Movie Review: Aiyaary misses the mark and is a huge
letdown
Director Neeraj Pandey is one of the
best in the business and has a penchant for making thrillers taking a
political, crime issues as its central theme. His past experiments with Akshay
Kumar, Special 26 and Baby, have worked both at the box office and with masses.
This time around, he is back with Aiyaary which again has a strong plotline and
a holds out a promise of dumdaar performances by its leads Manoj Bajpayee,
Sidharth Malhotra, Vikram Gokhale and Rakul Preet Singh and added appearances
by director's favourites Anupam Kher and the effervescent Nasseruddin Shah.
With masses still warming up to Akshay Kumar's Pad Man, Aiyaary has released at
an opportune moment.
Here are our thoughts about the
film. Watching the espionage thriller over the weekend? Find out our verdict.
First of all, one must be wondering
what Aiyaary actually means? So, according to the maker, the word is an embodiment
of all the qualities a true soldier must have. A successful soldier is the one
who brings out his best in the time of adversity. So, Aiyaary means a
combination of sharpness, wit, tact, ability to change appearances and
combating techniques a soldier uses to emerge victorious. The movie revolves
around Colonel Abhay Singh (Manoj Bajpayee) and Major Jai Bakshi (Sidharth
Malhotra) who are both army officers. It majorly focuses on corruption within
the army and the system efforts to hunt down Jai who goes rogue after finding
out the ugly truth about the defence system. While it is loosely based on the
Adarsh Society scam which rocked the nation in 2010, the maker does not revolve
the entire movie about it. Instead, he builds on the tension using different
plots which come together to make one massive issue, in this case: corruption
in the Defense Ministry. The undercurrent of the film is raging generation gap
between Singh and Bakshi. Friends turned foes, both lead characters focus on
keeping viewers engaged with their car and mouse chase.
While the director Pandey tried to
build on the suspense, he fails to keep the viewer's attention because of it's
run time and clumsy writing. The movie talks about arms and ammunition scam for
about one and a half hour, but ends with a focus on Aadarsh society Scam. The
movie could have been salvaged by tighter editing but Praveen Kathikuloth fails
to deliver on that front. Aiyaary suffers from a weak script but we liked a
couple of dialogues which are apt to describe the Indian political circus and
the subsequent corruption. For example, in one scene Manoj talks about the
Kashmir issue and says the reason it's not getting solved is because lot of
people have to gain from it. Kashmir is not just an issue but has become an
industry. Bitter yet true. The film has all the makings of a Neeraj Pandey
film. Yet, it somehow fails to have a massy connect.
DOP Sudeep Palsane has done a good
job. Special mention to the make up artistes and also costume designer Falguni
Thakore for doing such amazing work with Sidharth and Manoj's different guides
in the film. Action by Abbas Ali Moghul is okay but honestly, there is nothing
to write home about.
Talking about the performances,
Manoj Bajpayee is as usual excellent. He tries really hard to hold the film on
his shoulder; after all he is one of the central characters. His seasoned act
shines through. Sidharth Malhotra looks to redeem himself, after the box office
debacles: A Gentleman, Baar Baar Dekho and Ittefaq, with this film. His romantic
portions with Rakul Preet Singh fails to work and seems forced. The supporting
cast of Vikram Gokhale, Kumud Mishra, Aadil Hussain, Naseruddin Shah shine
through.
The music of the film is good but
not extraordinary. This film has one such track 'Lae Dooba' which is on radio
charts but is not as effective.
On the whole, AIYAARY misses the
mark and is a huge letdown on the account of its flawed script and the lengthy
runtime. At the box office, it will be a disappointing fare.
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