Produced by Gauri Khan and Ratan Jain for Red Chilies Entertainment
Story: Farah Khan; Screenplay and dialogues: Farah Khan, Rajesh Saathi, Abbas Tyrewala; Music: Anu Malik; Lyrics: Javed Akhtar; Art director: Sabu Cyril; Costumes: Karan Johar, Manish Malhotra, & Sanjeev Mulchandani; Cinematography: V. Manikandan
Story: Farah Khan; Screenplay and dialogues: Farah Khan, Rajesh Saathi, Abbas Tyrewala; Music: Anu Malik; Lyrics: Javed Akhtar; Art director: Sabu Cyril; Costumes: Karan Johar, Manish Malhotra, & Sanjeev Mulchandani; Cinematography: V. Manikandan
Acclaimed choreographer Farah Khan’s first foray into
directing feels, indeed, rather like a graduation project in the
College of Post-Digital Masala Movie-Making. All the required
buttons—patriotic, erotic, familial, comic, violent, and so forth—are
robustly pushed in the course of a Byzantine storyline with three main
subplots, four stars, six songs, and plenty of explosions and bursts of
automatic weapons fire (which, combined with pathological,
hostage-seizing terrorists, seem harder to relish now, in the aftermath
of the Bombay massacre of November, 2008). Khan is not averse to naming
her influences, and there are nods to numerous films, from SHOLAY and
1942 A LOVE STORY to GREASE and THE MATRIX, but the presiding genii in
her inspirational pantheon seem to be Subhash Ghai and Manmohan Desai,
who might have dreamed up a similarly outlandish storyline and who would
surely have loved to deploy, in its service, the computer-enhanced
blue-screen effects to which Ms. Khan now has access. If the result is
not total delight, it is solid and often clever entertainment, delivered
with the kind of relentless visual wallop that has become A-list
industry standard since the ‘90s. Indeed, this film seems, at times,
like a speeding cavalcade of slick TV ads and MTV videos, punctuated by
bursts of Emotion-laden dialog, all loosely strung on the stunt-wire of
its comic-book-like plot.
This concerns Operation Milaap (“meeting, unity,
friendship”), a planned easing of tensions between India and Pakistan
through the release of hapless villagers who have been imprisoned by
both sides, sometimes for years, for the crime of straying across their
respective borders. This exercise in photo-op détente, engineered by a
visionary general in the Indian Army, is planned for Independence Day
(August 15), but its execution is threatened, on the Indian side, by a
psychopathic ex-army man nicknamed Raghavan (Suniel Shetty).
Driven by a personal vendetta against Pakistan, he
has assembled a private corps of fanatical Rambo-esque guerillas, the
better to use kidnapping and assassination to scuttle the peace
initiative. To foil Raghavan’s evil plans, Ram Prasad Sharma (Shah Rukh
Khan), a heroic army captain, goes undercover for no less than three
Missions Impossible: to protect Sanjana (Amrita Rao), the estranged
daughter of India’s highest-ranking general and simultaneously reconcile
her to her father; to find and befriend his lost step-brother and
step-mom; and to finish his own interrupted college education while
simultaneously (and this is the hard part) mastering the hybrid
sartorial and coolness codes of post-liberalization youth
consumer-culture.
All this transpires in the setting of St. Paul’s
College, an improbable institution hugging a hilltop in Darjeeling,
peopled entirely by Archie-esque types (jocks, beauty queens, nerds, and
even cheerleaders) who have apparently migrated here from the first
half of KUCH KUCH HOTA HAI. Although academic standards are apparently
low enough to tolerate such party animals as the popular “Lucky” (Zayed
Khan)—a.k.a. Lakshman Prasad Sharma, Ram’s lost half-brother and a
triple-failed student—dress codes are strict, and require, for each and
every extra, almari-busting loads of designer denims, spandex, and
sweats, which are displayed through the trademark F. Khan choreography
of such item numbers as Main hoon na and Gori gori (“O pretty one”).
The teaching staff includes an assortment of
predictable comic types—the absent-minded principal (Boman Irani), the
bombastic spitter (Satish Shah), and the sexually frustrated and
mongrel-English-speaking Hindi instructor (Bindu)—as well as the
requisite bombshell chemistry teacher, Miss Chandni (Sushmita Sen), to
whom Captain Ram promptly loses his heart.
Amid a barrage of fashion fetishism, many Bombay cinematic clichés also get re-dressed—including an eye-popping disco-qawwali,
replete with reflecting pools and live aquatic birds—though the
reigning trope ultimately seems to be the teary-embrace-of-lost-brothers
(named Ram and Lakshman, no less, and with other Ramayana references thrown in) as metonym for the healing-of-subcontinental-schisms.
When the explosions die down, and a slightly-reformed
Lucky finally matriculates together with Ram, there’s a signature Farah
credit sequence (in which you actually get to see the folks who did
everything), set at an outdoor fair, that is about as good as the rest
of the film. Maybe better….
Still, one has to admire Farah Khan’s success in
breaking into the Boy’s Club of Bombay industry direction, and this
commercially successful film shows her competence at tweaking one of its
signature action-adventure/dosti-laden genres—certainly, no
one could accuse her of making a “chick flick.” But to see this plucky
director’s real genius, viewers are well advised to watch her
extraordinary second film, OM SHANTI OM (2007).
[The Eros International DVD of this film in my
possession is the WORST Hindi film DVD I have ever seen. Although image
quality is tolerable, and decent subtitles are provided for both dialog
and song lyrics, the film is repeatedly interrupted by commercials for
AKAI electronic equipment, apparently inserted during the actual running
time so that short segments of the action are cut out. To make matters
worse, song sequences feature a continuous scrolling ad for AIRTEL
running across the top of the frame. This appalling imposition
(reminiscent of the bad old days of Dubai-made pirated VHS tapes bearing
the slogans of their cassette shops) on what is already a fairly messy
film makes the DVD unusable for instructional purposes, should anyone be
inclined in that direction. Farah and the Red Chilies folks ought to
be ashamed to present their work in this format. (Eros, one suspects,
has no shame.)]
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