Sensex surges 454 points Nifty closes at 17,536 S.Korean game producers chase NFTs in real-money boost for players and firmsĮU regulator authorises Pfizer’s COVID vaccine for kids 5-11 Taiwan looking at chip cooperation with Eastern European nations Twitter reveals its first ever livestream shopping platform It is moral ambiguity that is the driving force of Badlapur but Raghvan doesn’t over play the drama card to spoil the fun of a pulpy thriller.īottomline: An edge-of-the-seat pulpy entertainer that manages to turn the revenge formula on its head. Sachin- Jigar’s compositions come in at the right times to help us take the small leaps of faith in this dark space. In fact in the second half you start reading Raghu’s mind but Raghavan manages to tide over the loopholes with a tightly-edited, fast-paced narrative that keeps you hooked all the time. It is not that all the questions are answered it is not that whatever Raghu does is convincing. Radhika Apte emerges as a surprise packet. Varun not only undergoes the physical transformation but also the psychological change is palpable. It is tough to blow dignity into a character that starts a black hole but Nawaz manages to do it effortlessly. A lady private detective who mops the floor to remain in shape, a dialogue of Sholay that inspires Laiq or the Kaalia like jail, this dark tale has a lining of dry humour as well.Īs Laiq, the liar, Nawaz is an absolute delight to watch. The detailing is delicious and so are the references and the quirks that he is known to slip into storytelling. Known for nourishing his ensemble cast with care, here again Raghavan has given each character a chance to engage. Be it the hooker Jhimli (Huma Qureshi) or the dedicated social worker Shobha (Divya Dutta) or for that matter the well-meaning police officer (Kumud Mishra), Raghavan spares everybody from straitjacket. In true tradition of noir, every character that Raghu encounters in his search for the killers is twisted here. The shift of moral compass is not limited to Raghu and Laiq. That there is no point in taking everything into one’s hands. Along the way, Raghavan also hints at something called divine justice. What the supposed villain did was in a moment of madness but what our hero is going to achieve is a cold blooded murder.Ĭast: Varun Dhawan, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Yami Gautam, Huma Qureshi, Vinay Pathak, Radhika Apte, Kumud MishraĪs we grapple with the choices that Raghu makes, Raghavan doesn’t waste time on back stories to establish the motivations of Laiq but gives us enough to dip into the societal pool where such characters germinate.
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After establishing the traumatic void in great detail that sudden and brutal death of the loved ones create around you, Raghavan gradually makes us revisit established definitions of hero and villain. It shifts the film into the adult territory but only to ask some mature questions about the shapes and sounds that violence can take.Īs his means become increasingly questionable the thriller turns out to be a rollercoaster ride where the mind and heart switch sides like a pendulum. Having bit dust at the box office even after making a ‘safe’ film like Agent Vinod, Raghavan goes all out, even a step beyond Johnny Gaddar, as his protagonist uses sex as a weapon of revenge sending the moral compass into a tizzy. Raghu, who could not come to terms with the loss, doesn’t buy his alibi and seeks revenge and bides his time. When the police catch one of the robbers, Laiq (Nawazuddin Siddiqui), he blames his missing partner for the murders and manages to convince the jury that he was also used in the robbery. It is about Raghu (Varun Dhawan), an advertising executive, whose happy world gets ripped apart when his adorable wife (Yami Gautam) and kid get killed in a robbery. The good thing is Raghavan doesn’t blink on establishing either side of the moral divide creating a complex tapestry for the audience to manoeuvre. Sriram Raghavan, who has been playing with noir (Įk Thi Hasina, Johnny Gaddar) in Indian conditions, has come up with yet another absorbing journey from black and white to grey alleys in human psyche as the title becomes a homonym with one meaning punning on the other. As if it is the aakhri raasta! What if the avenger is bereft of his most potent weapon, or connection with the audience, midway? And we don’t mind the mayhem that ensues, at least within those two hours. But from Zanjeer to Ghajini, the writer and director often create a moral cushion for the hero to strike back. Revenge as the driving force of the story is not new to Hindi cinema.