Release date:
|
December 18, 2015
|
Director:
|
Rohit Shetty
|
Cast:
Language:
|
Shah Rukh Khan,
Kajol, Varun Dhawan, Kriti Sanon, Varun Sharma, Mukesh Tiwari, Pankaj
Tripathi, Sanjay Mishra, Boman Irani, Johnny Lever, Vinod Khanna, Kabir Bedi
Hindi
|
There’s something
about age that does wonderful things to people. Shah Rukh Khan and Kajol have
always had great on-screen chemistry, but the 22 years that have passed since
they were first seen together in a film have added an unfathomable,
heart-wrenching element to their pairing. Team Dilwale should send up a prayer of thanks for this saving grace, because
this is the first time the two have been called upon to carry a film through on
the strength of nothing but – absolutely nothing but – that chemistry.
If you draw a sketch
of the basic plot points of Dilwale,
you will see the promise there. How the lead pair meet, the misunderstanding
that leads to a parting of ways and the seemingly improbable circumstances that
reunite them are all believable and potentially entertaining. The problem with
the film though is that the threads used to weave these plot elements together
are so disparate, so jumbled and so loosely put together, that the result is a
bland, lifeless film.
Rohit Shetty, whose
previous works could be accused of many things, but never a lack of energy,
seems to have fallen asleep – perhaps with boredom? – in the director’s chair
while making this film. That is one possible explanation for the lackadaisical
nature of the storytelling from a man who in the past has given us Chennai Express and Singham (yeah yeah, I know it’s terribly unintellectual to say so,
but I enjoyed both). All those cars careening about the screen cannot
compensate for what feels like his own lack of interest in this project.
Dilwale suffers from limp writing and unenthusiastic
direction. Even its clichés and stereotypes are too dull to be infuriating –
like that distasteful and decidedly unfunny scene in which Johnny Lever
pretends he is about to assault Kajol’s character; or the disappointingly medieval
mindset which makes the film’s writer think, even in the year 2015, that there
can be nothing more terrible than ladkiwaale
who want their daamaad to live with
them after marriage; or the regressive, populist monologue about the high cost
of dating women these days by Varun Sharma’s character, while his girlfriend
stands by unquestioningly, clearly never having heard of going Dutch on a date;
or Sanjay Mishra’s character who forever spouts nonsensical rhymes in
conversations, such as this one addressed to his sister: “Bol mere ghar ki laado, Rolex Rado.”
Hain?
All this fades into
insignificance though each time SRK looks at Kajol. Not the clean-shaven,
supposedly younger version of Shah Rukh in the film, but the older, wiser,
bearded man whose role acknowledges his age with dignity and grace.
When he gazes at
her or even just throws her a fleeting glance, and those eyes we’ve been seeing
now for almost 27 years brim over with love and longing, tedium recedes into
the background. It is a look that makes you want to reach out and hug him, to
reassuringly pat him on the shoulder, to tell him that all will be well, to scream
out the truth so that she realises that it was all just a misunderstanding.
The return of the
Kajol-SRK pairing five years after My
Name Is Khan was supposed to be this film’s USP. As it turns, it is the
film’s OSP – only selling point.
Shah Rukh in Dilwale plays a gangster in Bulgaria called
Raj Randhir Bakshi a.k.a. Kaali. Between shootouts and car chases during the
course of his underworld activities, he meets Meera Dev Malik (Kajol) and they
fall in love. A tragedy causes them to split up. When the film opens, the story
has fast forwarded to the present in Goa where Raj runs a car modification
workshop with his younger brother Veer (Varun Dhawan) who, at some point, falls
in love with a pretty restaurateur called Ishita (Kriti Sanon). As you can imagine,
circumstances cause Meera to return to Raj’s life.
Dilwale’s primary characters are surrounded by a bunch of
comedians who are occasionally amusing (Mukesh Tiwari and Pankaj Tripathi are
hilarious in a scene in which they try to cover up Raj’s past in the face of
Veer’s probing questions) but mostly not.
Varun is sweet but
really needs to give that cutesy dialogue delivery a rest. Kriti is given
little to do, which is a pity because she has a striking, intelligent screen
presence and was perhaps the only one worth watching in Tiger Shroff’s debut
film Heropanti.
Even the songs by
Pritam are, for the most part, a damp squib. The music director redeems himself
though with Gerua (in Arijit Singh &
Antara Mitra’s voices) from which Amar Mohile borrows several
bars for his background score. Both serve to play up the SRK-Kajol hotness to
searing effect.
SRK himself is
magnetic and charming as the older Raj. He should seriously consider keeping
that beard forever. Kajol is radiant, pretty and, with much less screen time
than the hero, effective, though she should seriously consider junking those
awkward high heels in future. It also feels sad to see how much she has
whitened her skin from what it was when she began her career (he seems to have
done likewise, though to a lesser extent).
There is not much
in the writing of Dilwale that could
help these two recreate the sparks that flew between them in their earlier
films, but they do radiate warmth for each other, a warmth that wafts off the
screen and floats about the air in a sigh-inducing fashion. Each time Shah Rukh
and Kajol are together in a frame, you can almost forgive Dilwale for everything else that it ought to have been but is not.
Rating
(out of five): **
CBFC Rating (India):
|
U/A
|
Running time:
|
165 minutes
|
This review has also been published on
firstpost:
The film lacked a soul. There was no depth or intensity whatsoever. Too many characters, too much happening. Yet nothing. But Mr. Shah Rukh Khan took my heart away, yet again. Toh sab kuch maaf ;)
ReplyDelete@mallikagupta
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteAnna: A question on the film's overseas collection. There is an unanimous consensus that Bajirao Mastani is a better film than dilwale. This is evidenced by the film's collection in the domestic market as compared to Bajirao Mastani. With respect to the overseas markets, the film has done exceedingly well. This is strange considering that the overseas audiences are perceived more sensible and are adverse to slapstick stuff as against the audiences in India. Is the trend changing?
ReplyDeleteAnkit Nahar
Dear Ankit, But who said the overseas audience is "more sensible and adverse to slapstick stuff", as you put it? I was not aware of this perception :)
DeleteI meant the way the typical NRIs project themselves to be. May be I was carried away by the perception.
Delete