijay crucial information about Teja's
operations, all the while dancing in a Ganpati procession.
Not satisfied at being a hollow imitation, the new 'Zanjeer' is
embarrassingly ill-conceived and is packed with howlers from start to
finish. Sanjay Dutt's Sher Khan and our cop hero first engage in what
comes off as a comedic fight scene that leaves them panting for breath.
The next moment, they're bonding during a Playstation game. At another
point in the film, while asking that Vijay be protected, Sher Khan says:
"Woh mera dost hai. Aur waise bhi Hindustan mein sher aur dost, dono ki
kami hai".
Dressed in badly-fitted gaudy suits and constantly pawing his moll
(Mahie Gill in a career-ending performance) while delivering sleazy
double-meaning lines like "Mona Darling, apna moonh sirf ek cheez ke
liye kholna please", Prakash Raj can't recreate the gloriously
over-the-top guilty pleasure that was Ajit in the role of the original
Teja. The film, in fact, is a treasure chest of corny dialogue, with the
choicest lines reserved for Prakash Raj. During a lavish meal with his
associates, Teja says, "Chicken and chicks are the two meows of life."
While bribing Atul Kulkarni in a private theatre filled with
skimpily-clad white women, he points to one lady and says to the
reporter: "How about a massage? She gives the best happy ending."
Lakhia cobbles together powerful moments from the original 'Zanjeer',
but he brings neither imagination nor depth in his telling. In a
cringe-inducing rehash of the memorable morgue scene, as the background
score swells, Vijay tells Mala rather tritely, "I thought being a woman,
you'd have a heart". Meanwhile, the famous confrontation scene with
Sher Khan in the police station feels strangely muted because Ram Charan
can't muster up the seething intensity that Bachchan brought to that
moment.
Ram Charan, in fact, a successful and popular star in Telugu films,
comes off as stiff as a wax statue in his Bollywood debut, with barely
any emotion, forget brooding anger. His biceps pop out of his uniform,
but he barely flexes his facial muscles. Ram Charan never gets under the
skin of Vijay Khanna, making it hard to look beyond his kohl-lined eyes
and his neatly styled hair. A portly Sanjay Dutt, his wardrobe
comprising bright pathani suits, pretty much sleepwalks through his
scenes as Sher Khan. Buried under bad prosthetic make up, or the result
of too many hangovers, his eyes and face appear hard as a rock.
But the most grating performance comes from Priyanka Chopra, who was so
good in last year's 'Barfi', you have to wonder if that role sucked all
the talent right out of her. Like a six year old on a sugar high, she
chatters away inanities without pausing for breath; her Mala an idiot
version of Jaya Bachchan's memorable take on the character.
Having said that, the blame for this film rests squarely with its makers
- co-writer and director Apoorva Lakhia, and Prakash Mehra's own sons
who have produced this drivel. If the new 'Zanjeer' was merely a badly
made film, you could dismiss the makers as talentless brats. But their
biggest crime here is that they don't so much as try to make a decent
film. Their movie stinks of a blatant disregard for the audience's
intelligence and entertainment. It's an obvious attempt to cash in on
the brand 'Zanjeer' and offer nothing in return.
I'm going with zero out of five, for the new 'Zanjeer'. Without
belittling their year-long battle with the film's makers to be
compensated for remaking their script, one has to wonder if
screenwriters Salim Khan and Javed Akhtar might consider donating some
part of their settlement towards admitting these guys in film school
Read more at: http://ibnlive.in.com/news/zanjeer-review-the-film-is-a-shameless-exercise-in-laziness/420143-47-84.html?utm_source=ref_article
Read more at: http://ibnlive.in.com/news/zanjeer-review-the-film-is-a-shameless-exercise-in-laziness/420143-47-84.html?utm_source=ref_article