Simmba Review thread - Page 36

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Posted: 6 years ago

Originally posted by: JungFrau

These days people are relying more on user ratings than critics reviews. Audience WOM can make or break a movie. So far it seems like an entertaining masala film like dabangg.




Yes! I have been waiting for WOM only from start of this thread. Not going to bother about paid reviews
zara321 thumbnail
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Posted: 6 years ago
looks like that film companion reviewer doesn't like masala films

but he did praise ranveer and said he is the perfect rohit shetty hero
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Posted: 6 years ago

Simmba' movie review: Crash and Burn

Ranveer Singh's shtick keeps Simmba' afloat before it takes on a subject it shouldn't have
Last Published: Fri, Dec 28 2018. 10 14 AM IST
Uday Bhatia
A still from Simmba', starring Ranveer Singh and Sara Ali Khan and directed by Rohit Shetty.

The year ends as it began, with an unhinged Ranveer Singh performance in a film that really needs it. While Padmaavat' (review) was built around his character's reputation for corrupting virtue, Simmba' turns on his being moved to defend it. Spare a thought for the women in these films, whose excellent options are: burn yourself alive to preserve your honour from the marauding Alauddin Khilji, or be raped and brutalised so that Sangram Bhalerao might realise his true calling.

Before Simmba' turned, I found myself dangerously close to enjoying an entire half of a Rohit Shetty film. This isn't a position I'm accustomed to finding myself in, and I blame it on Singh. We first see "Simmba Bhalerao in Shivgadh, chasing a couple of goons through a dhobi ghat. Even with the usual spot-start Shetty action, it's a lovely sequence, brightly coloured clothes flapping and water splashing in slow motion as Simmba doles out beatings and wisecracks. Afterwards, the young cop cheerfully accepts bribes from the thieves and from the trader whose jewellery he's recovered. It's a part of the Singham universe, but the tiresome moral clouds of the Rohit Shetty-Ajay Devgn films are already receding.

Simmba is transferred to Miramar, Goa, a lucrative posting for a crooked officer. His first move is to seek out the local don, Durva (Sonu Sood), and promise not to interfere in his business. For a while, everything goes swimmingly, Simmba helping Durva bully people out of their property while turning a blind eye to his drug-running. He also finds time to fall for Shagun (Sara Ali Khan), a caf owner who supplies lunch to the police station, and become de facto elder brother to Aakruti (Vaidehi Parshurami), a medical student who teaches underprivileged children in her free time.

If you've seen the film's trailer, you know something horrible will eventually happen to Aakruti. Part of the perverseness of Simmba is how much silly fun it is before this incident. Singh preens and pouts, mixes Hindi and Marathi and broken English. He has the ability to play a broad-chested hero and still seem like he's in on the joke. When he shouts "Uff, taana at a disapproving cop or performs a jealous pantomime when Shagun appears interested in another man, the playacting is a level removed from the outright spoofery of Quick Gun Murugan. Like all Shetty characters, Simmba is a cardboard creation, but in Singh's playing, his macho bluster has an underlying sweetness that renders it more winsome than the humourless masculinity of Devgn's Singham.

The film quickly comes apart when a couple of Aakruti's students go missing. Her search leads her to Durva's drug-packing den, where she's discovered by Durva's brothers. They first try and take her phone; when she fights back, they assault and rape her. When Simmba visits her in hospital the next day, she's barely alive. He vows revenge on Durva, changes his corrupt ways, and that's the rest of the film.

Even for Hindi cinema, where rape-revenge is a thriving subgenre (there were four films on the subject last year), this is pretty dire. Sexual assault is not just a plot device here, it's the catalyst for Simmba to go from bad to good. Put more plainly, a minor female character has to suffer so that the male lead may evolve. For all its outrage over the safety of women, the film can't help but reveal its obsession with male pride and how this is linked with the honour' of women they protect. Durva's brothers are goaded in jail, called napunsak(impotent) and namard (unmanly), incapable of rape. There's a lot of talk of desh ki betiyaandaughters of the nation. Time and again, male characters are asked, how would you feel if this happened to your sister, your mother? One has to wonder whether Simmba would be this affected if the victim had been someone he didn't know and not the girl he considered his sister.

The ridiculousness piles up as Shetty and writer Farhad Samji barrel headlong into the issue they have no deep thoughts on. A courtroom scene has Simmba asking the judge, a woman, if one desh ki beti' can help out another. Later, a friend of Aakruti asks, "Desh ki betiyaan padh toh rahi hain par desh ki betiyon ko in haivaano se bachaega kaun (daughters of the nation are studying, but who will save them from these savages)?a twisting of the government's "beti bachao, beti padhao slogan, but to what end? The film's idea of including women in the conversation about safety is, I guess, when Simmba asks a group which includes Aakruti's mother and Shagun what they think should happen to rapists. Each responds with some variation on "they deserve to die. At least Shetty's consistent: both Singham' (review) and Singham Returns' (review) ended with vigilante killings by the police.

Shagun is largely absent after the intermission; she's extra baggage in a film that has more use for women as sisters and mothers than as lovers. Her best momentand a rare instance of female agencyis when she tells Simmba that she likes him and demands to know whether he has feelings for her (that the cocky Simmba turns out to be a shy wooer is a nice character beat). But she's clearly an afterthoughta few hastily written lines and a backstory about a dead cop father that goes nowhere.

Singham turns up, which should surprise no one. To hear Devgn grunt his lines is to become grateful all over again for Singh's fleet presence, even if it's weighed down by the cartoon violence and endless posturing that make Shetty such a popular, if critically reviled, director. As a late scene makes clear, the Shettyverse isn't done growing. But more than expanded universes, what commercial Hindi cinema needs right now is broadened world views.

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Posted: 6 years ago
Raja Sen appreciating Veer n Rohit movie??? Am I dreaming?? 😲 A 3 from him for this genre is huge 😆
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Posted: 6 years ago
Raja sen gave 3 😲 Honestly I am shocked .
I want this movie to be a blockbuster . Ranveer deserved it .
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Posted: 6 years ago
Anupama isn't reviewing
Anupama ChopraVerified account @anupamachopra
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I and @Su4ita are traveling but you can read @ReelReptile's review of #Simmba here:

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Posted: 6 years ago
In 15 mins into 2nd half ...epic shit guysss...damn👏
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Posted: 6 years ago
Lol. What must Rohit shetty be thinking with all these positive reviews. He is so accustomed to bad reviews😆
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Posted: 6 years ago
i am so proud of Ranveer, he has worked so hard, filming continuously every day for 4-5 months and not taking a break, he filmed all the way upto his wedding and then even filmed after his wedding for simmba, he hasn't even had his honeymoon coz he has been promoting simmba non stop, and to see him getting such wonderful praise, even some saying he made the movie enjoyable and entertaining, it makes me so happy for him ❤️

he is gonna take break for news years and deepika's bday but then he will start prep for 83 in January and then start promoting gullyboy, he truly is one of the most hard working actors in the industry, and he does it all with a smile on his face
Edited by zara321 - 6 years ago
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Posted: 6 years ago
filmibeat review 3.5/5

Simmba Movie Review: Ranveer Singh | Sara Ali Khan | Rohit Shetty | Karan Johar | FilmiBeat


'Yeh kalyug hai kalyug, yahan log sirf ek hi matlab ke liye jeete hain...apne matlab ke liye!', reasons out Sangram Bhalerao aka 'Simmba' (Ranveer Singh) as an unscrupulous cop on-screen and the cinema hall immediately bursts into cheers and whistles. It's solid dialoguebaazi like these by Ranveer which make Simmba a massy, entertaining ride.


To begin with, the film starts with an introduction to Simmba as an orphan in Shivgad. Soon, a chain of events follows and a man predicts, "He's a little cracker who'll spark a big explosion one day." The little one grows up to become a cop who believes in doing 'beimaani with full imaandaari'.

When Simmba gets transfered to Miramar Police Station, he comes across Shagun (Sara Ali Khan) and instantly falls in love with her. As expected, cupid's arrow strikes Shagun as well and the two oscillate between 'Aankh Maare' and some Swiss romance.

On the work front, Simmba finds a perfect foil in Ashutosh Rana who disagrees with his principles and corrupt practices. Until one 'unfortunate' day, tragedy strikes closer home and leaves him with a guilty conscience. Determined to serve justice to the wronged, Simmba embarks on a life-changing journey that's replete with 'kicks' and 'punches'.

It's out there- clear and in bold! Nobody understands the pulse of masses as better as Rohit Shetty. It's evident that the filmmaker is highly inspired by Manmohan Desai whose crowd-pleasing films in 70s and 80s shattered box office records.

With Simmba, Rohit Shetty makes the tried-and-tested formula more appealing with the right amount of masala, 'kadak' dialogues and a charismatic Ranveer Singh in a larger-than-life cinema.

On the flip side, the film dips a little post the interval and few sequences look dragging. But Rohit saves the best for the last by bringing in his other favourite- Ajay Devgn as Singham and slipping in the announcement of his next big project with a superstar.

Speaking about the performances, it's Ranveer Singh whose roar is the loudest. After unleashing madness and terror on celluloid as Alauddin Khilji in the January release 'Padmaavat', the actor ends the year with a bang with his whistleworthy performance as he effectively slips into the khaki for Simmba.

Right from his myriad expressions, moustache-twirling, impeccable comic timing, 'dishoom-dishoom' skills to burning the dance floor, the actor is a 'total dhamaka' who sparkles and how! Proof? Check out the scene where he dances unabashedly before busting a rave party.

His leading lady Sara Ali Khan looks charming but a little more depth to her character would have added more to the fun. Nevertheless, she's a delight to watch.

Sonu Sood's Durva Ranade brought me back fond memories of Dabangg's Cheedi Singh. As the main anatgonist in the film, the actor pulled off a commendable act.

Ashutosh Rana puts up a good show and his camaraderie with Ranveer Singh is affable. My favourite scene featuring the two is the one where a drunk Simmba sings, 'Mohile, Mohile...tere bina main kaise piyu.' Siddharth Jadhav too lends an effective support.

Rohit Shetty's world of cinema is always bright and full of colors and Simmba is no exception; courtesy Jomon.T. John's lens. The film could have been snipped shorter by few minutes to make it more crispier.

Coming to the music, Aankh Maare leaves your feet tapping with some nostalgia bytes with Arshad Warsi's appearance in the song. Tere Bin gives you plenty of romantic feels. Each time you hear, 'Aala re aala Simmba aala' playing, your heart thumps in excitement with Ranveer's dashing gait.

It wouldn't be wrong to say that he is the coolest addition to Rohit Shetty's cinematic universe of men in khaki. In Simmba's words, 'mind izz blowing'! I am going with 3.5 stars.

Read more at: https://www.filmibeat.com/bollywood/reviews/2018/simmba-movie-review-and-rating-ranveer-singh-sara-ali-khan-280915.html


Edited by zara321 - 6 years ago

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