Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Assassin Siddiqui shoots in the air

- ROHIT VATS

Two profession­al assassins are on a bridge overlookin­g railway tracks, drinking and swapping tales about how they got into the business. One considers the other his teacher. He has even renamed himself Banke Bihari out of respect for the guru, Babu Bihari (Nawazuddin Siddiqui).

But then Banke (Jatin Goswami) learns that Babu gets paid much more than he does. Their conversati­on turns to inflation and how hard it has become for hired guns to operate profitably. In an inebriated state, they throw down a gauntlet — they will each murder three people. Whoever meets the target first, wins; the loser must quit the business.

K us han N andy’ s movie opens with promise, and a quirky and authentic-seeming cast of characters. It’s mofussil Uttar Pradesh. When we first meet a gun- toting Babu, Amitabh Bachchan songs play in the background. There’ s a local strong man Du bey (Anil George) who enjoys watching his wife get rubbed down by a burly masseuse.

There’s also the razortongu­ed Jiji (Divya Dutta), a kingmaker who lusts for power and curses in a stream. Her conversati­ons with the local top cop (Bhagw an Tiw ari) are laden with innuendo — and a silent power struggle.

Babu’s girlfriend Fulwa (Bidita Bag) adds oomph to the proceeding­s. Her expressive eyes tell of a young, lonely woman among wolves disguised as men.

Her comfort level with N aw azuddin in their love scenes adds a dimension of sensuousne­ss to her role of the cobbler girl in love. But the characters are all flat, which is why it reads like a quirky thriller on paper, but in execution, is borderline ridiculous.

The film has all the ingredient­s, but their proportion­s are not right.

 ??  ?? Nawazuddin Siddiqui plays an assassin in the film.
Nawazuddin Siddiqui plays an assassin in the film.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India