Release date:
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July 25, 2014
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Director:
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Sajid Nadiadwala
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Cast:
Language:
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Salman Khan,
Randeep Hooda, Jacqueline Fernandez, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Mithun Chakraborty,
Vipin Sharma, Archana Puran Singh, Saurabh Shukla
Hindi
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A man and woman on a train journey are exchanging
notes about that one grand obsession in their lives. She is Shaina Mehra
(Jacqueline Fernandez), daughter of the Indian ambassador to Poland. He is
Himanshu Tyagi (Randeep Hooda), a top Indian policeman. Shaina tells him about
her ex-boyfriend Devi Lal Singh back in Delhi, an altruistic fellow who was forever
placing himself in precarious situations to get an adrenaline rush (he calls it
“kick”, hence the film’s title). Since he was unable to stick to any job, her
father assumed that he would gladly be a ghar
jamaai. Whaaaaatttttt?!!!! I tell ya, the audacity of the man! Since there
can be no greater affront to a Bollywood hero’s ego – as we all know – this GJ business ultimately tears the couple
apart.
Himanshu in turn tells Shaina about the one
criminal he has failed to nab so far – a gravity-defying, logic-busting, masked
thief whose face no one has ever seen. He calls himself Devil. Of course they’re
both talking about the same man, played by Salman Khan. Don’t worry, that’s not
a spoiler: they don’t know, but we
the viewers are in on the secret from the start.
Producer Sajid Nadiadwala’s debut film as director,
Kick is devoted to dual threads: the
crests and troughs of Devi’s romance with Shaina, and Himanshu’s
cross-continental chase of Devil. That the two stories will intersect at some
point is evident from the word go.
Kick is a glossy, overtly
expensive film shot in India and abroad with sumptuous sets and expansive
cinematography. Although Ahmed Khan’s choreography for the women (Jacqueline
and cameo girl Nargis Fakhri) is graceless, he has given Salman some interesting
moves. The intermittent humour in the screenplay steers clear of farts, poop
and pee, which is more than can be said of most big Bollywood comedies these
days. Besides, although it has been designed as an ode to its leading man
replete with references to his hits, it is less irritatingly in-your-face with
the Salman worship than many of the star’s recent films.
Big mistake though: Sajid surrounds his hero with
supporting actors so vastly superior to him in various ways, that they show him
up for what he is: a cute guy with a charming screen presence who milks the
cuteness and charm to camouflage his limited acting.
Mistake #1: casting Nawazuddin Siddiqui as Devil’s
bĂȘte noir. The eccentric Shiv Gajra in Kick
is the least nuanced character this marvelous actor has played so far. Yet,
Nawaz shows flashes of brilliance even here. The merit in his performance becomes
glaring when Devil/Salman mimics Shiv’s quirks, and falls flat in the attempt.
Mistake #2: casting Randeep Hooda as Himanshu.
Randeep is an underrated actor who is his usual, quietly effective self in Kick, but that’s not the point here. His
presence in this film serves to highlight the fact that Salman is no longer the
lithe action hero he once was. This Khan has always had the body and
distinctive walk of a body-builder – I get that. But from Ek Tha Tiger onwards, he has been looking increasingly tubby and sluggish.
Watching one particular low-angle shot of him negotiate the edge of a wall of a
high-rise building is a sad reminder of this. So too is the sight of him next
to Randeep’s slim yet muscular frame sans the endearing Salman-deprecating
humour of Dabangg’s screenplay that revelled
in the physical differences between Chulbul Pandey (Salman) and Chhedi Singh (played
by the towering Sonu Sood). It doesn’t help that a light-footed Hrithik Roshan
as another masked hero is still so fresh in our memories.
Mistake #3: Vipin Sharma playing India’s Home
Minister and Sanjay Mishra as the low-ranking policeman Ramaavtar Rathi pull off
comedy with greater panache in their brief appearances in Kick, than Salman manages with the zillion lines he gets in the
entire film.
The film’s gender politics is steeped in hypocrisy.
In one scene, Devi bashes up a bunch of guys who were harassing women at a
restaurant and lectures the indifferent onlookers. This comes just seconds
after he was himself harassing Shaina in that very restaurant despite her
professed disinterest. Then in that thoroughly enjoyable song Jumme ki raat hai (the stand-out number
in an otherwise lacklustre soundtrack), Devi lifts an unsuspecting Shaina’s
skirt by his teeth and follows her, surrounded by a troupe of male dancers. In
the same song, she takes off her overcoat and gyrates every single part of her
body in a tiny tight dress, while he watches in open-mouthed wonderment. In the
very next shot he protectively covers up her body with her coat. Guess he just
remembered those audience members who were moved by his earlier ma-behen
speech?
To be fair, there are several scenes in which the
humour hits home and the action is cool (one involves Devil on a bike with a
speeding train approaching him). For the most part though, Kick feels stale. In places, the writing is so sub-standard that
it’s a wonder such lines were released for public consumption. Topping the list
is the repeated, tacky use of the word “kick” in dialogues to justify the
contrived title. The characterisation of Devi’s mother (over-acted by Archana
Puran Singh) is unimaginative and unoriginal. How many times will we be served
loud, crude melodramatic North Indian moms before the cliché is laid to rest?
As Devi’s dad, Mithun Chakraborty delivers an OTT performance of an unfunny,
OTT character.
Kick is a remake of a
Telugu film of the same name, with a screenplay adapted for Bollywood by
Nadiadwala, Rajat Aroraa and bestselling author Chetan Bhagat. The result of Bhagat’s
earlier screenplay collaboration was Kai
Po Che, a film that is head and shoulders, eyebrows and forehead above this
one in terms of finesse and novelty. This is not to say that Kick can be completely written off. It’s
way better than the recent Salman-starrer Jai Ho. But considering the dullness of Jai Ho and how repetitive Salman has been since the highly entertaining Dabangg in 2010, that still just makes Kick an average film with sporadic humour and little that’s new.
Rating
(out of five stars): **
Footnote: Believe it or not, Salman
plays a 40-year-old in Kick. Devi laughingly claims that he is
10 since his birthday comes once every four years (he was born on February 29
in a leap year). As every Bollywood buff knows, for a 48-year-old male star to
play a 40-year-old character, and not a 20-/30-something, is unusual and
progressive. Next step hopefully: 48-year-old men who do not insist on starring
opposite girls two decades their junior?
CBFC Rating (India):
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UA
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Running time:
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147 minutes
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Photograph courtesy: Everymedia PR
Nawazuddin Siddiqui as the villain was an excellent move. He is way too talented. Randeep was excellent too. Salman as usual and it should not be mentioned, was his usual best.
ReplyDeleteYes Salman played a 40 year old character just like how SRK played a 40 year old character last year. SRK was 48 years old last year too. So if it was not a big deal then then it shouldnt be a big deal now either.
Movie deserves at least 4 stars. Not sure what you were smoking while watching the movie.
Fresh air methinks, my friend, she was smoking fresh air! :D
DeleteLoved your review! It's time Salman retired! He should become a gym instructor!
SRK wasn't playing an action hero in it. I think you're a salman fan, they always find a way to bring srk up to justify their points - why?
ReplyDeleteBooked tickets for matinee show but after reading your review I don't know what to do... Thoda guide karo yaar...
ReplyDeleteI hated the movie.shameful ,how these movie stars are still accepted .they should be banned to act.I agree he might do a better job as a gym instructor.
ReplyDeleteloved the review. there is nothing shameful about these movies. These stars are loved and they will phase out, may be slower than others but they will definitely phase out. Till then, just relax, enjoy and comment.
ReplyDeleteAnd... Anonymous?really?
eliminating Halwa Raj&Dr.Bali characters from Original KICK is a Blunder,SolmonKhan was gr8,Nawaz=bakwas overrated actor. Anyday give me the ORIGINAL
ReplyDeleteI like it when people like to critize films like as if they can make a better film. First try to make yourself look good in front of the camera. It is easy to trash film. Anyone can do it.
ReplyDeleteTry and make a film.
The movie was very good. Everyone has their opinion.
ReplyDeleteThe film is making average collections. 130cr after 5 days is not that bad.
Well some actors are just too big to be pulled down by critics.
Salman is the only actor to have 7 back to back 100cr collections and 6 blockbusters in 4 years.