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Posted: 8 years ago
#51
Raja Sen (Rediff)

Review: Rustom is an accidental parody of itself

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August 12, 2016 08:42 IST

'The uniform might be the most accurate thing about this film, however, a painfully tacky production where all the sets look like over-saturated cardboard,' says Raja Sen.

Akshay Kumar in Rustom

IMAGE: 'Despite a shapeshifting moustache that, from scene to scene, oscillates between that of Errol Flynn, Raaj Kumar and a felt-pen attempt to draw a clotheshanger in silhouette, Rustom nevertheless makes sure his white Navy uniform is spotless.'

The first time we meet Esha Gupta in Rustom -- a film set in Bombay 60 years ago -- she'S spending her afternoon in a satin-covered bedroom room bathed in golden light, wearing a white corset-like garment while smoking a cigarette using an exaggeratedly long holder.

The second time we see Gupta, she's lounging by the side of a swimming pool wearing a candy-striped swimsuit and an XL-version of Lolita's sunglasses.

It may confound you that I'm starting off a review mentioning a cartoonish vamping who is a secondary character -- Gupta, after all, does not play cuckolded husband, cheating wife or dead playboy -- but I felt it important to be honest and start this review off with utter absurdity instead of bringing up the mythologised Nanavati Murder Case this film is somewhat based on.

You see, no possible fiction-based-on-fact disclaimer could have prepared me for the fact thatRustom is a parody.

That, I believe, can be the only explanation for this daft film. Akshay Kumar -- who we meet on a ship where officers march down corridors even when nobody is watching -- is Naval Commander Rustom Pavri, a decorated officer who has brought his ship home early.

Despite a shapeshifting moustache that, from scene to scene, oscillates between that of Errol Flynn, Raaj Kumar and a felt-pen attempt to draw a clothes hanger in silhouette, Rustom nevertheless makes sure his white Navy uniform is spotless.

Even when he's locked up in prison, where he plays chess and reads Sun Tzu, keeping his expression stoic enough to perhaps ensure a state of zen that brings about creaselessness.

Do officers get locked up in full dress uniform? This one does, possibly because the producer -- also Mr Kumar -- likes the way he looks in those superb, stiffly-starched whites.

The uniform might be the most accurate thing about this film, however, a painfully tacky production where all the sets look like over-saturated cardboard and all the taxicabs are gleaming.

The colour-correction is atrocious, inconsistent even between the faces of two people speaking across a table, and, at one point, an injured wife staggers into a room with her head stained red, looking for all the world as if she'd collided with a plate of gulaal.

This wife, played by Ileana D'Cruz, is the reason Rustom is in prison. She's been cheating on him with Vikram Makhija, an insouciant playboy with an alarmingly technicolor wardrobe -- even his bathrobe looks like it belongs to Bam Bam Bigelow.

D'Cruz, who flits between a pair of awful accents, is vacuous throughout this film, but never more so than in the unending courtroom sections, where she looks as blank as if she were being grilled about why Barfi was made up of stolen scenes. Which is to say she doesn't have a clue.

Neither, it must be said, does the director. Tinu Suresh Desai, who made the gormless 1920 London earlier this year, tries far too hard to make a thrilling true-life case into a thrilling film.

Playing it straight would have sufficed, but Desai resorts to odd dialogue, a bewildering climactic twist, and immensely ill-conceived attempts as comedy.

Armed with a cinematographer who loves abrupt and misleading pan shots, Desai stitches them digitally together to impress us, going from scene to scene, character to character in a single swivel.

Alas, his idea of a policeman interrogating suspects in revolving-door fashion loses all potency when we see that after all these conversations, he's only scribbled three words -- words like 'dost' -- on his notepad.

The film starts off relatively cleanly -- save for the art-direction -- but then Esha Gupta, in a parade of cleavagey dresses, comes along and reminds us that we're watching trash.

Akshay Kumar and Illena D'Cruz in Rustom

IMAGE: Akshay Kumar and Ileana D'Cruz in Rustom.

This is basically a Bhatt film + Akshay Kumar. Kumar is calm and stiff even as the film gets increasingly atrocious, with decent actors like Pawan Malhotra, Kumud Mishra and Sachin Khedekar wasted. Khedekar is particularly slaughtered here as a hammy prosecution lawyer. 'Objection, m'lord, the loudly-gasping lawyer is overacting and misleading the audience.'

The Nanavati Murder Case -- one where public opinion lionised the naval officer to such a degree that its Not Guilty verdict marked the end of the jury system in India -- was a landmark.

It was a case where the tabloid Blitz successfully manipulated an eager, righteous audience, and a case where enterprising street-side peddlers sold toy guns by calling them Nanawati Revolvers.

It is a case, in short, that deserves good cinema. Cinema that, like any intelligent murderer, understands that it is indeed all in the details.

For half a minute, a highly distinguished Parsi gent shows up and immediately classes up this film, but that's about all. Despite Kumar's valiant (albeit overdressed) attempt at calm and gravitas, this film is bilge, unintentionally hilarious and eventually tedious.

The only way to salvage it would be to add a too-loud laugh track, give Gupta a trampoline, and call it Carry On Rustom.

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Posted: 8 years ago
#52
Indian Express

Rustom quick review: Akshay Kumar movie flies high after interval

Rustom quick review: Akshay Kumar, Ileana D'Cruz film based on the KM Nanavati murder case takes its time to set the pace. But having done that, it is a taut thriller.

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Written by Pramod Gaikwad | New Delhi | Published:August 12, 2016 9:01 am
Rustom, Rustom quick review, Akshay Kumar, Akshay Kumar Rustom, Rustom imageRustom quick review: Akshay Kumar as a navy officer plays his part with conviction and keeps you glued to your seats.

Akshay Kumar starrer Rustom mixes both fact and fiction to produce a cine version of the sensational 1959 case of Commander K M Nanavati vs State of Maharashtra that rocked the nation and changed the face of the Indian judicial system. In this case, a naval commander Kawas Manekshaw Nanavati, a Parsi man, was tried in court for killing his wife's lover, Prem Ahuja. He had fired three bullets from his service revolver. He was declared not guilty by the jury of the session court with 8-1 verdict and was set free even when everyone knew he had committed the murder.

Those who might not know about the case would surely want to go and give it a watch. And Tinu Suresh Desai's directorial succeeds in giving a basic idea about infamous incident with a tight narration and keeps the essence intact with its intriguing story line. But it fails to provide us with a high octane courtroom drama that was expected from the movie.

Read: Rustom starring Akshay Kumar is based on this real-life incident

Rustom Pavri (Akshay Kumar) a patriotic and honest naval commander, comes back from his voyage to meet his wife Cynthia (Ileana D'Cruz) with whom he is happily married. But soon after he finds that his wife is having an affair with a friend, Vikram Makhija (Arjan Bajwa) during his absence from home. After confronting his wife, Rustom borrows a gun from the Navy armoury, goes to his Vikram's house, shoots three rounds in his heart, drops him dead and surrenders himself to police admitting his crime. Vikram's sister Preeti Makhija (Esha Gupta) swears to punish Rustom for the murder and the investigation begins. The whole scenario changes when Rustom pleads not guilty in the court.

The first half of the movie rides high on setting the plot right without including any kind of melodrama which we normally witness in Bollywood movies and follows an unadulterated storytelling with sharp editing. It tries to paint the 50s-60s era but fails miserably in doing so due to bad CGI. However, writer Vipul K Rawal, an ex navy officer, has made use of objects like naval ships, vintage cars to give authenticity to the film. The movie scales high after the interval giving many twists and turns during the court proceedings.

Watch: Rustom trailer starring Akshay Kumar

Akshay Kumar as a navy officer plays his part with conviction and keeps you glued to your seats. However, Akshay is missing quite a lot in the first half as the director opted to focus more on the story. But he takes charge in the second half and shines in every frame. Ileana as his wife supports him and looks beautiful throughout the film. Arjan Bajwa also does well with his part while Esha doesn't get enough space to showcase herself. Other supporting actors like Pawan Malhotra, who plays the investigating officer, is spot on with his portrayal and looks convincing. Mukud Mishra as a tabloid head, Usha Nadkarni as Rustom's domestic help also make their act a powerful one.

The movies has many flaws but it manages to keep you glued to your seats. And between all, Akshay Kumar once again stands tall and nails it with his act.

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Posted: 8 years ago
#53
Huffington Post

'Rustom' Review: A Farce Of A Trial

Even Akshay Kumar can't save this unintentionally hilarious courtroom drama from itself.

12/08/2016 8:17 AM IST | Updated 1 hour ago
ZEE STUDIOS
Akshay Kumar in 'Rustom'.

The last time I remember seeing a character named Rustom Pavri in Hindi films, it was in Munna Bhai MBBS (2003). Played by the actor Kurush Deboo, it was " especially in hindsight " a fairly stereotypical portrayal of a Parsi doctor. Even so, within the universe inhabited by the film's characters, it somehow fits.

In Tinu Suresh Desai's Rustom, a similarly tic-laden Kumud Mishra plays Erach Billimoria, a comically scoop-hungry tabloid editor (quite unimaginatively, his publication is called Truth). In a truly good film that is very obviously based on the sensational K.M. Nanavati murder case of 1959, this character would hold great value. In this case, modeled after the real-life tabloid editor Russi Karanjia, Erach is reduced to comic relief, one that even an incredibly consistent actor like Mishra (who seems to be in every second film nowadays) can't save.

Rustom is a strange beast: an A-list star vehicle that insists on being a B-movie. In hindsight, by which I mean a few hours after having watched it, I'll concede that it could indeed have been worse " there are no unnecessary item songs, for instance, and the story is genuinely interesting.

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But it boggles the mind that a movie like Rustom made it off the editing table and into theatres, the way it is. Part courtroom drama and part battle-of-wits, this is an Akshay Kumar vehicle that, for some reason, doesn't allow its star to really act. As this movie's Rustom Pavri, he's at the opposite end of the 'Being Parsi' spectrum from Deboo, which is to say he basically comes across as Akshay Kumar playing a Parsi naval officer at all times.

The film opens with him in a crisp-white uniform aboard a ship, which he commandeers to reach home (Bombay " not Mumbai) several days ahead of schedule. I can't think of a recent film in which Kumar has appeared this disinterested " even his "Do you hear this?" announcement in which he informs his crew that they're getting home soon is delivered in the kind of monotone one would use to share cancer diagnoses with loved ones.

It's a horrible, indigestible mixture " like a school play with an out-of-control budget.

Perhaps he knows what's in store for him? Turns out his wife Cynthia (Ileana D'Cruz), who is from London but sports a Katrina Kaif accent, has been having a very reluctant affair with the philanderous Vikram Makhija (Arjan Bajwa). Rustom returns home with flowers, but finds that Cynthia isn't around. Thankfully, she has been kind enough to leave a very obvious trail of evidence " a bunch of love letters, arranged neatly " within easy reach, presumably because screenwriter Vipul K Rawal had a raging headache the day he wrote this scene and reallycouldn't be arsed to complicate matters.

Anyway, despite the movie's claims that the film is not inspired by the Nanavati case, Rustom does exactly what the naval officer had done: he pumps three bullets into Vikram's chest and marches straight into a nearby police station to surrender. A senior inspector named Vincent Lobo (Pavan Malhotra), all set to go on vacation for two weeks, looks visibly disappointed at this development, and the dramatic background score during this scene only makes the viewer giggle at his predicament.

Speaking of giggling at predicaments, this movie also stars Esha Gupta as Resting Bitch Face aka Preeti Makhija, Vikram's sister. As support for Rustom grows, fuelled by Erach's desire to defend a fellow Parsi, Preeti gets a Sindhi lawyer (an atrociously hammy Sachin Khedekar) on board to get justice for her brother, turning this into a battle between two of Bombay's wealthiest and most influential communities. An interesting dynamic to explore, sure, but Rustom is more interested in showing us Preeti's elaborately coiffured look and period-inappropriate dresses, even as Gupta channels her inner Ivanka Trump. It's a hilarious performance; what a pity it wasn't meant to be one.

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As the film progresses to the courtroom scenes, it devolves into farce. While a loud score insists on accentuating every other moment with a crescendo, the film attempts to inject humour into the proceedings, with a wry judge a la My Cousin Vinny (Anang Desai, in the film's only truly effective performance) and an overly sassy maid named Jamnabai. It's a horrible, indigestible mixture " like a school play with an out-of-control budget.

Aside from that, this is also one of the tackiest looking films I've seen in a while, with an inexplicably oversaturated colour palette, bad lighting, lacklustre CGI (its recreation of late '50s Bombay leaves much to be desired), and amateurishly visible make-up. At one point, we're also subjected to Bajwa in a digitally printed orange robe, which is when I realised that it is humanly possible to both groan and giggle at the same time.

Perhaps the only real upside to this movie is that Kumar's character, an atypically non-heroic leading man, commendably, resists the urge to s**t-shame his wife for straying. It's the star's worst performance this year, but at least the man still holds your attention. In the hands of a more capable writer and director, this could've been a great role. Alas, Rustom only ends up being yet another forgettable venture for the star.

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Posted: 8 years ago
#54
koimoi.com

What's Good: Akshay Kumar in Navy uniform! An entertaining yet riveting plot keeps you well-hooked to your seats.

What's Bad: Rustom claims itself to be a work of fiction and hence glamorizes Rustom's character overtly. His character seems too angelic.

Loo Break: In between a song would be a good time!

Watch or Not?: Yes! Rustom is recommendable for a weekend watch. It's best if you watch this murder mystery thriller without its references to the Nanavati case.


Rustom Pavri is a commander with the Indian Navy. He is a celebrated officer and is known for his unabashed nature when it comes to putting his country first.

Based on the 50s explosive case of K.M Nanavati, the makers issue a warning at start that it is not a biopic and only a fictional representation of the case.

On his early return from his duty, Rustom finds his wife Cynthia missing at home. He soon learns about her affair with popular car dealer Vikram Makhija (Arjan Bajwa). Hurt and angered by his wife's infidelity, Rustom shoots Vikram with 3 bullet shots and even surrenders for his crime.

The case further starts to get twisted when, Rustom pleads not guilty in court. Is he guilty or not is what lies ahead.

Akshay Kumar and Ileana DCruz in a still from Rustom

Rustom Review: Script Analysis

This film's script comes across like a Special 26 or A Wednesday with only one angle in aspect. In all these films you are rooting for the criminal. They make the lawless ways look just by their execution.

In Rustom, the protagonist's character is written with such a lot of sugarcoating that you hardly find him to be a murderer.

The film's story has been crafted well with good twists, turning points. The cinematic liberties that the makers have taken are clearly crowd-pleasing and in the lieu to pack this film as an entertaining watch.

What they stray away from, is making this film a juicy tabloid affair which could've easily been the case considering the story's basic elements involving an extra marital affair and a murder.

Sadly, to make it crowd pleasing, the writers give up on the opportunity to develop a point which was most obvious in the story. They fail to show how justified it is for a Navy officer's wife to stray away into adultery given the circumstances. Instead, they portray a weak woman who is ashamed of her affair and also back it up by showing her lover to be a bast*rd which justifies her to be pulled into a situation and not because of choice. One would definitely question this to be different from the real case.

The side characters are much more well-written. We love the maid' who shouts in favor of her employer in court without the fear or knowledge of being held in contempt. Also Kumud Mishra's tabloid owner character is extremely enjoyable.

The representation of a young kid selling the newspaper by giving juicy dialogues worked for me really well.

The courtroom scenes are dramatic and they even pull off self-jokes on their TV-serial type drama. This self-joke kind of thing seems like a very smart writing move.

Towards the climax, the plot falters hugely. The jury deciding their decision is a terrible scene.

Rustom Review: Star Performance

Akshay Kumar as commander Rustom Pavri looks deliciously handsome in the uniform. I wouldn't think of cheating on him! (Wink!). He does a good job all through, but in a few courtroom scenes, his straight-faced expressions and stance make him look like a wax statue. In terms of performance, there is nothing challenging here for him, so he is good enough.

Ileana D'Cruz who plays the sorry' wife is like a doll in this film. Her perfect hair, perfect dressing and perfect tears are the only thing you will see.

Esha Gupta has a resting bitch-face all through the film. She is unnecessarily seductive with those low-cut outfits that would excite none. The only action she does in the film is hold that cigarette holder and smoke!

Arjan Bajwa as Vikram Makhija is uninspiring. He is made to look like a 50s villain with hideous flashy bathrobes. Coming to his act, there is nothing noticeable.

Pavan Malhotra as the investigating officer on case does a good job.

Kumud Mishra in his teensy role too manages to impress us.

Rustom Review: Direction, Music

Tinu Suresh Desai had previously helmed 1920 : London and I was quite surprised at him coming up with a film like Rustom. Of course, if he would have actually delved into the case or the fact that it was the last one to have a jury trial, it would have been ambitious. He sticks to getting us a formulaic murder mystery drama that has its second half as the courtroom proceedings with a crowd pleasing climax.

In terms of execution, the interrogation scene worked out well. Also, the courtroom sequence is slightly witty and hence seems better than many that most Bollywood films have.

What doesn't work is Arjan and Akshay's hand to hand combat. It looks completely shady. Also the special effects used to portray the naval base, and certain to represent old establishments are not upto the mark.

The music of the film is already popular and Tere Sang Yara sounds beautiful in the movie hall.

For a regular movie goer, Akshay Kumar will be the highlight of this film and it will have to ride on his shoulders alone to work at the box office.

Rustom Review: The Last Word

Rustom is a one-time watch. For those who just want to catch a flick without its relation to Nanavati case, it makes up for a decent watch. I plead guilty that I suggest this film! A 3/5 for Rustom.

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Posted: 8 years ago
#55
http://m.rediff.com/movies/report/review-rustom-is-an-accidental-parody-of-itself/20160812.htm

Review: Rustom is an accidental parody of itself
August 12, 2016



'The uniform might be the most accurate thing about this film, however, a painfully tacky production where all the sets look like over-saturated cardboard,' says Raja Sen.

Akshay Kumar in Rustom

IMAGE: 'Despite a shapeshifting moustache that, from scene to scene, oscillates between that of Errol Flynn, Raaj Kumar and a felt-pen attempt to draw a clotheshanger in silhouette, Rustom nevertheless makes sure his white Navy uniform is spotless.'
The first time we meet Esha Gupta in Rustom -- a film set in Bombay 60 years ago -- she'S spending her afternoon in a satin-covered bedroom bathed in golden light, wearing a white corset-like garment while smoking a cigarette using an exaggeratedly long holder.

The second time we see Gupta, she's lounging by the side of a swimming pool wearing a candy-striped swimsuit and an XL-version of Lolita's sunglasses.

It may confound you that I'm starting off a review mentioning a cartoonish vamp who is a secondary character -- Gupta, after all, does not play cuckolded husband, cheating wife or dead playboy -- but I felt it important to be honest and start this review off with utter absurdity instead of bringing up the mythologised Nanavati Murder Case this film is somewhat based on.

You see, no possible fiction-based-on-fact disclaimer could have prepared me for the fact that Rustom is a parody.

That, I believe, can be the only explanation for this daft film. Akshay Kumar -- who we meet on a ship where officers march down corridors even when nobody is watching -- is Naval Commander Rustom Pavri, a decorated officer who has brought his ship home early.

Despite a shapeshifting moustache that, from scene to scene, oscillates between that of Errol Flynn, Raaj Kumar and a felt-pen attempt to draw a clothes hanger in silhouette, Rustom nevertheless makes sure his white Navy uniform is spotless.

Even when he's locked up in prison, where he plays chess and reads Sun Tzu, keeping his expression stoic enough to perhaps ensure a state of zen that brings about creaselessness.

Do officers get locked up in full dress uniform? This one does, possibly because the producer -- also Mr Kumar -- likes the way he looks in those superb, stiffly-starched whites.

The uniform might be the most accurate thing about this film, however, a painfully tacky production where all the sets look like over-saturated cardboard and all the taxicabs are gleaming.

The colour-correction is atrocious, inconsistent even between the faces of two people speaking across a table, and, at one point, an injured wife staggers into a room with her head stained red, looking for all the world as if she'd collided with a plate of gulaal.

This wife, played by Ileana D'Cruz, is the reason Rustom is in prison. She's been cheating on him with Vikram Makhija, an insouciant playboy with an alarmingly technicolor wardrobe -- even his bathrobe looks like it belongs to Bam Bam Bigelow.

D'Cruz, who flits between a pair of awful accents, is vacuous throughout this film, but never more so than in the unending courtroom sections, where she looks as blank as if she were being grilled about why Barfi was made up of stolen scenes. Which is to say she doesn't have a clue.


Neither, it must be said, does the director. Tinu Suresh Desai, who made the gormless 1920 London earlier this year, tries far too hard to make a thrilling true-life case into a thrilling film.

Playing it straight would have sufficed, but Desai resorts to odd dialogue, a bewildering climactic twist, and immensely ill-conceived attempts at comedy.

Armed with a cinematographer who loves abrupt and misleading pan shots, Desai stitches them digitally together to impress us, going from scene to scene, character to character in a single swivel.

Alas, his idea of a policeman interrogating suspects in revolving-door fashion loses all potency when we see that after all these conversations, he's only scribbled three words -- words like 'dost' -- on his notepad.

The film starts off relatively cleanly -- save for the art-direction -- but then Esha Gupta, in a parade of cleavagey dresses, comes along and reminds us that we're watching trash.

Akshay Kumar and Illena D'Cruz in Rustom

IMAGE: Akshay Kumar and Ileana D'Cruz in Rustom.
This is basically a Bhatt film + Akshay Kumar. Kumar is calm and stiff even as the film gets increasingly atrocious, with decent actors like Pawan Malhotra, Kumud Mishra and Sachin Khedekar wasted. Khedekar is particularly slaughtered here as a hammy prosecution lawyer. 'Objection, m'lord, the loudly-gasping lawyer is overacting and misleading the audience.'

The Nanavati Murder Case -- one where public opinion lionised the naval officer to such a degree that its Not Guilty verdict marked the end of the jury system in India -- was a landmark.

It was a case where the tabloid Blitz successfully manipulated an eager, righteous audience, and a case where enterprising street-side peddlers sold toy guns by calling them Nanavati Revolvers.

It is a case, in short, that deserves good cinema. Cinema that, like any intelligent murderer, understands that it is indeed all in the details.

For half a minute, a highly distinguished Parsi gent shows up and immediately classes up this film, but that's about all. Despite Kumar's valiant (albeit overdressed) attempt at calm and gravitas, this film is bilge, unintentionally hilarious and eventually tedious.

The only way to salvage it would be to add a too-loud laugh track, give Gupta a trampoline, and call it Carry On Rustom.
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Posted: 8 years ago
#56
Sumit kadel @Sumitrajkadel

#Rustom morning shows- 25-30 % occupancy across india. #MohenjoDaro -15-20 %.

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Posted: 8 years ago
#57
Box Office Capsule @BOCapsule

#BOCapsule EXCLUSIVE Movie Review #RUSTOM Is Entertaining Crime Drama 4/5* @akshaykumar http://ow.ly/Hh0X303af0K

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Posted: 8 years ago
#58
Rishi Kapoor @chintskap

Wishing the sincerest "Bestest" to both the film's at the Box Office. YO!.

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Posted: 8 years ago
#59
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Posted: 8 years ago
#60
In the hall, damn excited.
They started with trailer of XXX-3

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