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85%
3.70 

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''Kamini'' inspired me to write this one
Jul 13, 2005 03:00 AM 2064 Views
(Updated Jul 13, 2005 03:02 AM)

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<First and foremost> Must accept the most sought after reviewer here at the MS family, Kamini has inspired me to write this review on Sarkar


<Prologue> I did get to see the movie this Saturday, but vacilatingly decided not to write a review on the movie , as we were already overflowing with the reviews on Sarkar. (My last count was 60, I had to leave my count there only as I do not know much beyond that). But 5 minutes back, I happen to read this review by ''Impeccable'' Kamini who impeached the credibility of AB sir (Well he deserves that), and AB Jr. That hurt me alot, not as a fan of SRK, AB or anyone else but more as a fan of good healthy cinema. So I have decided to key down my opinion on the movie.


<About the movie> The movie was the most awaited film of the year, was proved with the bumper opening it got all over India. (Well I did try for its tickets a week after its release in a Delhi multiplex, but could not able to find any.)


What made this film most awaited


Reason-1 Amitabh Bachan (Why the heck ppl compare him to Marlon Brando, its like comparing Dave Gilmore with Kurt Cobain, you simply can not). And be it inspired form life of Bal Thakrey or Godfather, AB need not prove his acting skills now when he has crossed the age of 60 and has given more hits than SRK , Aamir Khan, Salman Khan, Dilip Kumar, Dev Anand, Raj Kapoor put together. (And the matter of the fact is “SRK”, the better actor than AB, according to Kamini, licks his boot three times a day, now dn’t tell me that SRK is humble enough to do that). Kamini when some is stacked against majority and thinks everone else has gone crazy, then usually its other way round. NEVER MIND. And to further substantiate ABs acting skills, here is a simple fact, ALL FOUR HITS THIS YEAR HAVE “AMITABH BACHAN” in THEM. (Bunti…., Waqt, Sarkar, Black) and yeah did anyone was saying that Amitabh was mediocre in BLACK. LOLz


Reason-2 Abhishek Bachnan , the most happening actor in todays time, whose only mistake is that he was born with a BACHAN surname, well AB Jr even with a TyreWALLA surname wud hve been as good an actor as he is now. SO NO ISSUES . Especially after his scintillating act in YUVA, he has now become a major crowd puller.


Reason –3 RGV, the director who is the role model for so many of us. The guy who has taken Bollywood at par with Hollywood, even far beyond that, the guy who dares to think different, the guy who is audacious enough to launch new pool of talented actors, the guy who simply is unaffected by success or faliure of his movies and would produce one gem after another, like a true cine lover, unlike some business man or show man.


<Review> The end justifies the means and this movie justifies the hype it has generated. RGV has done it again. How many time we have appreciated his movies based on underworld themes. Be it Satya, Company or to lesser extent ‘D’. This movie does not has such a macro view on the underworld, nor does it deals with corruption but this is a simple story about a man who considers himself above law . Parallel government is the word used for him in the movie.


When a maverick filmmaker like Ram Gopal Varma sets out to pay his personal homage to the film that has inspired not only him but also millions of movie lovers, it’s time to take serious heed.


Those who know Varma’s style know that he is a man who wouldn’t venture out to create a replica. And it is true that his Sarkar is his own interpretation of the Mario Puzo novel, with a few cinematic liberties.


Ford Coppola’s ‘The Godfather’ remains unparalleled till date for various reasons and it would have been wishful thinking on anyone’s part to attempt to match the simmering intensity, the visual beauty and the acting performances (by the likes of Marlon Brando and Al Pacino) on celluloid once again.


Varma dares to do that. But in his own style. The Godfather (Vito Corleone) is replaced with Subhash Nagare aka Sarkar, played incredibly by Amitabh Bachchan. It is hard to say convincingly whether similarities between Sarkar and Shiv Sena chief Bal Thackeray are incidental or deliberately created in the film.


Like the Sena chief, Sarkar too wears long silki kurtas, carries a Rudraksh mala in hand, and always has a tilak on his forehead. But similarities end here. Inside the body, Sarkar is like don Corleone.


Kay Kay Menon plays Sarkar’s elder son Vishnu (similar to the hotheaded Sonny in Coppola’s classic). And Abhishek Bachchan plays Shankar, the younger son. Instead of Coppola’s Michael (Pacino) who was a decorated army hero, Shankar is a foreign-returned young man coming to terms with the ways of his father’s work.


As the movie’s story goes, Sarkar’s elder son Vishnu is a film producer who kills the hero of his movie because of his affair with the movie’s actress. He is estranged from the family after Sarkar decides to support the actress (a deviation from ‘The Godfather’).


In the meantime, Sarkar turns down a deal with a Dubai-based gangster Rashid because of ethical reasons.


Things flare up further as Sarkar’s foes join hands, and with Vishnu in their tow, plan to assassinate Sarkar. They first get Sarkar arrested in a conspiracy revolving around the murder of his arch foe Khurana (Anupam Kher). Then Vishnu is given the task to assassinate him. This is where Shankar steps in to save his father.


In the first half of the movie, Abhishek Bachchan is more like a loverboy, smitten with one girl (Katrina Kaif) and being asked by his family to marry another (Tanisha). But in the second half, his character goes through a transition. Inside him we can see a sensitive son with enormous care and affection for his father. In short, in him is the making of another Sarkar. A challenging role indeed and Abhishek shines through it. The simmering anger that resonates through his facial expressions and his blood-shot eyes is too credible.


Amitabh Bachchan deliberately underplays his character Subhash Nagare (Sarkar). He lets his character speak through silent glances and muted gestures – yet another impressive performance by the superstar.


Supriya Pathak (as Sarkar’s wife), Rukhsar (as Vishnu’s wife) get limited roles that they nonetheless aptly play. Katrina shows improvement in her acting with broader range of expressions on her beautiful but bland face. Kay Kay Menon is another revelation of this movie.


Ram Gopal Varma grips a viewer from the very first scene when a man visits Sarkar to ask for justice for his raped daughter. The movie from then on is evenly strewn with gripping sequences – like the clash between Sarkar and Vishnu at the dinner table, the Sarkar-Rashid meeting, or the assassination attempt on Sarkar and Shankar coming to rescue.


The background music in the film seems overused at places. The climax is the highpoint.


To sum it up, Sarkar is not ‘The Godfather’. It cannot even be called its rehash. But, as pointed in the beginning, it is Varma’s original attempt to adapt Mario Puzo story to Indian milieu, with few liberties taken.


All n all, It’s a very powerful movie. A must see! Even if u have seen it thrice already


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