Director: A Harsha
Language: Hindi
Never Give Up. This is something people usually tell people who have repeatedly failed to hit the
Animal felt like a stern and stubborn response to all the critics who dared to critique Kabir Singh. Kill got the language of its bloodshed right and reduced Vanga’s film into a Disney cartoon. In the case of Baaghi 4, it feels like a star vehicle where the leading men are doing exactly what’s the need of the market. Sanjay Dutt follows the crowd at least a third time. When those cop remakes were the flavour of the season, he jumped on to the frivolous but ultimately failed Policegiri. When the nation woke up to horror comedies, he gave us what he shouldn’t have- The Bhootni. And now with
This time, the makers have attempted to show there’s a lot more to Shroff than his bronzed muscles and black belt. So the film begins with a gaudy shot of his accident. His brain is dead so he’s hallucinating and often breaking down. He’s trying to piece his screwed and scattered life together as charmless and tuneless songs play in the background. In the name of humor,
It’s a film that shows how a fine actor like Shreyas Talpade is at times reduced to thankless roles. It’s a film that shows Shroff as a Navy officer in hideous VFX. It’s a film that thinks cutesy exchanges between the hero and the heroine will make us feel nostalgic. It’s a film that makes the first three films in the Baaghi films coherent. It’s a film that has one of the most ill-timed and poorly choreographed action scenes involving a gun, a hockey stick, and a hammy Sandhu. It’s a film that also has the most ill-timed songs that are forgotten as quickly as they begin. It’s a film that wastes the prowess of Saurabh Sachdeva, who almost does a Mukesh Rishi from
It’s a film where the same actress has two back stories in a twist that feels so twisted that it twists your brain. It’s a film that echoes Kaho Naa Pyaar Hai. It’s a film that’s so pretentious in its telling that swag soon turns into silliness. It’s a film where the editing is so inconsistent that you lose interest in the action even before it begins. It’s also supposed to be a film that can potentially revive the dwindling career of its leading man, who once was the infallible celluloid star. It’s a film whose commercial prospects look better than Shroff‘s last few films. It’s also a film that’s not done with its hideousness. It’s a film that will come back. As I said, never give up!
Rating: 1.5 (out of 5 stars)
Baaghi 4 is now playing in cinemas










