Raees will no doubt be among big earners in Bollywood this year but it could have aspired to do more
Ranjita Ganesan | New Delhi January 25, 2017 Last Updated at 20:20 IST
The Shah Rukh Khan-starrer pauses strategically for cheers from the audience, an audience that is willing to line up in cinemas at 8.20 am on the day of release. With such commercial intentions affixed proudly on the sleeve, any chance of being a meaningful addition to the roster of gangster dramas is lost. What remains is a candyfloss crime picture.
It is another curious addition to the uneven track record of Rahul Dholakia, director and co-writer, who in the past made a nondescript Kehta Hai Dil Baar Baar (2002) as well as a sincere Parzania (2005).
The treatment, however, opts for fanfare over depth. There is little insight into Raees’ criminal personality. It is not clear what stirs and sustains his enormous hunger for success, although low self-esteem is hinted at in his disapproval of the nickname “battery” (a colloquial reference to his spectacles). It is only explained, through repeated uttering, that the man believes “Koi dhanda chota nahi hota. Aur dhande se bada koi dharm nahi hota” (No business is lowly. And business outranks religion).
Dholakia and his team lionise Raees. He is street-smart, an able marksman, a lifter of heavy weights, a baddie with scruples, a philanthropist. While the character’s triumphs are punctuated with songs, moments of defeat or despair are brief and afterthought-like. The result is quite enjoyable but equally unexceptional.
One dazzling moment is in the introduction of Siddiqui as ACP Majmudar, who delivers a hilarious speech with textbook understatement. The fights, featuring parkour moves and a videogame-style shooting spree are somewhat sanitised. The characters land safely like cats and wounds, if suffered at all, appear to heal quickly. Much of the film, while intending to transport viewers to a mohalla in small-town Fatehpura, looks like a movie set.
Raees review: A candyfloss crime picture desperately in need of depth
Raees will no doubt be among big earners in Bollywood this year but it could have aspired to do more
Raees will no doubt be among big earners in Bollywood this year but it could have aspired to do moreThe Shah Rukh Khan-starrer pauses strategically for cheers from the audience, an audience that is willing to line up in cinemas at 8.20 am on the day of release. With such commercial intentions affixed proudly on the sleeve, any chance of being a meaningful addition to the roster of gangster dramas is lost. What remains is a candyfloss crime picture.
It is another curious addition to the uneven track record of Rahul Dholakia, director and co-writer, who in the past made a nondescript Kehta Hai Dil Baar Baar (2002) as well as a sincere Parzania (2005).
The treatment, however, opts for fanfare over depth. There is little insight into Raees’ criminal personality. It is not clear what stirs and sustains his enormous hunger for success, although low self-esteem is hinted at in his disapproval of the nickname “battery” (a colloquial reference to his spectacles). It is only explained, through repeated uttering, that the man believes “Koi dhanda chota nahi hota. Aur dhande se bada koi dharm nahi hota” (No business is lowly. And business outranks religion).
Dholakia and his team lionise Raees. He is street-smart, an able marksman, a lifter of heavy weights, a baddie with scruples, a philanthropist. While the character’s triumphs are punctuated with songs, moments of defeat or despair are brief and afterthought-like. The result is quite enjoyable but equally unexceptional.
One dazzling moment is in the introduction of Siddiqui as ACP Majmudar, who delivers a hilarious speech with textbook understatement. The fights, featuring parkour moves and a videogame-style shooting spree are somewhat sanitised. The characters land safely like cats and wounds, if suffered at all, appear to heal quickly. Much of the film, while intending to transport viewers to a mohalla in small-town Fatehpura, looks like a movie set.
Ranjita Ganesan
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