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Film review: ‘Bhavesh Joshi Superhero

The painfully long film sees its lead star display sparks of brilliance Review

- By Manjusha Radhakrish­nan Chief Reporter — 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? BOLLYWOOD BINGE

Director Vikramadit­ya Motwane does a splendid job of subverting a slew of cinematic tropes that’s expected of a superhero film such as Bhavesh Joshi.

It turns it back defiantly on employing hyper-masculine heroes to save the world or planting a highly sexualised female character as eye-candy. Motwane also does away that token scene of a bunch of determined guys doing a power-walk in absolute harmony as loud music blares just before intermissi­on.

While that’s a relief, this dark, vigilante drama isn’t without its share of flaws and missteps. It’s painfully long with its 175-minute running time and is mind-numbingly bleak with its subdued and dark lighting effect creating a recurring morbid atmospheri­cs.

The characters in Bhavesh Joshi Superhero are also painfully ordinary and resolutely toothless as they fight an establishm­ent filled with dishonoura­ble, apathetic men.

The movie begins with two idealistic and zealous young men — Sikander (Harshvardh­an Kapoor) and Bhavesh Joshi (Priyanshu Painyuli) — who are happy to rebel against the establishm­ent and fight for their rights as Mumbai residents.

They are never the proverbial bride, but the bridesmaid when it comes to protesting and getting their voice heard. They fight from the sidelines and take on causes that plague a common man in their daily lives.

Greasing the palm of government officials to secure a passport or launching an amateurish investigat­ion into the shortage of water supply in Mumbai localities are their biggest battles.

They are coltish and awkward in their attempts to weed out corruption linked to water shortage, but there’s a definite charm to their amateurish combat.

Painyuli shines in the titular role as the young man who’s disenchant­ed by the rotting system around him. He’s earnest and his sincere act makes you root him and his selfless angst.

Ashish Verma as their perenniall­y pragmatic friend also delivers.

While Kapoor gets the maximum screen time as he turns into a masked crusader on a vengeance and redemption trail, he isn’t armed with a charismati­c aura that would make us invested in him.

He displays sparks of brilliance, but he underplays his emotions and that cripples a drama that was in bad need of a silver lining jolt.

But credit has to be given to the actors and its director for being consistent­ly dystopian. They don’t cop out by giving us neatly-packaged utopian endings, but it may have come at the expense of the viewers feeling underwhelm­ed.

Forget Kapoor’s characters saving the day, he sucks the daylight out of us by presenting to us a reality that’s painfully real and rooted in today’s times.

The over-stretched thriller is also a stark reminder of the troubled times we live with mob justice and digital warriors shaping public opinion.

The film is also dominated by men with the women having limited voice. If you are looking for closure or a solution to a corrupt-free world, the valiant heroes of this film aren’t going to swoop down to rescue you.

They may just remind you that the world isn’t a pretty place.

 ?? Photo courtesy of Eros Internatio­nal ??
Photo courtesy of Eros Internatio­nal
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