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Review: Watch ‘Aiyaary’ for Manoj Bajpayee

Thriller lacks teeth but is bolstered by Bajpayee’s performanc­e Review

- By Manjusha Radhakrish­nan, Chief Reporter

Director Neeraj Pandey’s latest thriller Aiyaary, set against the backdrop of the Indian armed forces, is about a young officer who goes rogue after stumbling upon the Indian military’s murky goings-on.

But you get the distinct impression that it’s the director who’s scared of going rogue and demonising the establishm­ent or the men in uniform.

He seems to hold back in Aiyaary, a sacrilege because he’s one of the few directors who can spin taut, non-conformist films.

Simply put, director Pandey knows a thing or two about sticking it to the authoritie­s in the most dignified, non-didactic fashion as evident in his earlier works, such A Wednesday! and the riveting coprobber thriller Special Chabbis. But, half an hour into Aiyaary and you wonder where did the spunky Pandey we know disappear?

Precious minutes are lost in explaining character quirks, eccentrici­ties and idiosyncra­sies of a clutch of military officers and a couple of well-dressed arms dealers. The dialogues between the idealistic and the corrupt are painfully stilted.

When it comes to performanc­es, it is seasoned actor Manoj

Bajpayee who is in total command.

He plays the senior military officer Col. Abhay Singh and is a joy to watch as he sinks his teeth into the role of a staunchly scrupulous army officer. He has got the mannerisms and the body language of a discipline­d soul figured out to the last letter. He’s the devilish head of a covert cell that thwarts baddies in his distinct cavalier style.

Representi­ng the millennial­s is his dishy protege, Jai Bakshi, played by Sidharth Malhotra. But his character isn’t as fleshed out and what you get is an unconvinci­ng army deserter. His reasoning for going berserk and outing his own mates lacks teeth.

The climax, which explains his source of disillusio­nment, is hastily wrapped up.

Till then, the overstretc­hed thriller is intent on over-explaining but the portions that needed that kind of exposition is hurriedly done.

FORCED CLIMAX

The climax feels forced, which lets the whole film down. The portions where Bakshi romances the young woman Rakul Preet Singh, a nifty hacker, is unconvinci­ng and lame. Singh looks fetching, but doesn’t win us over as a sly hacker.

Aiyaary also boasts some of the finest talents in Hindi cinema right now. There’s Kumud Mishra, Adil Hussain, Naseeruddi­n Shah and Anupam Kher in this ensemble espionage drama, but they are grossly under-utilised.

Hussain and Mishra, as the cold and soulless businessme­n who are out to get the rogue spy, aren’t as sharp as their suits. Their seedy style of conducting business feels forced and unnatural.

Shah, who plays the token common man in Pandey’s socially-conscious film, suffers from a serious A Wednesday! hangover. When he utters the veiled threat — ‘Don’t ever provoke a common man’ to highlight his have and have-nots divide during the climax — the regurgitat­ed sentiments from previous film comes screeching back.

But your misgivings erode when you watch Bajpayee in action. His wry humour at world problems, delivered in his nonplussed manner, are comic gold.

Finally, Aiyaary isa toothless thriller about a clutch of morallycom­plex, dapper menin-uniform who turn against each other, but the reasons for doing so doesn’t get enough play. Watch this at your own risk.

— Manjusha Radhakrish­nan is the chief reporter with tabloid! and loves all things Bollywood, fashion and music. After all, what’s not to love about grown men and women dancing around trees?

 ??  ?? Manoj Bajpayee and Anupam Kher.
Manoj Bajpayee and Anupam Kher.
 ?? Photos courtesy of Reliance Entertainm­ent ?? Sidharth Malhotra and Bajpayee in ‘Aiyaary’.
Photos courtesy of Reliance Entertainm­ent Sidharth Malhotra and Bajpayee in ‘Aiyaary’.
 ??  ?? Film review and masala from the world’s most colourful film industry by Manjusha Radhakrish­nan
Film review and masala from the world’s most colourful film industry by Manjusha Radhakrish­nan
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