Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Choppy, disjointed: A rollercoas­ter ride

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and hunted plays out like a souped-up ’70s gangster film, one with furious background music, dialogue-baazi, frantic action and a killer item number featuring Sunny Leone. Rahul unabashedl­y pays homage to Salim-Javed and, of course, Amitabh Bachchan.

But Raees doesn’t achieve the heft of those films because it never becomes more than the sum of its parts. In fact, the parts don’t even connect organicall­y. The screenplay is choppy and disjointed. At one point, Raees’s wife (played by Mahira Khan) declares that she is pregnant but she stays slim for several scenes afterward and then suddenly a baby appears.

The narrative gets especially messy in the second half, when Raees becomes a messiah of sorts and starts to build a housing colony. Despite many plot twists and dozens of characters, the screenplay stays inert. There just isn’t enough excitement or tension as we trudge up to the predictabl­e end.

The trouble is that Rahul is trying to create a gritty crime drama but is also upholding the myth of the superstar Shah Rukh Khan. So the character must walk a tightrope and somehow be a noble badass. Which means that Raees kills but only kills men who are truly nasty. He looks after everyone in the neighborho­od. He even does the garba. It’s a half-hearted attempt at villainy that keeps the persona intact but doesn’t serve the film.

Mahira is wholly vapid, and the wonderful Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub is reduced to a sidekick. Sadly, despite the rich material, there isn’t a scene here that rivals the devastatin­g power of Parzania — which was also set in Gujarat and directed by Rahul.

The best way to enjoy Raees then is to manage expectatio­ns first. This is an uneven film. In places, you will applaud and whistle. But you might also find yourself utterly exhausted. Still, as the girl in Dangal so memorably put it: ‘Shah Rukh ko na nahi bolte. Paap lagta hai.’

 ??  ?? A still from the movie Raees.
A still from the movie Raees.

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