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shud cross 10crOriginally posted by: blue-ice
Any idea how much it will make today...Planning to see it this week end...the reviews are awesome...😛
Originally posted by: blue-ice
Any idea how much it will make today...Planning to see it this week end...the reviews are awesome...😛
Rating:
January 23, 2015
Cast: Akshay Kumar, Kay Kay Menon, Anupam Kher, Rana Dagubatti, Sushant Singh, Tapsee Pannu, Danny Denzongpa
Director: Neeraj Pandey
Borrowing its structure from Zero Dark Thirty, its climax from Argo, its intention from Nikhil Advani's D-Day, and its occasionally jingoistic tone from your standard Bollywood B-movie, Baby, directed by Neeraj Pandey, is a khichdi of influences, and an uneven film as a result. Pandey, who made a big impression with the provocative and controversial vigilante thriller A Wednesday, applied the same sense of urgency and tension to Special Chabbis, giving us a smart con film that involved an elaborate cat-and-mouse chase between cops and thieves. With Baby, his treatment is more escapist than realistic.
Akshay Kumar is Ajay, a highly skilled agent in an undercover counter-intelligence unit dubbed Baby that's tasked with foiling terror attacks on the country. When Bilaal (Kay Kay Menon), a terrorist facing trial in India, escapes from prison, and it becomes clear that a major attack is being hatched by Pakistan's Lashkar group, it's up to Ajay and his team to save the nation. This mission sends Ajay racing between Turkey, Mumbai, New Delhi, Nepal, and the Middle East, where he more or less single-handedly flushes out rogue agents, dismantles terror plans, and vanquishes the bad guys in well-executed action scenes. He is both the brains and the muscle in the unit.
Unfortunately however Pandey gives us a first half that is loose, and one that serves little purpose other than to act as a set-up, and to introduce us to the main players. Danny Denzongpa is Ajay's boss Feroze Ali Khan, who paces down corridors and stares grimly into open spaces, leaving his star officer to do all the heavy lifting. There's also a hate-spewing, India-bashing mullah (Pakistani actor Rasheed Naz) who, in one of the film's crucial scenes, echoes an oft-repeated (and controversial) sentiment pertaining to India's typical response to terror attacks.
The pace picks up considerably post intermission, when Pandey gives us some terrific moments of breathless action and genuine tension. In a rare scene that allows another agent besides Ajay to flex their chops, Tapsee Pannu gets her big moment to shine in a Kathmandu hotel room. However implausible, another break-in scene at a desert resort is riveting, edge-of-the-seat stuff. The film's last hour in fact is so crisply done you're even willing to forgive Pandey the messiness of the first act and the routine lapses of logic in the screenplay, like Bilaal's escape in broad daylight on Mumbai's busy Marine Drive.
To be fair, the film is an engaging enough thriller sprinkled with witty lines and crowd-pleasing moments that Akshay Kumar performs with a deadpan expression to great effect. An example of that is a superb scene in which he calmly responds to an apathetic offhand remark made by a minister's PA. Akshay, in fact, is in very good form, giving us a glimpse of the solid actor he can be when he isn't cashing his paycheck making low-brow comedies. He's ably supported, in the film's final act, by a buff Rana Dagubatti, and particularly by Anupam Kher as fellow agents on a daredevil mission.
I was rankled by the film's simplistic arguments, its all-too-convenient solutions to complex issues, and Pandey's tokenism when it came to portraying a few good Muslims'. Also, wouldn't it have been great to get a protagonist that felt vulnerable instead of a superhero? Well, perhaps in another film.
I'm going with three out of five for Baby. Enjoy it for the brisk action thriller that it is, and try not to think about how much better it could've been.
mihir gave 3 and half stars to baby...
by Mihir Fadnavis Jan 23, 2015 09:23 IST
#Akshay Kumar #Anupam Kher #baby #Baby review #Neeraj Pandey #Neeraj Pandey films #Rana Daggubati
Director Neeraj Pandey's films are a mixture of old school Bollywood formula, slick modern execution and bouts of intense suspense with some bombastic, social commentary. His films don't have clueless idiots with walkie talkies pretending to be commandoes. They have reasonably realistic depiction of police work and ludicrous holy cow that was awesome' thrills.
His latest venture Baby is another perfectly outlandish and white-knuckled action thriller - a seemingly intelligent but mindless piece of well-oiled escapism that delivers several crowd-pleasing moments of action mayhem. And Pandey does it in such style and a breakneck pace that one can't help but enjoy the ride. Sure, most of the plot points in Babycome dangerously close to the utter stupidity found in films like Holiday, but it's very entertaining. It's also a rare piece of event cinema - because how many Akshay Kumar movies turn out to be anything besides awful?
Baby is supposedly based on real life missions and characters, but the disclaimer before the movie mentions that all characters and events in the film are fictitious. This is probably Pandey pulling the prank that the Coen brothers did in Fargo, but more on that later.
We're brought up to speed with the help of a grave and grim voiceover by Danny Denzongpa who plays Feroze Ali Khan, the chief of a super-secret-undercover-counter-intelligence-rapid-action-surveillance-savvy-first encounter-assault recon-I-spy-antiterrorist unit named Baby. Feroze tells us that Baby has been the most successful force against Pakistan-based terrorism, and since 2008, has dismantled several terrorist attacks in India. The film chronicles Baby's final mission, starring Akshay Kumar as Ajay who's hunting down Kay Kay Menon's Bilal Khan, an escaped terrorist. Ajay's hunt for Bilal takes him (and us) through seedy streets in Bombay, the bylanes of Turkey, the mountains of Nepal, and the desert sands of Saudi Arabia. Also in the mix is a nutty, India-bashing, hate-spewing Mullah Maulana Mohammad (played by Pakistani actor Rasheed Naz), a not so subtle derivation of LeT's Zaki ur Rehman Lakhwi.
Akshay Kumar in Baby.
Baby ups the body count and delivers the goods when it comes to gritty action, non-stop thrills, mood and style. What mainly works here is the sense of urgency. Our hero sticks to the mission instead of veering out for item numbers and even though he's larger than life, he remains in a fairly realistic mode. This is a mainstream film, but there is no slow-mo bullet time rubbish. There's some interesting hand-to-hand combat, and Pandey somehow manages to balance the grittiness and realism balance the masala of commercial films. It's quite refreshing to see a film that caters to its target audience and at least tries to not insult it.
There's not a dull moment here, save for one hopelessly horrible song in an equally awful love track (Pandey did the same in Special 26 as well). Thankfully, it's short and quickly abandoned, so we're thrown right back into a cocktail of chase scenes, intrigue and espionage.
To fill the rather large 159-minute runtime, there are catchy sequences, but also the unintentional hilarity of head-scratchingly stupid moments that stretch the material beyond the realm of plausibility. For example, Bilal escapes from a police van in broad daylight, in the middle of a completely deserted Marine Drive in south Mumbai, after leisurely shooting three cops and walking away. Anyone who's been to Mumbai knows that the only time you'd find a deserted main road is during the Rapture.
There's also a scene where Feroze explains to the minister he reports to how Pakistani terror organisations are breeding homegrown terrorists in India, much to the minister's shock. One would imagine any minister would be well aware of the most basic security threat to the country.
Akshay Kumar deserves credit for choosing such a project and making it work. He's got his usual cocksure swagger, his impressive athletic prowess but he manages to restrain himself during the dramatic beats. He even hurls a few one-liners in hilariously passive ways. If only he'd stopped himself from giving into his desire to display his jumping abilities.
Adding some much-welcome layer to a very standard sidekick, Taapsee Pannu is fun as Ajay's team member. Her violent encounter with a shady businessman (Sushant Singh) makes, very crowd pleasingly, an excellent case for women not needing men to fight for them. Kudos also to Pandey for delivering action scenes that are visually slick, cohesive and don't give in to the lazy cuts.
A rewatchable thriller can spark conversations about how unexpected some scenes were, but most of the conversations following Baby will consist of how true the film actually is. One one hand, we're expected to simply take everything at face value, assume the anti terrorist unit and the mission in the film are real, but also simultaneously digest the vast amounts of obvious creative liberty. A similar self-contradictory narrative also plagued D Day and Madras Caf.
So no matter whether you like the film or not, it's hard to deem Pandey a thought provoking filmmaker because Babyseems a lot sillier a few hours after you see it. Pandey is a smart, commercial filmmaker though, because Baby basically exists for the singular purpose of filling three hours of your life with slickly-crafted and frequently outlandish thrills. Just like Ajay himself, the movie doesn't stop until its mission is complete. Just plug some cotton in your ears though, the music is loud enough to wake up the dead.
Seems like a good start and advance booking Hopefully it will sustain a good run in its re release...
Movie has released worldwide 12th September and will release in India too...
https://x.com/vivekagnihotri/status/1946940660067803443...
https://x.com/UmairSandu/status/1962932305451716881
https://youtu.be/XkIlffVuljE
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