Satyameva Jayate - Box Office + Review Thread

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Posted: 6 years ago
#1
First review out:

Satyameva Jayate Quick Movie Review: Over-the-top even by Milap Milan Zaveri's standards

Satyameva Jayate, that features John Abraham, Manoj Bajpayee, Aisha Sharma and Amruta Khanvilkar in the lead roles, will hit the screens on August 15. Check out our quick review of the film.

John Abraham in a still from Satyameva Jayate
John Abraham in a still from Satyameva Jayate
Satyameva Jayate is a vigilante action thriller film that stars John Abraham, Manoj Bajpayee, Aisha Sharma and Amruta Khanvilkar in the lead roles. The film, written and directed by Milap Milan Zaveri, is easily among the most-awaited this year. Speaking of the advance booking trends of Satyameva Jayate, it may become the highest-opening film of John's career. According to film trade analyst Sumit Kadel, the film may earn Rs 10 crore-Rs 12 crore on its Day 1.

Our in-house film critic Amman Khurana is currently catching a special press screening of the film in New Delhi. He is done through the first half. Here's what he feels about it:

"The story is extremely simple so far. John Abraham plays a vigilante battling against corruption. He picks up the most corrupt officers from the Mumbai Police and sets them on fire. Manoj Bajpayee, a police officer himself, plays his arch-rival but he is not your outright villain.

From what I can figure out from the first half, the film is absolutely commercial in nature. From dialogues to fight sequences to the background score, everything is over-the-top.

The first half had its moments but the content is largely stale. The setting, as well as the characters, seem familiar.

Nonetheless, the lowest common denominator of the society won't be disappointed, I feel."

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Posted: 6 years ago
#2
Satyameva Jayate Review
Bollywood Hungama
14 August 2018 10:12 am IST
We all have seen corruption and apathy in the government and police force etc. from close quarters at some point in our lives. Most of the times, we have not protested and merely given up since the thought of taking on the system is just too much. But imagine if you could teach these corrupt officials a lesson. Milap Milan Zaveri's SATYAMEVA JAYATE promises you to get into that space and give you a kick in seeing baddies facing a crushing defeat from an aam aadmi, as evident from the trailers. So does SATYAMEVA JAYATE turn out to be as action-packed, massy and satisfying as expected? Or does it fail? Let's analyse.

Movie Review: Satyameva Jayate
SATYAMEVA JAYATE is the story of a vigilante on a killing spree for a personal reason. Veer (John Abraham) is an acclaimed artist who has taken up a mission to kill corrupt cops. His first target is Sadashiv Patil (Abhishek Khandekar). He sets him on fire alive and then sends his ashes to his police station in Santacruz, Mumbai. In no time, he bumps off Inspector Irrfan Qadri (Shaikh Sami Usman) from Andheri Police Station in the same manner. DCP Shivansh Rathod (Manoj Bajpayee) is given the charge of this case by the Commissioner (Manish Chaudhary). Veer meanwhile meets Shikha (Aisha Sharma) at a beach clean-up drive and both fall for each other. Meanwhile, Veer challenges Shivansh to stop him from killing his next target. Shivansh fails and Veer manages to eliminate Inspector Damle (Ganesh Yadav) of Thane Police Station. Shivansh is shaken by Veer's audacity and his fearlessness and he goes on an overdrive in trying to know who his next target would be. Finally, Shivansh cracks the modus operandi of Veer. Shivansh realizes that Inspector Bhonsle (Rajesh Khera) from Yari Road police station is the next one in line. Shivansh lays a trap and is all set to catch Veer. What happens next forms the rest of the film.

Milap Milan Zaveri's story is simplistic, massy and something that the masses would applaud. Milap Milan Zaveri's screenplay is also on the same lines but it gets repetitive. There's no novelty value left after a point with regards to the killing of the cops. Also it's a bit flawed. For instance, Veer giving all the clues through his painting was a bit too convenient. The climax is a bit confusing especially actions of Shikha. Milap Milan Zaveri's dialogues however are completely paisa vasool and would be greeted with seetis and taalis!

Milap Milan Zaveri's direction reminds one of the 90s action dramas. Although it works in most parts, at some places the film begins to give a dated feel. In the second half, he could have executed the killing sequences differently as that would have enhanced interest. Moreover, the film gets a bit stretched towards the finale and perhaps, he could have avoided this aspect too.

SATYAMEVA JAYATE begins with a dhamaka and the excitement keeps going. The entry of DCP Shivansh in the narrative adds to the fun. Veer's first ever call to Shivansh is quite a dramatic sequence. The manner in which the three cops are eliminated are also quite interesting and viewers would surely root for these sequences. But the best sequence of the first half is the namaaz' sequence. Single screen audiences would go crazy at this point. The intermission point comes as a bolt from the blue. Post-intermission, the hospital sequence stands out. But then the film drops as it becomes too overdramatic and repetitive. Even the finale would be received with mixed reactions.

John Abraham delivers a fabulous, nuanced performance. John is known for his action avatar majorly and his role in SATYAMEVA JAYATE is definitely the best as compared to other such flicks of recent times like FORCE 2, ROCKY HANDSOME and DISHOOM. Watch out for the way he dons a cunning act in the hospital sequence. Manoj Bajpayee provides able support and enhances impact in some scenes. His confrontation with Veer at various points is too good. Aisha Sharma makes a confident debut but sadly doesn't have much to do in the film. Amruta Khanvilkar (Sarita) is completely wasted and that's unfortunate considering that she just gave a memorable performance in RAAZI. Manish Chaudhary is fine but hams a lot in the climax. Rajesh Khera leaves the maximum impact out of the police officers. Ganesh Yadav comes next. Abhishek Khandekar, Shaikh Sami Usman and Ankur Sharma (Inspector Mohan Shrivastav) are okay. Chetan Pandit (Inspector Shiv Rathod) leaves a mark. Archita Agarwal (Muslim girl harassed by cop) has a good screen presence. Nora Fatehi looks and dances like a dream and is quite sizzling.

The songs don't have much purpose in the film. Dilbar' is the best of the lot and this chartbuster is very well picturised. Paniyon Sa' doesn't register an impact while Tajdar-E-Haram' is relegated to the background. Sanjoy Chowdhury's background score is dramatic and exhilarating.

Nigam Bomzan's cinematography is decent while Priya Suhas' production design is a bit poor but works well for this film as it's based in a realistic setting. Amin Khatib and Ravi Verma's action is the highpoint of the film. It's not too gory but at the same time feels quite raw and real. Maahir Zaveri's editing should have been crisper.

On the whole, SATYAMEVA JAYATE is a powerful and gripping drama that leaves an impact as it resonates with the problems of the common man. It is sure to work big time in the single screens where the various scenes are bound to induce claps and whistles. This one is for the masses!
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Posted: 6 years ago
#3
Thank you for the thread!

Looking forward for SMJ tomorrow :D
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Posted: 6 years ago
#4

Satyameva Jayate movie review: The John Abraham starrer revives all the forgotten horrors of 80s B-grade cinema

Satyameva Jayate review: There's so much gore that even hardened viewers may flinch, and there's something entirely gratuitous about characters being made to mouth thunderous lines against people taking the law in their hands, and then showing humans being burnt and beaten.

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Written by Shubhra Gupta | New Delhi | Updated: August 15, 2018 8:58:29 am
satyamev jayate review
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Satyameva Jayate movie review: What possessed the excellent Manoj Bajpayee, who can lift a film just by his presence, to do this film?

Satyameva Jayate movie cast: Manoj Bajpayee, John Abraham, Aisha Sharma, Amruta Khanvilkar
Satyameva Jayate movie director: Milap Milan Zaveri
Satyameva Jayate movie rating: One and a half stars

A hooded vigilante is roaming about in Mumbai, setting fire to corrupt cops, easily evading capture, and notching up the gruesome numbers: you close your eyes, and another one goes up in flames.

The film takes its objective very seriously indeed. We are shown stacks of wood, kerosene cans and matchsticks, and burning human flesh, over and over and over again. And again, just in case we'd forgotten.

There was a time, in the 70s and 80s, when B grade cinema embraced this themeweeding out corruption with extreme violence with enthusiasm. Satyameva Jayate brings it all back, with all its dialogue-baazi, and relentless background music, piling one improbable, clich-ridden sequence upon another.

Backstory of the hunter (Abraham), as the devastated child forced to see his honest policeman father being hounded and humiliated? Check. A Deewar'-like strand, with the good' brother (Bajpayee) on his trail, conflicted, yet true to his oath as an enforcer of the law? Check. A posse of cops milling about uselessly as our man breezes blithely in and out of cops stations and hospitals and other well-guarded locations? It's all there.

An effective vigilante film has its guilty pleasures: who doesn't like a bad guy come to a worse end? But not when the plot offers creaky tropes, and revives all the forgotten horrors of this kind of movie, where you dispense good taste in the pursuit of hoots and whistles. There's so much gore that even hardened viewers may flinch, and there's something entirely gratuitous about characters being made to mouth thunderous lines against people taking the law in their hands, and then showing humans being burnt and beaten.

Some of the lines are in cringingly poor taste. Pata lagao uski koi rakhail hai ki nahin', thunders Bajpayee's character. A toaster is used to make ghastly jokes about a guy who's been burnt to a cinder. Macabre jokes work only when you do them well: here, they don't land, because the whole thing is so inept.

We can get why Abraham is in this film: he's done this kind of movie before, and this looks like an extension, all bulging biceps and flaring nostrils, and using hands and legs against the enemy. He does action well: you believe when a tyre is split by those muscled arms. But what possessed the excellent Bajpayee, who can lift a film just by his presence, to do this?

There's also the small matter of the portrayal of the other', showing Muslim characters in prison, in black burkhas', in bloody Moharram processions, and doing nothing else. There is also a steady barrage of phrases culled from today's India: keeping India swachch', and chests which measure fifty plus inches.

Basically, death by jumlas'.

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Posted: 6 years ago
#5

Satyameva Jayate Movie Review: John Abraham Goes On The Rampage In Nonsensical Film

Satyameva Jayate Movie Review: Manoj Bajpayee, a gifted actor, allows himself to be trapped in a hopelessly disjointed script.

Entertainment | Saibal Chatterjee | Updated: August 15, 2018 11:28 IST
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Satyameva Jayate Movie Review: John Abraham Goes On The Rampage In Nonsensical Film

John Abraham, Manoj Bajpayee, Aisha Sharma in Satyameva Jayate (Image courtesy: smjfilm)

Cast: John Abraham, Manoj Bajpayee, Aisha Sharma

Director: Milap Zaveri

Rating: 1 Star (Out of 5)

In every bit of every frame of Satyameva Jayate, the truth stares us in the face: it is the sort of vigilante action flick that one thought Bollywood had successfully put behind itself long ago. The makers of this violent anti-corruption drama (written and directed by Milap Milan Zaveri) do not seem to have the slightest clue how dangerous its kill-and-burn messaging is in an era in which mobs need little provocation to resort to extra-judicial methods to spread fear.

In the film's opening sequence, a homily-spouting pyromaniac, Veer (John Abraham), in the middle of the night, burns a corrupt cop alive on a funeral pyre to the accompaniment of ear-splitting scriptural incantations. He doesn't stop there. Early next morning, he leaves the victim's ashes outside the police station neatly stuffed into an urn.

A few sequences later, Veer is back in action, viciously pumping gasoline into the mouth of another policeman gone astray and lighting a matchstick to send the man up in flames. "Tu iss aag mein jalega dard agle janam tak chalega (You will burn in this fire, the pain will last until your next birth)," the vigilante thunders, revealing his fascist fangs in all their ugliness.

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John Abraham in Satyameva Jayate (Image courtesy: YouTube)

Before the final strike, he quips to his cornered quarry that the next morning's newspaper headlines will read: "Petrol ke daam aur Damle dono upar gaye (The price of petrol and Damle have both gone up)." The audience is supposed to marvel at this point at the skills of the dialogue writer.

Just a tad earlier, before dispatching another errant cop to a fiery death, Veer had uttered: "Note badle par neeyat nahin, Patil ho ya Qadri sabki ek biraadari (Currency notes have changed but not the intentions, be it Patil or Qadri they are of the same fraternity)." All this might sound defiantly political, but do not be misled by the ballast. One angry man in the street, supporting the cop killings, stands before a TV camera and expresses the hope that similar treatment is meted out to avaricious government officers as well. Not a word on the politicians. In the worldview propounded by Satyameva Jayate, the cops are to blame for all our ills.

The marauder's intention is to instill fear in the hearts of corrupt policemen. He isn't afraid of the law and that is his biggest strength, says the Mumbai police commissioner (Manish Chaudhary), summoning his best officer, deputy commissioner of police Shivansh Rathod (Manoj Bajpayee) from an outing and tasking him with the job of capturing the dangerous vigilante on the loose.

Rathod is out fishing with his daughter when he receives the chief's SOS. He turns to his daughter and says: "Chhoti machli bahut pakad li, ab magarmachh pakadne ka waqt aa gaya hai (I've caught enough small fish, it is time to go for an alligator now)." So, this isn't any old cat-and-mouse game, it is an all-out clash of shrill dialogue-baazi.

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Manoj Bajpayee in Satyameva Jayate (Image courtesy: thejohnabraham)

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Bajpayee is a wonderfully gifted actor who allows himself here to be trapped in a hopelessly wayward, disjointed script. So when in the climax he breaks down and bawls, one can understand exactly what is going on in his mind. Satyameva Jayate, in the form that it is on the screen, surely couldn't be what Bajpayee would have bargained for when he signed up for the project.

But this is John Abraham's comfort zone. Going on the rampage is all in a day's work, be it springing to the aid of a young man wrongly confined in a police station and tortured or a girl assaulted by a policemen. Veer might be a ruthless killer for a cause but he is a good guy with a good enough reason for his marauding ways.

The back story, which pans out in the second half of Satyameva Jayate, is as clichd as they come. It is centred on two sons of a wronged policeman, who is honest to a fault, a gallantry medal defiled and a suicide by fire. Veer decides to defend his dad's honour and, while making a living as a painter, eliminate all those who don't deserve to wear a policeman's khakis. He hollers and hectors - that is Abraham's stock and trade - as he goes about wreaking havoc.

Amid the trail of destruction that he leaves behind, he has the time to romance a pretty veterinary doctor (Aisha Sharma), who, when we first meet her, harangues a politician for flying the national flag upside down. It's no big deal, says the politician. It is, the girl insists, for the soldiers defending our borders and for filmgoers who stand up when the national anthem is played ahead of a movie show - a ridiculous equalization all right, but no worse than all the other putrid ideas that form the crux of the film.

The upright, fearless DCP Shivansh Rathod, on his part, takes upon himself the mission of restoring the rule of law. But the film isn't interested in peaceful means of settling scores: it revels in relentless bloodshed. "Har mujrim apne aap ko masiha samajhta hai (Every criminal considers himself a Messiah)," Shivansh says to Veer. "Har vardiwala apne aap ko khuda manta hai (Every man in uniform regards himself as God," the latter sneers in response.

COMMENT

In the 'morality' tussle between a putative saviour and an unflappable defender of justice, it is cinema that takes a major beating. Satyameva Jayate, truth be told, is a film that has no apparent reason to exist. Not a shred of it is original. At best, it makes a silly spectacle of beating a dead, decomposed horse. At worst, it is a product of a tendentious mind. Satyameva Jayate is nonsensical, with nary a nod to logic.

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Posted: 6 years ago
#6
After so many years FDFS and so many people... It was nice!!!
Full masala movie... Hehe... So. Clichd I really enjoyed! Will write more later.

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