PHANTOM Reviews/Box Office thread. - Page 19

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Mr.Chief thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
Vishal Bollywood @VishalBollywood

#Phantom is closer to reality, Ek Tha Tiger was glamourised: Kabir Khan via @SwetaKaushal http://read.ht/ujF

vib. thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
Cant wait to catchup the movie in a few hours!
Guys whoever sees , post comments
Mr.Chief thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
Gotu @amitjiit128

#Phantom @kabirkhankk is the best. Awesome movie.Katrina is the ultimate beauty.Saif rocks.In love with katrina again


Gotu @amitjiit128

#Phantom @kabirkhankk u bring out the best in Katrina . In love with Afgaan Jalebi.


u @amitjiit128

@kabirkhankk @minimathur sir u are just amazing. Each of ur film is better than previous.#Phantom is a class act.

Edited by .HandsomeBanana - 10 years ago
gilmores thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago

Originally posted by: Rhino2close2car

http://m.rediff.com/movies/review/review-saif-and-katrina-make-phantom-a-joke/20150828.htm


Review: Kabir Khan's Phantom

Old jungle saying: cast a film well.

There is a lot that a film-going audience can forgive in a production - from continuity errors to script flaws, from incoherent cinematography to weak plots - but one of the hardest to overlook is when the filmmakers pick the wrong people for the principal parts. Truly remarkable lead actors are magic - they salvage a bad film or shoulder a good one, and shine even when the film around them is flimsy - but even merely suitably-chosen actors can, at the very least, make a film appear adequate.

What, then, does Kabir Khan do? Who does he - a man who has just given Salman Khan the biggest hit of his career in Bajrangi Bhaijaan - cast in a film about killing terrorists and "vigilante justice"? A tough action hero and a girl who knows her way around a minefield? Actors who appear gritty and credible when squeezing a trigger, looking like morality is a luxury for those who get to sleep at night?

No.

He casts a Nawab and a mannequin.

Phantom could never have been a great film. Based on a book called Mumbai Avengers, it was always going to be an unsubtle work of jingoistic finger-pointing, a film that suggests that intelligence agencies securing a nation should blindly rush into eye-for-an-eye territory. Yet while it remains a work of immature, even irresponsible wish-fulfillment, that in itself does not keep it from being a passable actioner. In fact, we saw something similar earlier this year with Neeraj Pandey's Baby, which, while not particularly sharp, was slickly watchable " largely because of how Akshay Kumar took a role with negligible depth and created a protagonist worth watching.

Alas, here we have the Anari to Kumar's Khiladi. Phantom stars Saif Ali Khan in the John Rambo mould, a loner coaxed out of an invisible, ex-Army life to assassinate evil Pakistanis. Yes, it's Saif Ali Khan essentially playing Sunny Deol. This is a patently absurd bit of casting, defeated only by the choice of the doll-faced Katrina Kaif as a former RAW agent. Khan, who would much rather charm in a suit, here wears one scowl throughout, while Kaif, who speaks every line of dialogue in the same pre-teen tone, is here made to pick up a machine gun and fire.

Everyone misses the mark. Kaif's character, the director, and Saif. This is less a motion picture and more a vanity vehicle for two stars who want to try roleplaying as GI Joes. The result is an exasperatingly childish film. When Khan tells Kaif about his deadly classified mission, she rolls her eyes casually, cutely peeved at how he's always dragging her into things. When she speaks of childhood memories of her father taking her to tea (and cake) at the Taj- the hotel ravaged by the 26/11 attacks - his immediate reaction is to smile and declare that he'll take her there "once all this is over" for tea (and cake), hence making clear his intent to pounce on her daddy issues.

She isn't the only one with daddy issues, to be fair. Saif's character, Daniyal Khan, is a disgraced-Army man who keeps phoning his father who keeps hanging up, because that "disgraced" part doesn't sit well with him - even though there is absolutely no evidence against Daniyal. Dad has also presumably burnt up all adult pictures of his son, which is why the only photograph of Daniyal his mother finds is one from his youth: Saif as an effeminate 16-year-old, the kind of guy who'd sing about blue dupattas and yellow suits. Perfect. Just the reminder we need to reinforce the idea of a truly macho Saif.

Pointed parallels are drawn to the real-life masterminds behind the 26/11 attacks, and an attack on David Headley is genuinely interesting, if a trifle too convenient. Kabir Khan mounts his action scenes competently, even impressively - I was rather taken aback by the appearance of a submarine at one point - but, in an effort to mislead the audience into tension, there is too much cross-cutting to try and bring us close to the wire. This may be fine in theory, but in practice it means repeated shots of Saif biting his lip, intercut with shots of a paunchy cop running really slowly, and in slow-motion. Sigh.

Tragically, pretty much everything in Phantom goes according to plan, making for an inert, unchallenging and boring watch. By the time theTitanic-themed climax rolls around, even Katrina's exhausted by the nonsense; she stops pretending to care and starts shouting "Daniel!" instead of Daniyal.

According to this film, India's Research and Analysis Wing is a threadbare office, full of old and dusty files yanked from cabinets by character actors who must wish they were in sensible films instead. Over in Pakistan's ISI, equally fine actors stand around a computer waiting forever for a jpeg to download. Shameful, really. All this talk of intelligence, but no smarts anywhere in sight. Stay away from Phantom. It gives audiences a raw deal.

Rating: 1 star


----------

OUCH! That's a harsh review. Raja Sen used to like Kat a few years back too.

Edited by turqoisedress - 10 years ago
ElOqUeNcE thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
All the best to phantom team!!D
Edited by ElOqUeNcE - 10 years ago
1051843 thumbnail
Posted: 10 years ago

15 crores hope it is true. Kat ki star power prove ho jaayegi n also credit goes to kabir n saifsaif 😃
-Vaishvi- thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago

Originally posted by: realvdfan


15 crores hope it is true. Kat ki star power prove ho jaayegi n also credit goes to kabir n saifsaif 😃


That's only a prediction, but hope it's true.
I don't want this movie to be a flop. I want it to be a hit, if not hit, atleast do avg business but not flop
fitoori_kudi thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
finally the day has arrived🥳

all the best to #Phantom😊
style14 thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago

Phantom review: Kabir Khan's 'thriller' starring Saif Ali Khan, Katrina Kaif is plain boring


There is only one explanation for Phantom: the cast and crew of the film really wanted a paid holiday. This in itself is not an objectionable aspiration. Who doesn't want to be able to bounce around London, Beirut, Chicago and other beautiful parts of the world, and get paid to do so? However, when the cost of that bouncing around is approximately Rs 55 crores and those who foot that bill expect the movie-going public to recover that amount as box office collection, things may get a little more complicated.

As an idea, Phantom crackles with possibility. Humiliated and furious after the terrorist attacks on Mumbai in 2008, India's Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) decides to send an operative on a covert mission to teach those who plotted against India a lesson. He is a man who goes unnoticed in crowds and who has evaded Google's all-seeing eye. He doesn't care if his target has a human side or redeeming qualities " if you had any part to play in the Mumbai attacks, the phantom wants you dead.

In your head, you now see a desi super spy with Daniel Craig's cool menace, Tom Cruise's stunt-worthiness, Jason Statham's punches. What you get in Phantom is Saif Ali Khan.

As court-martialled soldier Daniyal, Khan takes the idea of a game face to a whole new level. For all of 147 minutes, he sports precisely one expression, give or take some make up and facial hair. He doesn't move as much as lumber, he is thoroughly indiscreet and everywhere he goes, he sticks out like a sore thumb. If this was because of his good looks, we'd forgive it. But Khan spends the entire film looking both awkward and impassive, as though he's got a hangover and is doing his best to block out the headache.

One can't help but feel that there was hope and a prayer governing the decision to name Katrina Kaif's character Nawaz in Phantom. Sadly, those prayers were not answered. Almost sharing a name with Nawazuddin Siddiqui doesn't ensure the transference of his acting ability. Compared to Khan's one expression, Kaif has none. Whether she's crying over lives lost or reminiscing about having tea at the Taj Mahal Hotel, there's not a hint of emotion to mar her perfect complexion and gorgeous features.

Smartly, director Kabir Khan decides to not rely upon his lead pair's charisma and acting skills to woo the audience. Instead, he takes the audience globe trotting. We begin in Mumbai, move on to Kashmir, London, Chicago, Beirut, a recreated-in-Lebanon Syria and finally land up in Pakistan. In each place, people are killed and Daniyal wrinkles his brow, possibly because he's trying to figure out how much of his beard he should trim since his facial hair changes as much as the landscape in Phantom.

When a film rests upon Khan and Kaif to hold the audience's attention, the action better be explosive and the plot, tightly-wound. The stunts aren't bad in Phantom, but they're not memorable. Still, the sounds of explosions and bullets will at least keep you awake. For the plot, there is only one word: woeful. Phantom could have been a clever film. It borrows heavily from very dramatic, real incidents that are begging to be fictionalised. Only here, the characters are badly drawn, the dialogues are clumsy, the transitions are jumpy and the politics are horribly simplified " it's as though the screenplay was written overnight. The film quickly starts feeling predictable and the strategies to kill the terrorists are not particularly gripping. It doesn't help that one of the plans requires us to watch (and hear) Daniyal doing potty.

But well before art imitates life, you have to wonder about RAW's judgement when we see Daniyal in action the first time around. With Nawaz, Daniyal is first supposed to identify a Lashkar-e-Taiba operative in a packed stadium and then, they're to discreetly follow the suspect around London. Daniyal and Nawaz's behaviour is so shifty and obviously suspicious " Daniyal's midlife-crisis-signalling leather jacket really doesn't help " that it's a wonder they weren't snapped up for questioning by the British security service.

Not only can he not blend in, Daniyal lets Nawaz (a civilian under contract with RAW) know he's going around killing Lashkar operatives. This is not necessarily the best way to keep a top-secret plot, secret. Nawaz then proceeds to get deeply involved in Daniyal's mission to avenge India. Why? Because her daddy used to take her to have tea and chocolate pastry at the Taj when she was a kid. If it's the dessert-flavoured memory that's fuelling her, it's a good thing Nawaz hasn't been back to Bombay and tasted Le 15's chocolate and salted caramel tart.

Kabir Khan also tries the standard trick of casting good actors in key supporting roles, but Sabyasachi Chakrabarty, Rajesh Tailang and Zeeshan Ayyub are all wasted on characters that have been badly written. Ayyub, for instance, plays Samit Mishra, a chap who appears in the RAW director's office out of nowhere. We mean this literally. His introductory scene literally has him materialise in the middle of a meeting, on the couch in the RAW director's office, as though he's been beamed in place by Starship Enterprise. Most tragically, he doesn't even get to have chai with Nawaz despite having ventured into enemy waters to save her life.

Things finally turn a little tense in the second half of the film, when Daniyal is in Pakistan and the ISI start closing their net around him. There are a few close calls and at one point, it seems like Daniyal just might get caught after all. Unfortunately, since Daniyal might be the most bland and uncharismatic hero we've seen on screen in years, no one cares if he lives or dies. The man spends 147 minutes killing bad guys " Pakistani bad guys, no less " and the only moment when he drew cheers from the crowd was when he told a baddie called Haaris Saeed that India wants "insaf".

In case you haven't guessed, Haaris Saeed is the stand-in name for Hafiz Saeed. Evidently, his name was changed to Haaris at the last moment since when speaking of him, all the characters' lips say "Hafiz" but voices say "Haaris". Sajid Mir, the Lashkar-e-Taiba commander, doesn't enjoy that privilege. Even the photo that we're shown of him is quite similar to the photos of Mir that are in circulation.

Considering how Phantom cheerfully borrows from real life and makes no bones about ISI being in cahoots with Lashkar-e-Taiba, it isn't surprising that the film isn't being shown in Pakistan. However, considering just how much of a bore Phantom is, for once the Pakistani courts may just have done our neighbours a favour.


http://www.firstpost.com/bollywood/phantom-review-saif-ali-khan-katrina-kaif-are-as-boring-as-the-film-2410136.html

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