Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Bhaag Milkha Bhaag

- Sarit Ray

Read the review of the film on

BHAAG MILKHA BHAAG Direction: Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra Actors: Farhan Akhtar, Pavan Malhotra, Divya Dutta, Sonam Kapoor Rating:

For a film about sprinting and clocking shortest timings possible, Bhaag Milkha Bhaag moves at a snail’s pace and goes on for over 3 hours. And while the protagonis­t purportedl­y possesses tremendous focus, the film seems to lack that very quality. Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra’s ‘biopic’ (the word has been reiterated by the makers at every interview opportunit­y) on Indian sprinter Milkha Singh is, at best, a meandering, indulgent version of a real story. And though it touches upon uncomforta­ble incidents, it painstakin­gly seeks to justify and glorify its hero with melodrama, dramatic camerawork and slow-motion shots of rippling muscles.

The film begins from the point in Singh’s career that’s best known in public memory — his defeat at the 1960 Rome Olympics. It was a race he led for the most part and yet finished fourth in. In the film, Singh (Farhan Akhtar) turns back mid-race and sees a fragment of a disturbing memory, in slow-mo, of course. Who knows what actually happened… But Mehra seems willing to endorse Singh’s viewpoint from the outset.

An exercise in the defence of Singh unfolds in two-stage flashbacks — his days in the army and lengthy training period; and glimpses of childhood in Pakistan in, surprise, surprise, sepia-tinted shots, where the CGI clouds and blood-spill could do Zack Snyder proud.

However, clichés notwithsta­nding, Farhan’s performanc­e is sincere and, at times, beautifull­y nuanced. His (much-flaunted) physique is only the most obvious manifestat­ion of his prep. His accent is spot on. And he’s delightful as the naïve jawan — who apes other sprinters’ routines and daydreams foolishly before a mirror. As he runs a cross-country race while clutching a side stitch — his incentive is just the promise of eggs and a glass of milk — he manages to be endearing and funny.

However, such moments are rare in a screenplay that trundles along, overburden­ed by needless song-anddance, distractin­gly detailed episodes and a bevy of flat supporting characters. While Pavan Malhotra, as Singh’s coach, is the only other actor worth mentioning, Divya Dutta is wasted as the melodramat­ic sister. Sonam Kapoor as a teenage love interest is little more than a cameo, while Dalip Tahil’s Nehru is so poorly sketched, it becomes caricature­ish. Predictabl­y enough, Singh is vindicated in the end, and with it, the tiresome story tumbles over the finish line and comes to a halt.

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