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Elaan
An Assertive
Declaration Proclamation
| Director |
Vikram
Bhatt |
| Producer |
Ganesh
Jain, Ratan Jain |
|
Lyrics |
Sameer |
|
Music |
Anu
Malik |
| Screen
Play |
Robin
Bhatt,Bikram Bhatt |
|
Playback |
Udit
Narayan, Alka Yagnik, KK, Sunidhi Chauhan,
Gayetri Iyar. |
| Starting |
Mithun
Chakraborty, Rahul Khanna,Arjun Rampal,John
Abraham,Lara Dutta, Chanki Pande, Amisha Patel |
|
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A
report By Dr. Usman Khawaja
Courtesy : Romuz Uddin |
This
urban modern day reworking of the Sippy’s
classic works primarily as it scours the
prodigal body of law and order and questioning
the effete judiciary as well as making some
very relevant comments on the international
extradition treaties, but it has a crisp
script and a fine narrator as Vikram Bhatt who
stylishly translates this dark but fast paced
thriller onto the silver screen.
The
modern tale of a menacing, cold, calculating
mastermind criminal is played by a highly
charged Mithun who looks every bit the
international criminal who publicly announces
the assassination of a billionaire for ransom
and then executes it while making a mockery of
the law and order, his malignant smile, mean
sneer and panther like posture are enough to
make this a truly dark character as evil as
Hannibal Lecter, this is a stellar act and he
walks away with the highest plaudits, but Rahul
Khanna as the bereaving son who must
reap justice for his father’s soul is superb
too as the quiet and shy but extremely
intelligent youth who recruits a brilliant ex
army mastermind to plan the vendetta, played
with Elan by Arjun
Rampal as the single parent with a
young daughter and they are accompanied by John
Abraham, a conniving, but cunning
criminal who joins the group for lust and
greed.
The
weakest link are the 2 female leads, while Lara
Dutta as Abraham’s femme fatale Mata
Hari lookalike girlfriend as a dancing
diva injects the movie with a lethal dose of
glamour, Amisha as the investigative
journalist posing to be Rahul
khanna’s lover is very ineffective as
are the romantic production numbers which mar
and hamper the narrative.
But
the visual splendours are enough to make up
for these shortcoming as the thriller progress
from Mumbai
to a gondola chase in venetian canals and a
motorbike-lorry sequence caught on an alpine
freeway against a panorama which puts bond to
shame.
The
movie is darkly yet atmospherically shot from Italy
to the Bavarian heartland and the gunfights
are breathtakingly staged on the snow capped
alpine slopes with a technical finesse rarely
seen in Hindi cinema, it is here that the soul
of this erstwhile classic is imbued with its
urban metaphysical form as the style and
content come together with a brilliant
director and an ensemble cast.
This
is one of the most alluring products from the
Bhatt stable and despite somewhat hurried and
makeshift finales; it is a worthy successor to
its classic predecessor.
The
socio political comments on the Indian
judiciary and the establishments impotency to
protect a victim or punish the aggressor are
chillingly narrated in a highly effective
manner and this makes an effective declaration
of a great proclamation an eye for an eye and
while some may argue that can make the whole
world blind, I would rather live in a blind
world rather than an unjust world.
This
is how you execute a criminal and an erstwhile
classic when you are remaking Sholay’s and
Dons, the only other Hindi thriller made by
the talented Farhan Akhtar which was even
better than this fine product in totally
overshadowing its predecessor even though the
original products are just as credible as the
remakes, but they have to be executed with a
vision and finesse and not just technical
wizardry which while exciting can lead to a
damp squid like recent remakes.
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