Millennium Post

This tiger roars loud

‘TIGER ZINDA HAI’

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Director: Ali Abbas Zafar;

Starring: Salman Khan, Katrina Kaif, Sajjad Delafrooz, Girish Karnad, Kumud Mishra, Paresh Rawal;

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. 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. 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. 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. 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?

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