The Guardian (USA)

Radhe review – Salman Khan blockbuste­r is a cheap dash through the fight tropes

- Mike McCahill

What was originally scheduled as India’s big Eid blockbuste­r for May 2020 is opening a year later in cinemas everywhere but India itself, where it came out on streaming platforms last weekend. In his guise as producer-megastar, muscleboun­d Salman Khan has dispatched his minions to hollow out the taut narrative chicanery of 2017’s Korean thriller The Outlaws and reconfigur­e its carcass into the kind of flattering vehicle only a powerful Bollywood leading man can command. Despite some early welcome flickers of the kind of self-awareness that’s crept into Khan’s projects over the past halfdecade, the result is very much backto-basics. The more knowing nonsense only serves to make the eventual slump into third-rate pummelling more dispiritin­g.

Most of that nonsense, which prompts fitful back-row giggles, concerns Khan’s indomitabl­e hero cop Radhe. “He has his own methods of working,” insists one of the Mumbai police chiefs recruiting him to protect the city’s youth from straggle-haired druglord Randeep Hooda. These include: never entering via the door when he can leap face-first through a glass window, manifestin­g in multiple locations simultaneo­usly so as to better box his quarries’ ears, and – less amusingly

– casually torturing suspects. A chance encounter with poster-girl Diya (Disha Patani) encourages our man to try male modelling; this love interest, naturally, turns out to be the sister of Radhe’s ever more exasperate­d CO (Jackie Shroff). Don’t ask about the 35-year age gap between these siblings; no one behind the camera clearly bothered.

While a jocular, self-mocking Khan is still preferable to the puppy-eyed sentimenta­list who made 2017’s Tubelight and 2019’s Bharat such ordeals, there’s an awful lot of self to mock here, and not nearly enough craft to counterbal­ance that ego. Hired to glam up an expensive-looking nightclub number, guest star Jacqueline Fernandez gets elbowed out of sight once Radhe storms the stage to prat around. Quality control gets shoved off soon after. One bathroom punch-up is shot on such cheap, smeary digital it resembles rehearsal footage. Even the fun stuff is low-grade and limited, because our guy’s heroism is forever meant to be taken as sacrosanct. Director Prabhu Deva’s cursory dash through the not-sogrand finale suggests he clearly wanted it over; you may do, too.

• Radhe is released in the UK on 17 May in cinemas.

 ?? Indomitabl­e ... Salman Khan in Radhe. Photograph: Zee Studios ??
Indomitabl­e ... Salman Khan in Radhe. Photograph: Zee Studios

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