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EDITOR'S PICK
'Tiger Zinda Hai': Seriously frivolous masala film (Review By Troy Ribeiro ; Rating: **1/2)
"Tiger Zinda Hai" is the sequel to the 2012 released, Kabir Khan directed,
"Ek Tha Tiger". Designed purely for Salman Khan fans, "Tiger Zinda Hai" is
elegantly and stylishly made by writer director Ali Abbas Zafar. It is nothing
short of an effervescent cocktail of spy thrillers, except that the fizz is mild
and evaporating.
The tale takes off eight years from where it left in the last edition, sometime
in 1993 just after the Gulf War.
RAW agent Tiger is now married to his Pakistani girlfriend Zoya who is an ISI
agent. He has a 7 year old son, whom he fondly calls Junior. He lives a
domesticated life in the wilderness of the snowclad mountains of the Austrian
Alps, where he literally fights wolves who try to prey on him and his son.
In faraway Ikrit a small town in Iraq close to the Turkish border, the Islamic
fundamentalists have taken over the place. They behead a journalist and are
holding a few Americans as hostages. Amidst this chaos, the lives of twenty five
Indian and fifteen Pakistani nurses working in a hospital there, are in peril.
The Americans are ready to bombard Ikrit, but the Indian government intervenes
in order to protect the nurses who are stranded there. The Americans grant the
Indian Government seven days to evacuate the nurses and on the eighth day they
would attack the town.
Under such strained conditions, Shenoy, the head of RAW, can think of only one
person who could rescue the nurses. He is Tiger. Shenoy and his assistant Karan
track Tiger and cajole him to serve the country with, "Desh ki izzat ki baat
hai, baaki, you know better"
It goes without saying, Tiger puts up a team and with patriotic fervour he lands
up in Ikrit where he does the needful. We understood what Salman did and why he
did it, but the rescue drama definitely seems contrived, to befit his star
status. Needless to say, Zoya along with her ISI team, joins him in this mission
too.
While the hostages are in a desperate condition, their rescuers and those
holding them are too busy with sermonising about India-Pakistan brotherhood and
the need to fight and by the end, the film loses its credibility.
The phrase, "Abhi Tiger zinda hai," is oft repeated to give the audience an
assurance that more impactful action is in store for them. And lo and behold,
the blasts, gunshots and chase scenes truly hold your attention.
On the performance front, Salman Khan tries his best to be charismatic and
succeeds momentarily. His action scenes seem laboured. On the other hand Katrina
Kaif seems to have been resurrected. While her onscreen chemistry with Salman is
passable, she excels in her action sequences. In fact she holds your attention
with her quick moves and agility, especially when she is fencing.
It is Sajjad Delfrooz as the fundamentalist Abu Usman who is arresting and
intriguing, but this being a star-focussed film, he is short-changed.
Accompanying Tiger are Angad Bedi as Namit Khanna the bomb defusing expert,
Paresh Pahuja as the sniper Azam and Kumud Mishra as the tech expert Rakesh.
They are impressive and have their moments of onscreen glory.
Paresh Rawal as Theuban who is also known as Firdaus is his usual self. As the
slimy Indian labour agent in Ikrit, he is expressive but does not make an
impact.
Visually the film is exorbitant. The frames are extravagant and aesthetically
well-mounted. The final song with the lyrics "Swag se karenge sabka swagat" is
frolicsome, but it dissipates the seriousness of the tale, making the entire
film seem just like another frivolous masala film.
'Tiger Zinda Hai': Director makes this tiger roar (Review By Subhash K Jha ; Rating ***)
When did this Tiger ever stop roaring? Well...okay, "Tubelight" didn't quite
work . Salmaniacs didn't want to watch him as a whimpy whiny crybaby hero. The
message is hammered loud and clear in "Tiger Zinda Hai"(TZH), a homage to Salman
Khan's indomitable powers of hero-giri. From the first frame to the last blast,
this is a fanboy director making sure that every moment of the narrative is
paisa vasool for the Salman fans.
"Tiger Zinda Hai" is a 2 ½ hour homage
to Salman Khan's superstardom. In the cinema of the Southern superstars like
Rajinikanth or even Mammoothy(see his latest release Masterpiece where in almost
every frame the star is eulogized)it is common practice to extol the virtues of
the Man Of the moment, to the extent that the other members of the cast appear
to be afterthoughts.
Almost every supporting actor in TZH- and that
includes the diligent Katrina Kaif -is an extension of Salman Khan's
superstardom, his or existence defined by how much he or she hero-wosrhips our
intelligence officer Avinash Singh Rathod a.k.a Tiger. The lengthy eulogy gets
tedious only when the actors pause to tell us what a daunting one-man army our
hero is.
And since that happens quite often, we are frequently asked to
hold our horses, while the compliments flow and the speed breakers are served
up. Once those are out of the way TZH is a lot of fun to watch. The sheer
silliness of a one-man army mowing a mayhem across terrorism, at a time when
heroes in cinema across the world are exposing their vulnerability more than
their virility(see the haunting Call Me By Your Name to know what I mean) is
laughable.
So is the attempt to infuse a political urgency to an
endeavour that is clearly on a one-point mission: no, not save the tiger, but
celebrate the hero's macho-giri until it hurts. And I don't mean the muscles.
To his credit director packs in quite a punch. The narrative takes us
through a collage of quirky, appealing locations where some really
well-choreographed action scenes are shot with breathless zeal. Full marks to
cinematographer Marcin Laskawiec and action director Tom Struthers, not to
mention the pulse-pounding yet discreet background score by Julian Packiam , for
uplifting the viewers' gaze to a level comparable with the Hollywood franchise.
A thought, though. Are we so short of international-calibre talent that we
need to import important technicians to make our onscreen action look
competitive and competent? And does Salman's stardom really need a boost? A no
to the first question and a yes to the second. Salman's superstardom is like a
pitcher of brackish brew whose bitter hue is best tasted when recycled with
gusto.
TZH looks like many other anti-terror films including Baby and
Naam Shabana.And if you really want to see a taut intensely-felt take on the
same plot about the kidnapping of nurses in Iraq, try the Malayam film Take Off.
Admittedly the action sequences in TZH are better staged than in the
first Tiger film. Except for the Iranian actor Sajjad Delfarooz who stands out
as the terror mastermind, the splendid supporting cast is criminally wasted.
It's sad to see actors like Girish Karnad, Paresh Rawal, Kumud Mishra and Angad
Bedi hanging around only to make sure the leading man looks his Sunday best.
Still these actors ferret out their moments from a script that allows no
breathingspace for anything but comicbook vigour .
As for Katrina Kaif
she remains as deadpan as ever. Thank God some things never change. But she's
surprisingly effective in the action scenes , more so than she was in a similar
role in Kabir Khan's "Phantom", or for matter in "Ek Tha Tiger".
As for
her chemistry with Salman, his eyes melt like a icrecream cone left out in the
sun, each time she's around. Will someone make an intense love story with the
two?
Superstar Salman Khan's period drama 'Bharat' will go under the camera and lights this weekend with the sequence of a circus. The team will begin shooting on an elaborate set erected in Mumbai's Filmistan Studio, which will go on till August, after which the crew will move to Malta and Abu Dhabi.Director Ali Abbas Zafar, who has been planning the shoot for months, said, "The idea is to create an Indian-Russian circus- like Raj Kapoor's Mera Naam Joker. Performers from all over the world are flying down for the circus tricks, which will be a mix of trapeze hoops and rope stunts."Read More
Disha Patani to feature in Salman Khan starrer 'Bharat'Actress Disha Patani will be seen in the upcoming Salman Khan-starrer "Bharat" that is slated for an Eid release in 2019.The film's director Ali Abbas Zafar made the announcement on Thursday on Twitter. He shared a photograph of Disha, welcoming her on board."Welcome Dish Patani to the journey of 'Bharat'. Salman Khan, Priyanka Chopra," Zafar captioned the image.This will be Zafar's third outing with Salman, with whom he has worked in blockbusters "Sultan" and "Tiger Zinda Hai". Read More
A sequel to the record-breaking blockbuster Ek Tha Tiger, Tiger Zinda Hai continues the story of two super spies Tiger and Zoya eight years later. Shot across various international locations with sleek production values, this mega espionage drama promises thrills, romance and tons of entertainment.