Skip to main content

HAIDER FILM REVIEW

Vishal Bhardhwaj’s HAIDER is an official adaptation of Shakespear’s play HAMLET, which is arguably the most complex and the world’s most filmed story after Cinderella and another book on Kashmir militancy called CURFEWED NIGHT. ‘Haider’ is set against the breathtaking and dreadful backdrop of 1994 Kashmir. At the outset, it is imperative to make you aware that the film’s screenwriter, Indian journalist Basharat Peer (Author, Curfewed Night) is also a Kashmiri . This becomes clearly evident when the film takes off and mesmerizes the audience with unadulterated and up-close visuals of the ‘real’ Kashmir - ‘the crackdown, the encounters, the sinister atmosphere etc.’ contrary to Bollywood’s fetish for the customary Dal Lake, flower beds and meadow slopes. However, as the film progresses, the seemingly straightforward narrative abruptly transforms into a convoluted mishmash- courtesy an ineffective re-imagination of an already complex epic . Soon after 45 minutes of an absorbing extravaganza, this reviewer got disinterested in the events that unfolded thereafter to the point of getting utterly bored. The main culprits were: a flawed screenplay, few unwanted songs and some lengthy & editable sequences, which resulted in forgone entertainment value. The Performances, ‘Bismil’ Song Choreography and Cinematography are the film’s strongest points. Shahid Kapoor plays the titular protagonist with sincere realism. Tabu was born to play the role of an unprincipled mother-in-distress. The extremely underrated K.K.Menon effortlessly plays the devious antagonist with finesse. Sadly, all this is eventually overshadowed by a lackluster screenplay. The outcome of fusing ‘Hamlet’ with ‘Curfewed Night’ was an uninteresting viewing experience for this reviewer. My Verdict: A heart-breaking 6/10!

Release Date: 2nd October’14
Duration: 2 hrs 42 mins
Director: Vishal Bhardwaj
Cast: Shahid Kapoor, Tabu, K.K.Menon, Shraddha Kapoor, Irrfan Khan

Comments

  1. My love for Hamlet play saved me from watching Haider. Post this review I really don't have any regrets for not watching Haider

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

PANCHAYAT (TV SHOW) REVIEW

PANCHAYAT, a web-series currently being streamed at Prime Video, can aptly be described as an honest attempt to create a modern-day reincarnation of the classic TV Show MALGUDI DAYS (based on the works of R.K.Narayan) and is reminiscent of Shyam Benegal’s critically acclaimed film WELCOME TO SAJJANPUR (starring Shreyas Talpade). PANCHAYAT is the story of an engineering graduate Abhishek Tripathi, played by Jitendra Kumar (Humorously Yours, Kota Factory), who reluctantly joins as the Secretary of a panchayat office in a remote village of Uttar Pradesh on the insistence of his best friend (played by OTT sensation Biswapati Sarkar), who believed that his unique grassroots level experience would increase his chances to crack his IIM interview. Biswapati comically consoles him by saying that it would give him a chance to be the Mohan Bhargava of Phulera village. The lead character’s frustrations and how he adjusts with the difficult village life is the common thread that joins

UNDERRATED INDIAN MOVIES FOR CINEMA LOVERS

Over the years, the Indian Film Industry has intermittently churned out genuinely good films, which were made on a smaller scale but with top-notch (and often better) content compared to their blockbuster counterparts (barring a few exceptions). This is the list of the top 50 of these underrated films which deserve more recognition and need to be seen by more people. 1. 13B (2009)  One of the best mystery-thrillers of Indian Cinema, 13B follows the story of a quintessential middle-class man (played by Madhavan), who begins to experience a series of supernatural phenomenon by way of a television program, soon after his family moves into a new apartment on the 13 th Floor. The film’s story and its execution were acclaimed by some Hollywood filmmakers also. 2. 1971 (2007)  A deftly made prison movie set in the year 1977, it revolves around six brave prisoners of Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, as they attempt to escape from a POW camp to reach the Indian border, which is just

QUARANTINE MOVIES WATCHLIST (Compiled by Pranshu Awasthi)

After the extended coronavirus lockdown was announced in India, I have been receiving requests to compile my own “Quarantine Movies Watchlist”. It was about time I resisted my laziness so finally made the list. I have tried to exclude too mainstream, too offbeat, and older pre-2K films and have tagged the ones which are available on Netflix and Prime Video. Read the synopsis, watch the ones which you have not and enjoy while being indoors. 1. THE NEXT THREE DAYS (2010) (Streaming on NETFLIX) When his wife is convicted of a murder she swears she did not commit, a college professor (Russel Crowe) plots to break her out of prison in this truly edge-of-the-seat thriller also starring Elizabeth Banks and Liam Neeson.  2. ORPHAN (2009) (Streaming on PRIME VIDEO) Offering a chilling blend of horror and nail-biting drama, it’s a story about a husband and wife who recently lost their baby and plan to adopt a 9-year-old girl, but who is not nearly as innocent as she claims to be.