Bajrangi Bhaijaan

REVIEW :

So, Bajrangi Bhaijaan is Salman Khan’s most daring film where Salman presents a beautiful performance – but allows the story to be the real dabangg. Pawan (Salman) aka ‘Bajrangi’ is a devout Shri Hanuman bhakt who meets a speech-impaired child (Harshaali) wandering alone, hungry and silent. Bajrangi decides to help the child, whom he calls Munni, return to her family – which is in Pakistan.

Facing borders and biases, lacking a visa, called a spy, can Bajrangi get Munni home – and return to India himself?

With Bajrangi, you meet a whole new Salman – this is not the shirt-ripping, ab-flaunting, dialogue-maro-ing Khan but a simple, innocent and honest man, who fails, gets tricked and beaten up – but never shaken from his purpose. With gentleness and no gimmicks, Salman puts on a polished, luminous performance – and is matched by little Harshaali, whose vulnerability and warmth are amazing.

Add a crackling Nawazuddin, as small-time Pakistani journalist Chand Nawab, hungry for ‘Bariking News’ but moved beyond TRPs by Bajrangi’s quest, and the screen’s alight with lovely acting, with a hilarious ‘Begum’, a child who glows and wanes like the sun, humans who treasure humanity beyond barbed wire and border guards.

Alongside memorable performances (Om Puri chuckles through a Maulvi cameo while Sharat Saxena wrestles with prejudice as Bajrangi’s potential father-in-law), the story features gentle comedy – Bajrangi’s chats with Pakistan’s border security are hilarious – and soulful qawallis. Its beautiful visuals travel unobtrusively from mohallas to mountain peaks, across priceless moments including Bajrangi’s panic-struck stammering to pretty fiance Rasika (Kareena), “Munni, woh, woh – woh hai!”

The plot could be tighter, sagging slightly until Nawaz’s lively entry. However, you see a director evolve – Kabir Khan’s fascination with borders shows again, but while his Ek Tha Tiger was a glamorous cosmopolitan cocktail, Bajrangi Bhaijaan is a pure South Asian jalebi, rounded, warm, simple and sweet. Kabir captures the tension of India-Pakistan without negativity and with soft charm, skillfully using a superstar as an actor, a child artist as a superstar and a border as a muse that opens up the world.

Bajrangi Bhaijaan emphasizes how, amidst visas and wars, there are also angels about who don’t see doors. They see homes, lives and children – and sometimes, children see angels too.

It makes a beautiful, mubarak point – one that’s very dabangg too.

STORY :

Devout Bajrangi meets a speech-impaired child in India, separated from her family – in Pakistan. Can Bajrangi ensure she gets home safely – and he does too?

The Times of India

Related Posts

संकट में ‘फिल्मी कारोबार’

मध्य भारत (मध्य प्रदेश) में फिल्म कारोबार में बड़ा बदलाव आया है। फिल्मों को वितरित करने वाली फर्मों ने अपना काम समेटना शुरू कर दिया है। बीते 10 सालों में…

पिछड़ता बॉलीवुड दौड़ता टॉलीवुड

भारतीय सिनेमा की वैश्विक पहचान है जिसमे केवल मुम्बईया सिनेमा नही अपितु दक्षिण (तमिल तेलगू, कन्नड़, मलयालम), भोजपुरी, पंजाबी, गुजराती, सभी सिनेमा सम्मलित हैयह बात अलग है कि बॉलीवुड में…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You Missed

इंदौर के इतिहास में पहली बार कांग्रेस प्रत्याशी ने चुनाव मैदान छोड़ा

  • By admin
  • April 30, 2024
  • 199 views
इंदौर के इतिहास में पहली बार कांग्रेस प्रत्याशी ने चुनाव मैदान छोड़ा

मध्य प्रदेश में बना दुनिया का सबसे ऊंचा जैन मंदिर

  • By admin
  • April 29, 2024
  • 178 views
मध्य प्रदेश में बना दुनिया का सबसे ऊंचा जैन मंदिर

महाकाल मंदिर में शुल्क देकर भी शीघ्र दर्शन नहीं कर सकेंगे

  • By admin
  • December 27, 2023
  • 188 views
महाकाल मंदिर में शुल्क देकर भी शीघ्र दर्शन नहीं कर सकेंगे

जब दिल ही टूट गया

  • By admin
  • December 27, 2023
  • 185 views

चार वेद, जानिए किस वेद में क्या है….?

  • By admin
  • December 21, 2023
  • 190 views
चार वेद, जानिए किस वेद में क्या है….?

भगवान के साथ रोटी

  • By admin
  • December 21, 2023
  • 178 views
भगवान के साथ रोटी