Release date:
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November 1, 2013
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Director:
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Rakesh Roshan
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Cast:
Language: |
Hrithik Roshan,
Priyanka Chopra, Kangna Ranaut, Viveik Oberoi, Arif Zakaria, Rajpal Yadav,
Asif Basra
Hindi
|
“Congratulations, beta hua hai,” says the nurse to the
beaming Priya and Krishna Mehra in a hospital room towards the end of Krrish 3. Imagine instead if the line
had been, “Congratulations, beti hui hai.”
Now that’s what could have elevated Rakesh Roshan’s film from merely being fun to
something extraordinarily pathbreaking, special and brave. Alas, like pretty
much every Hollywood superhero flick to which Krrish 3 pays tribute, here too legacies and genes are passed on
only from father-to-son-to-grandson instead of from parent-(mother/father)-to-child-(daughter/son)-to-grandchild-(granddaughter/grandson).
And sadly, the bravery in this
project is only a remnant of the risk Roshan Senior took when he entered a
heavily-special-effects-laden sci-fi-superhero genre with Koi Mil Gaya in 2003. Ten years on, he brings to us the third film
in the series, a play-it-safe even if highly entertaining film.
Krrish 3 takes off
where Koi Mil Gaya and its sequel Krrish left off: Rohit – an elderly
version of the mentally ‘slow’ genius from KMG
– is now living a happy life with his son Krishna in Mumbai. Rohit works in a scientific
research facility in the city. In his spare time he is immersed in a personal
project to harness the sun’s rays through mirror arrangements to revive dead
beings. Krishna is repeatedly fired from paying jobs since most of his time is spent
saving the world from tragedies in his masked superhero avatar Krrish. Their family
is completed by Krishna’s journalist wife Priya who we first met in the second film.
In a snowy land far away lives
Kaal, a wheelchair-bound evil scientist with telekinetic powers who creates lethal
viruses, deliberately causes epidemics, then earns millions by selling
antidotes for those very viruses. Kaal is aided in his work by an army of
mutants he created by fusing human and animal DNA, calling them maanvar (= maanav + jaanvar). Among
them is the chameleon-woman Kaaya. When Rohit develops an antidote for a virus
in India before Kaal’s antidote hits the market, the bad guy is enraged and
makes it his mission to find out more about the Mehras and his mysterious link
with them. And thence all hell breaks loose.
It becomes obvious what’s in
store for us when in the opening minutes: (1) Big B’s voiceover providing a
flashback to the first two films describes Rohit, with ill-chosen words, as “abnormal”
(2) we meet Krishna and Priya looking stunning in their nightwear (he topless,
actually) and (3) it soon rains adrenaline as Krrish emerges in his caped and
masked glory, zipping across the city to prevent a plane crash. This then is
what the film offers us throughout: not much intellectual finesse, handsome people,
top-notch home-grown special effects (it felt good to see them credited to SRK’s
Red Chillies VFX, Mumbai) and excellent action. Rajesh Roshan’s songs, it must
be said, are a yawn. Making matters worse are the dated lyrics of God Allah aur Bhagwan ne banaaya ek insaan,
reminding us that Bollywood remains convinced to this day that the God of
Christians speaks only English, the God of Muslims speaks only Arabic and Hinduism’s
many deities are Hindi-bhaashis. The
disco Raghupati Raghav Raja Ram is
interesting in the way it evokes the celebratory nature of Hindu worship, but the
song does not rise above being lively.
On the face of it, Krrish 3’s USP is its special effects. But
look closer and it’s clear that the entire series would be nothing without
Hrithik Roshan. In this film he switches from Rohit to Krishna to Krrish with more
conviction than the written material might have inspired in a lesser actor. Of
all Bollywood’s reigning male stars today, Hrithik is the one equipped with the
kind of versatile face and killer body (not overly ripped as it was in Kites) that could be equally convincing
as a superhero, a towering figure from Indian history or a contemporary regular
Jo. Personally, I’d love to see him play Ram, Krishna or Jesus in a film. It
goes beyond his natural talent and incredible looks though. With the flawed Krrish 3 he proves that he has overcome
his initial weaknesses & evolved into one of the best male actors in the
industry.
Playing his wife here is one
of the best female actors in the industry, which is why it’s a telling
statement on the position of women in Bollywood that Priyanka Chopra is relegated
to a mere hanger-on in this film. Kangna Ranaut’s impossibly curvaceous,
vicious yet vulnerable Kaaya has greater substance. When she has sexual
fantasies about Krishna, the director substitutes her thoughts with a sanitised
song, I guess because he wanted a U certification. Despite that embarrassingly
bad number sung in a desert, Kaaya remains an enigmatically appealing creature throughout.
Kangna also seems to have worked hard on her accent and voice modulation, which
have been her Achilles heel in recent years. With this film, the Roshans have
compensated her for the shabby treatment they meted out to her character in Kites in 2010. Viveik Oberoi’s Kaal is a
mixed bag though. The actor does his best, but the laboured explanations about his
background and the director’s evident effort to summon up a sense of ominous
grandeur around him end up slowing down the film in all his scenes. Especially dull
is the scene in which a metallic body suit envelopes Kaal, so reminiscent of Yashida’s
equally dull emergence as the Silver Samurai in this year’s The Wolverine.
That’s not the only scene here
that is a reminder of a Hollywood superhero flick (though let's be fair and admit that when Hollywood superhero flicks resemble each other, we Indians tend to complain a lot less). Krrish 3 repeatedly crosses the fine line between inspiration,
imitation and an ode. It’s hard to understand why that was necessary since
there was more writing depth, flesh and originality in both Koi Mil Gaya and Krrish despite the evident inspiration from ET and Superman/Batman.
Hollywood superheroes come
to us against the backdrop of their comic-book mythology. A Bollywood superhero
has thousands of years of Indian mythology to dip into. The Krrish-Kaal
equation harks back to Arjun and Karna from the Mahabharat. At one point a character draws a parallel between
Kaal’s mutants and Ramayan’s Shurpanakha.
There is potential here, but the screenplay by Akash Khurana, Honey
Irani, Irfan Kamal, Rakesh Roshan and Robin Bhatt seems
determined to keep it simple with what appears to be an eye on a very young
audience.
Thing is, children are far
more intelligent than we give them credit for. Besides, some of the best
children’s films have offered layers of meaning to adults. Oh well, with all
its blemishes, Krrish 3 still has a
lot to offer: a loveable, beautiful-looking superhero, an intriguing female
antagonist, hugely entertaining action sequences, the promise of a Krrish 4 and these words from Priya that
are worth holding on to, “Krrish ek soch
hai jise koi kaal nahin maar sakta”.
Rating (out of five): **3/4
CBFC Rating (India):
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U
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Running time:
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2 hours 32 minutes
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Photograph courtesy: Everymedia PR
The shooting for this movie was completed before Man of Steel or The Wolverine for that matter released.
ReplyDeleteDude, even the first Krrish hadn't been released before the concept of mutants was thought of. Mystique (Kaya in this movie) and Magneto (Kaal in this movie) were in a movie that got released before even Koi Mil Gaya. In 2000. This is a blatant rip-off of X-Men and the only thing worth watching is Hrithik's excellent performance.
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