~~~~Highway reviews ~~~~~ - Page 6

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Johnny.Balraj thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#51
Slap to all the haters of Alia, say she can't act. Everyone is praising her
kanta motwani @kantamo

Little @aliaa08 graduates ... Masters the art of acting #highwaythemovie


Alisha Coelho @AlishaCoelho

Highway is such a gorgeous film. Travel po*n, if you like. And Alia Bhatt is a mighty revelation in parts. Evening well spent.





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Posted: 11 years ago
#52
alia showed in the promos that she isn't just a pretty gal she can act too!!! she should do this kind of roles more often... she should keep herself away from those big budget action films!!! she still got time for those!!!
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Posted: 11 years ago
#53
I love how Alia surprised everyone and the fact that she's only done one movie and yet in each of her upcoming films she plays totally different characters.
Johnny.Balraj thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#54
More praise for Alia
Pravesh Gurung @praveshgurung

a journey of truth n freedom; outstanding overwhelming ride #highwaythefilm Ms. Alia Bhatt a standing ovation! pls watch it!


Harsh Jain @Harsh_sanman

Saw #Highway & @aliaa08 is superb. She looks so sweet & is very natural on screen. Imtiaz Ali knows how to take out d best from his actors!



Edited by LangdaTyagi - 11 years ago
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Posted: 11 years ago
#55

Highway Review: Imtiaz Ali film starring Alia Bhatt

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The director of films like Socha Na Tha, Jab We Met, Love Aaj Kal and Rockstar.. returns with a medium-budget film titled Highway'. Known for extracting award-winning performances from his actors, Imtiaz Ali directs Student Of The Year' star Alia Bhatt and Randeep Hooda. Highway has tunes composed by Oscar winning music director A.R Rehman.

Story: A young girl from an Urban city Veera Tripati (Alia Bhatt) is on the highway at night with her fianc. They are about to get married in four days. Suddenly, her life is swung away from the brocade and jewellery of marriage to the harsh brutality of abduction. Her life will never be the same again. The same night, the gang is in panic. The girl is a big industrialist's daughter. His links in the corridors of power make ransom out of the question. They are doomed. But the leader of this group, Mahabir Bhatti (Randeep Hooda) is adamant. For him sending her back is not an option. He will do whatever it takes to see this through. But as the days pass by, the scenery changes, the light changes, the sun sets and rises and the air changes, she feels that she has changed as well. Gradually, a strange bond begins to develop between Veera and Mahabir. It is in this captivity that she, for the first time, feels free. She does not want to go back but she also doesn't want to reach where he is taking her. She wishes this journey to never end.

Highway Review

Highway Movie Review

Short Review of Highway: Imtiaz Ali, a master at directing rom-coms, veers away from his comfort zone to direct a road film. Highway starts very well. The first half, apart from being a visual treat, has plenty of moments that could qualify as Imtiaz's best. He successfully manages to create a fantasy world, with a lot of heart and energy. Unfortunately, the second half fails to match-up to the first. The story suffers from being a little too hard to digest, to sometimes getting way too predictable. More on that in the detailed review on Friday.

Technically, the film is brilliant. The entire technical team deserves an applause as they infuse life into a not-so-glamourous film. The background score is top-notch, the editing is crisp. The lighting, setting and locations are in tune with the mood of the film.

A.R. Rahman's music gives Highway its soul and Anil Mehta's cinematography make even the milestones on the highway look so beautiful.

Alia Bhatt breaks free and delivers a fabulous performance, she is outstanding as Veera. With Highway, Alia grows from a student to an actor! Randeep Hooda is a sheer delight on-screen. Right from his diction to his body language and expressions, Hooda delivers a flawless performance. The supporting cast is top-notch. Quite a few unknown names excel in the film.

Overall, Highway is a soul-stirring film that may not rake in the moolah at the box office, but will touch your heart. Watch it for Rahman's fabulous compositions, brilliant performances and Anil Mehta's camerawork.

At the box office, the film is expected to take a slow start and then grow with word-of-mouth publicity.

Rating: More in the detailed review on Friday.


http://www.indicine.com/movies/bollywood/highway-review-imtiaz-ali-film-starring-alia-bhatt/

MR.KooL thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#56
Highway review: Alia Bhatt is brilliant in this terrific movie
by Mihir Fadnavis Feb 20, 2014

Having liked (but not loved) Jab We Met, rolled my eyes through Love Aaj Kal and despised Rockstar, my faith in director Imtiaz Ali had mostly faded. They were high schmaltz, the contrived drama and the lame message of the power of love' were unconvincing, and there was a blatant attempt at dumbing ideas down to cater to the lowest common denominator.

It's as though Ali heard these complaints, made a checklist of the critical flaws in his past films and then went out to make a film that passionately trumps his critics. Ali's latest venture, Highway, is not only a terrific movie, but also an achievement in commercial Bollywood cinema. As a bonus, it also has a pleasant surprise: Alia Bhatt is a major acting talent.

Highway is a character-driven film in which Bhatt plays Veera, a wealthy Delhi girl who gets kidnapped by a gang of bandits headed by Mahabir (Randeep Hooda). Like in A Life Less Ordinary, Veera is afflicted with a serious bout of Stockholm Syndrome. However, Veera is less like Cameron Diaz from that movie or the lovestruck Faye Dunaway in Three Days of the Condor, and more like Zhang Ziyi in Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon - a vulnerable child with a fractured personality. Her attraction to Mahabir is confounding in one moment, heartbreaking in the next and hilarious when you least expect it to be.

Bhatt and Hooda in a still from the film. Image courtesy: Facebook If you're an Imtiaz Ali fan, you'll be stunned by how different Highway is compared to his previous films, in both concept and form. The first thing you'll notice is how subtle and quiet the film is. Despite a soundtrack by AR Rahman, there is very little background music in the film. There are no tacky reaction shots and no helpful musical cues to spoonfeed the audience. The most dramatic scene of the film is enacted against pin drop silence, relying upon characters rather than background music to move you. There are no song and dance numbers, and the film plays out like an offbeat indie, crossing over to arthouse territory a lot of times.

For a film that is being released commercially, there is plenty of unconventional stuff in Highway. Often, the camera just follows Bhatt and keen movie buffs will be able to figure out the scripted scenes from the spontaneous ones, like the one in which Veera is trying to negotiate with a rock on a rapid stream. There's another really funny bit when Veera pops in an English music CD in Mahabir's truck and starts break dancing on the highway. Mahabir is a dacoit but isn't a stereotypical, rapey' Punjabi gunda, he actually gets annoyed when Veera clings on to him.

Highway's commercial elements arrive only in the second half, but they don't get in the way of the story. It doesn't try to be The Motorcycle Diaries or preach about Mother Nature giving the protagonists a perspective upon life. Veera changes as she travels with Mahabir across deserts and mountains, but the change is gently realized.

They're welded together with the songs and imagery, showing the protagonists driving through various terrains. Two people discover themselves at their loneliest, and with Mr Rahman's music trickling in the background, it's tough to dislike what's happening on the screen. The one legitimate criticism one could bring up is that Veera's breakthrough scene with Mahabir, in which she opens up to him emotionally, pops up out of the blue. It's the one time in Highway that the editing is jarring, but it's easy to glance over because of Bhatt's moving performance.

After watching Bhatt's debut film, few expected Bhatt to do anything more than the safe and stereotypical song and dance comedies. In Highway, she punches the entitled star kid stereotype and shocks you with both her range and dedication. Despite Hooda's decent performance, it is Bhatt who carries the film on her petite shoulders without breaking a sweat.

The film is practically a collage of Bhatt moments and she pulls off all the moments very well. What could have been hammy and laughable comes across as endearing. She even excels at a tremendous, five-minute long, single take shot in the climax - a million things could have gone wrong here, but Bhatt hits the right notes, thanks no doubt to Ali's direction. With Deepika Padukone, Parineeti Chopra and now Bhatt, the future of Bollywood's leading ladies seems bright.

A scary prospect is that Highway might not make money at the box office. Some will no doubt criticize the film's silences, long takes and lack of naach gaana. That'll be a shame because it's not often that a successful commercial filmmaker has the courage to take a sharp left from the blockbuster formulae and make something that's different. There is so much to appreciate in Highway and if it can goad other commercial filmmakers to take notice and also dare to try something new, we'll all be richer for it

Read more at: http://www.firstpost.com/bollywood/highway-review-alia-bhatt-is-brilliant-in-this-terrific-movie-1400019.html?utm_source=ref_article
MR.KooL thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#57

Highway Review

February 20th, 2014 by Mohar Basu

Highway Movie Poster

Rating: 2.5/5 Stars (Two and half stars)

Star cast: Randeep Hooda, Alia Bhatt

Director: Imtiaz Ali

What's Good: A.R Rahman's captivating music and the enchanting cinematography.

What's Bad: A depressingly mediocre screenplay and warped chemistry of its lead pair.

Loo break: Shockingly too many.

Watch or Not?: I feel cheated by Imtiaz Ali because Highway isn't anything even remotely close to what we usually expect from the filmmaker after terrific works like Jab We Met and Rockstar. With Highway he undeniably slips. It is a frustrating film that will leave you angry. Imtiaz clearly wasted his caliber over leisurely making a movie that is strictly respectable for its lack of connection and conviction. The film's hero is A.R Rahman and everyone else puts up an infuriatingly washed out show as compared to him. Let's just settle with saying that it was a proficiently thought film that we see moving inevitably towards death, putting us through excruciating heartbreak and pain through its run time. Mr Ali, what on earth happened to you?

User Rating:

44 Votes
The film begins at a posh locality in Delhi where a rich businessman's daughter Veera Tripathi (Alia Bhatt) is tying the knot with another who's who of the city. A few days short of the wedding, the to-be bride who is quickly prone to claustrophobia blackmails her fiance to take her on a nightly drive down to the highway. At a gas station which was being burgled, they stop. Amidst all the loot the gang leader Mahabir Bhati (Randeep Hooda) kidnaps Veera. With her father's political connections, it is a daredevil thing for Mahabir who then embarks on a journey from state to state to keep buying time until Alia is sold off successfully into prostitution. How from antagonists do Mahabir and Veera affectionately land up on the same plane is story that needs to be heard in this one.

Alia Bhatt in a still from movie Highway'

Highway Review: Script Analysis

From the onstart itself I have had a problem with the perception of Stockholm Syndrome' in this film. It is revealed much later in the story that Alia's character Veera comes with an emotional baggage as heavy as Mahabir's to justify the connection between the duo. However experimenting with the volatile idea here doesn't reap much good for the movie as a whole. Not only is the angle unconvincing and stark, it is unbelievable and horridly lame to say the least. I personally cannot identify freedom that doesn't assure a sense of security. And feeling free and ecstatic with someone who is brutal isn't identifiable. Though commendably it is a refreshing drift attempted on part of Ali, it isn't good enough to save the film.

Alia's Veera is a restructured version of Geet from Jab We Met. She is over-the-top whacky, on-the-edge impulsive and so adorable that you flow with her. Alia impersonates a similar premise but perhaps her character is written so sketchily that it fails to replicate a similar resonance. At many points the script fails to justify many of its high tension points. There is a scene where Mahabir asks Alia to run away from him and she failing to do that returns. A kidnapped girl returning back to the one who captivated her is bizarre. At another point, she hides when the police searches Mahabir's truck when she could have easily busted Mahabir. Understandably, the intention was to show how Alia despises the primness of her elite life but the scene came off as incredibly stupid.

Just before the interval strikes, out of the blue Veera tells Mahabir a deep secret from her childhood, which clearly most around her must have insisted she shushes up on. She hugs Mahabir to seek comfort and he allows her. While all is hunky dory in this affair, even if I cast aside my feelings about the chain of instances, the first most emotional moment of the film seems forced and wobbly.

The story turns to a newer leaf post interval. In the first half, I was perhaps hoping that the build up is leading to some good, after interval it took me little time to realize the predictable climax. The film transforms into slides from a travel catalogue suddenly. A girl with traumatic past, a man from the proletariat section of the society and the tug of affection between these strangers are all given a miss. The focus shifts drastically towards capturing the natural landscapes more than the emotional one. It will be a cliched line but the climax is one you can predict from far away and is handled carelessly. It is only or the last 15 minutes, the film manages to wrap up thunderously evening out the bad aftertaste that we would walked out with.

Highway Review: Star Performances

Randeep Hooda is brooding and fearsome for most part. Ever since the actor's advent in the industry, he has carefully selected roles which allow him to perfect the act of snarling and grunting. Hooda is damn good in the first half and in the rest he just repeats it all to the extent of overdoing it.

Alia Bhatt never got out of playing her bimbo character from Student Of The Year and the actress plays Veera with a similar quotient of nascent energy. However rendering the same excitement in tackling a sensitive film like this, it would have been advisable to tone down the ecstatic drift of story to find something more serene and meaningful. I would have easily said she is a terrible actress especially after watching the scene in which she runs to take the bus with Randeep, yelling, screeching, her nostrils flaring enough to make me laugh. But in the last 15 minutes she steals the thunder proving her mettle with the ease of a pro.

Highway Review: Direction, Editing and Screenplay

Imtiaz Ali left me heartbroken this time. Adapting a meandering script that prefers making you think rather that meting out fun instantaneously, the screenplay shatters rapidly over its runtime. There are only sprinkles of Ali's trademark genius served to us. Besides that, it has multiple lapses which hampers the film gravely in the long run. Not only does he risk working on a story that brings back horrendous glimpses out of the mosaic of Indian social life and horrifyingly educate you on the details of abduction of women, he tries his hand at delivering a love story that isn't one bit convincing. As a woman who identifies closely with these issues, broaching a subject like this with shots of gagging and screaming infuses fear inside us to the core.

Highway can be defined as a quicksand of muddled up mess which resorts to fascinating landscapes and soulful music everytime the story begins to gear up towards intensity and loses grip over emotions. Let's not even get into the logic defying moments of the story, the most striking one being a top honcho's daughter goes missing and no one recognizes her at all. But defending its dissipating premise in the garb of Rahman's mystically well done score isn't what is expected of Ali.

Ali's predictable climax and bumpy storytelling would all have gone down well but this time even the earnestness seemed a little low for the film. He wasn't in his best avatar as all the dramatic moments reduce to contrived writing and shockingly it is the first time I have felt that the filmmaker's work is amateurish. By far, this is his worst work.

Highway Review: The Last Word

Highway whips up all the ingredients required for an intriguing film but goes wrong as a whole. It is bold subject handled flimsily and doesn't come close to believable. There is excessive heavy handedness in the screenplay and somehow the effortless ease that signifies the beauty of Imtiaz's films is absolutely missing from it. There is far too much of incoherence in the screenplay to bear and though it tried its hand at adding varied hues to multiple layers of the story, one cannot disagree to the fact that it is only Rahman's divine music and the pristine cinematography that works here. It left me baffled and numb especially because I expect better from Ali. It is heartbreakingly mediocre and I am settling for ratings which translate the same. It is a lenient 2.5/5 for Highway

963651 thumbnail
Posted: 11 years ago
#58

Movie review: Avoid this Highway, it will lead you nowhere

Rohit Khilnani February 20, 2014 | UPDATED 10:37 IST

Highway

Cast: Randeep Hooda, Alia Bhatt

Director: Imtiaz Ali

Rating: 4 Star Rating: Recommended


From Socha Na Tha (2005) till Rockstar (2011), I have enjoyed all the films that Imtiaz Ali has directed. I feel he plays around wonderfully with relationships and that's what makes his films so relatable even if the character is as weird as Jordan in Rockstar. Hence, I was very hopeful after seeing the songs and promos of Highway. With Highway, Imtiaz takes the road less travelled and tries something very different from not just his usual style of films but goes ahead to challenge something that we have not seen in Bollywood movies. Although the problem that emerges is that he is not able to hold it together. Forget the reliability factor, the film is way too slow to offer any entertainment.

Veera (Alia Bhatt) is getting all geared up to tie the knot but the arrangements and the rest of the pre-wedding baggage is getting to her so she has called her fiance in the middle of the night to take her out for a drive as she is desperate for some fresh air. Hesitant to drive on the highway in the dark as it's unsafe, he finally gives in to Veera's request. At a gas station she steps out of the car and in no time she is kidnapped by some robbers. Then the film moves at a snail's speed and she is taken from one state to the other in a truck. After she is abducted, the group of men realise that Veera is the daughter of a famous businessman and her father will do anything under the sun to get her back safely. Head of the group, Mahabir (Randeep Hooda) hates the rich and wants to prove a point, he doesn't believe in going back even though he is told that her father is not the right person to mess with.

After facing some initial few difficulties, Veera is seen almost enjoying herself on this journey with a group of men who are her kidnappers. She talks to them as if they are her best buddies. She also asks one of the men to buy an English audio CD and breaks into a dance. This is not it, there are many senseless scenes like this one and there is no end to Veera's madness. So much so that when the truck is stopped by the cops and that's her only chance to run away from her kidnappers, she instead hides in the truck and continues the journey with Mahabir. Even he fails to understand why she did that! Finally even Mahabir doesn't know what to do with her or he does seen to realise his mistake and wants to get rid of her but only if she lets them go. She does whatever it takes to be with Mahabir because she does not want go back home. How, when and why she is attached to this truck driver is beyond my understanding.

Obviously this is her first time away from her five-star life and finally she is getting to travel, witnessing the beauty of nature and breathe fresh air which she loves! One may enjoy travelling to all these places but with your own kidnappers? Really! Not once we get to see what the family is going through back home and no one recognises the kidnapped daughter of a famous industrialist. It's too unrealistic!

There is a side story also here, that of an uncle who repeatedly sexually abused Veera when she was very young. No doubt this is a serious problem that our society faces but the problem doesn't fit very well in this film, it looks forced. For some serious viewing of such issues I will say hang in there, Satyamev Jayate season two will be out soon!

Alia Bhatt fits perfectly in this role but doesn't have much scope to perform. Even Randeep Hooda is not bad either but has little to do. Casting director Mukesh Chhabra is bang on, it's unusual and works very well here! Rahman's music does set the mood of the film and cinematographer Anil Mehta captures beautiful locations but even all this can't save this film!

Avoid this Highway, it will lead you nowhere!

963651 thumbnail
Posted: 11 years ago
#59
Why Highway' will be Imtiaz Ali's best, yet least successful film so far
by Suprateek Chatterjee Feb 20, 2014


Silence is golden and Imtiaz Ali knows this all too well. In his latest feature, Highway, the director known for making crowd-pleasers such as Jab We Met and Rockstar, uses silence so effectively that it's almost a directorial flourish. Highway has some lovely writing, beautiful cinematography and stellar acting from the two leads, Alia Bhatt and Randeep Hooda, but silence is the unsung hero of Ali's new film.

This is noteworthy because the Hindi film industry traditionally avoids silence like the plague, preferring to allow the background score to tell a parallel story, much like a sign-language interpreter narrating the story to a deaf audience. Even in his previous films, Ali, perhaps constrained by the diktats of commercial filmmaking, felt the need to riff on every emotion (although more subtly than most of his contemporaries). In Highway, Ali shows us how and what to feel, instead of telling us. The background music composed by AR Rahman is used sparingly and some of the best, most emotionally-charged moments allow the characters' lines to hang in silences and be absorbed by the audience, in an atmosphere of thickening emotion, without the distraction of hearing a wailing violin or a contemplative guitar. A still from Highway. Agencies.

The writing forms the backbone of Highway even though it doesn't have much of a plot. A young, seemingly-nave Delhi girl, Veera Tripathi (Bhatt), is the daughter of an obscenely wealthy man and she is abducted by Mahabir (Hooda) and his gang. As they travel across six states - from Gujarat to Jammu and Kashmir - Veera succumbs to Stockholm Syndrome and starts developing a fondness for her captor.

However, as the title suggests, this movie is about the journey and not the destination - as elucidated by Veera at one point. And what a journey it is, featuring some beautiful vistas that will make you want to pack your bags and go exploring north India (courtesy Anil Mehta's stunning cinematography). Ali's taken us travelling before in Socha Na Tha, Jab We Met, Love Aaj Kaland Rockstar, but here he approaches the journey with an agenda-free, spiritual cleanliness. There's no "Look at how beautiful our country is" or the "I am a famous cinematographer and therefore I will be self-indulgent" conceit - we see everything that Veera sees and it makes us feel the way she does.

Which brings us to Highway's biggest strength: Alia Bhatt. Like Veera, Bhatt is a privileged urban kid. She's likeable, but brash, nave and largely ignorant about small-town and rural life. When she sits on a rock in the middle of a gushing stream in Himachal Pradesh and laughs to herself till she cries, it's obvious that she is actually feeling those emotions herself. When she acts playfully defiant with her none-too-jovial captors, you laugh because you can imagine a sheltered girl like her talking like that with a mixture of fearlessness and false security.

Bhatt's is perfect casting and it's difficult to think of another actress in Bollywood who would have suited that role as well as Bhatt does. But aside from the resonances between Veera and Bhatt, she also pulls off some clumsily-written monologues that could have translated horrendously to screen. Again, it's the honesty that works. Bhatt makes Veera's internal journey her own and makes us believe we're watching more than just a performance.

Accolades must be go to Hooda too, who shines with his brilliant, balanced performance as Mahabir, a violent man with a seemingly impenetrable exterior. As he struggles to find what little remains of his humanity, his speech changes from guttural barks to sullen utterances. His is one of those roles in which the character graph is a languid incline and there is little opportunity to truly cut loose. Hooda eschews all temptations to chew scenery and paces himself brilliantly. Why aren't we watching him in more films?

Highway traverses diverse cinematic terrain -- from coming-of-age tale to socially relevant drama - without ever breaking stride and Ali has said in interviews that he'd been wanting to make this film for the past 15 years. I would like to think that, with a cast this good and a technical crew as accomplished (aside from Mehta and Rahman, it boasts of Resul Pookutty's sound design), he has succeeded in making the film he had wanted.

It highlights Ali's love for honest storytelling and his disdain for artifice. This is by far Ali's most accomplished film. Perhaps this means Highway will be his least commercially successful one. But, hey, let's just be happy it got made.

Read more at: http://www.firstpost.com/bollywood/why-highway-will-be-imtiaz-alis-best-yet-least-successful-film-so-far-1400287.html?utm_source=ref_article
Edited by _YoU_KnOw_WhO - 11 years ago
963651 thumbnail
Posted: 11 years ago
#60

Film review: Highway

Kaleem Aftab

February 19, 2014 Updated: February 19, 2014 17:04:00


Read more: http://www.thenational.ae/arts-culture/film/film-review-highway#ixzz2tqu7ievF
Follow us: @TheNationalUAE on Twitter | thenational.ae on Facebook

Anyone who has tagged Imtiaz Ali as a maker of big Bollywood blockbusters is in for a surprise with Highway.

The RockStar and Love Aaj Kal director's first foray into digital filmmaking sees him use a documentary-style aesthetic in telling the story of a poor little rich girl who gets kidnapped days before her wedding. The dark muted images and harsh tone of the opening sequences are more reminiscent of the work of the growing band of India's independent filmmakers, such as Anurag Kashyap, than the glossy fare usually offered by the Disney-backed UTV studio.

The action is held together by a star-making performance from Alia Bhatt. She plays Veera, a confident, assertive and playful woman whose world is capsized when she persuades her fianc to drive out to the main "highway" and gets taken hostage during the robbery of a petrol station.

The introverted Mahabir, played by the Once Upon a Time in Mumbai star Randeep Hooda, is the brooding leader of the captors and seems to have modelled himself on the less-is-more performances of Ryan Gosling or one of Clint Eastwood's cowboys. He doesn't say much but stares at the road they travel on, at his cohorts, into the camera, and, in the early section of the film, into space - no doubt sharing the audience's fear that Highway is developing into a typical kidnap movie of the kind we've seen a thousand times before.

But just as the action threatens to become monotonous, there's a dark twist that completely changes the nature of the relationship between captor and captive. It's part-Stockholm syndrome, part Three Days of the Condor. Ali handles it deftly; in fact, it is some achievement to pull this off in a believable, effective way.

From here, the story develops just like the road taken by the captors; offering romantic picturesque vistas, but always with potential danger around the bend. The story is set against a brilliant soundtrack by AR Rahman, admittedly less emphatic than his work on Slumdog Millionaire and RockStar but perfectly capturing the hostage Veera's continually evolving state of mind.



Read more: http://www.thenational.ae/arts-culture/film/film-review-highway#ixzz2tquBXjGl
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