Directed
by: Shriram Raghavan
Starring:
Varun Dhawan, Nawazuddin Sidiqui, Huma Qureshi, Yami Gautam, Divya Dutta
Released:
2015
My rating: destroy
every copy ? horrible ? bad ? whatever
? flawed but enjoyable - good ? great ?
amazing
A bloody revenge movie is
a tricky thing. You need a lot of strong points. Reason for revenge.
Believable acting. Arevenge which leaves you with a feeling of
gratification or at least understanding for the hero. And most
importantly a sense of compassion for the avenger. Not all real-life
situations, during which a man (or a woman) takes law and revenge
into their own hands are like that, but in the film world should, at
least in my view. Badlapur does have believable acting, it has a
powerful trigger to start off, unfortunately the compassion is
missing entirely.
Varun Dhawan shakes off
the cute image he has had by embracing a character much darker than
Aamir Khan from Ghajini or Shahid Kapoor from Haider. Starting off
as a tragedy-stricken young man he turns into an avatar which is more
repulsive and awful than the villains who took the life of his family
in the first place. Acting-wise he nearly pulls it off. As a
character Raghu is possibly the worst lead protagonist I can think
of. Repeatedly raping a completely innocent woman, threatening
another one with the same, only to murder her in cold blood and most
horrifying manner cannot be excused or put down to any inner pain or
turmoil. Not even the popular "eye for an eye" theory fits,
since the lovely Yami Gautam and her child were killed pretty much by
unwanted accident. One has to wonder what kind of person Raghu is, if
he is capable of such things as rape and abuse of trust. No matter
how loveable he seems to be in the flashbacks, Raghu remains
terrifying and disgusting. Perhaps more character development could
have done the trick and show his personality alternate, but instead
the makers decided to simply jump ahead 15 years (during which nobody
but Nawazuddin Sidiqui seems to have aged). Furthermore the movie
ends on a very anti-climactic note, with no justice served to anyone
at all, not even greedy bribe-mongering police officer.
Performances on the whole
are all good, but none outstanding. I cannot help but to compare
Badlapur with last year?s Ek Villain, which starred Varun?s debut
co-star Siddhart the Visually-perfect. While Siddhart has shown less
ease in his acting, Shraddha Kapoor was not as half as natural as
Yami and the film lacked logic, it still managed to make me cry and
feel for the characters. Badlapur made me sick. No wonder, when the
rape-victim announces to the her rapist and a murderer that of all
the people involved in this messy story he is the one who has been
given the second chance.
In conclusion from
technical point of view there is nothing too wrong with the film,
except perhaps the way the script looses pace and becomes boring as
soon as, ironically, Raghu finally confronts his wife?s killer
outside the jail walls. Some ends feel loose. Perhaps more soulful
and more strategically used music (again like in Ek Villain) could
have done make things better. For all its worth though I cannot
recommend watching Badlapur to anyone. Not to people like me for all
the reasons stated above. Not to lovers of thrillers because there is
not enough thrill to justify other things. Not to fans of
psychological movies because no development is shown in anyone.
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