Disclaimer- I admit to
being inspired by the ‘Time Out List Of 100 Best Action Movies’ which was all
about the cream of crop of action films from
Hollywood as well as the Japanese and Hong Kong film worlds. I have
taken inspiration in terms of the format but everything else- the words and the
opinion- are completely mine.
20- Tashan (2008)
Director- Vijay
Krishna Acharya
The plot- Lots Of
The Pharmoola, Served In The Ishtyle
Dishum-dishum
moment- Akshay Kumar’s macho-cool yet meltingly warm Bachchan
Pandey, transforming from Neo of ‘The Matrix’ to a raging chimp with machine
guns in each hand, inside the battlements of an old Rajasthani fort.
It got virulent hatred at the time of its release- from both
critics and the audiences- but somehow, all these years, this showy debut
vehicle for Vijay Krishna Acharya, who had previously written the formula-happy
‘Dhoom’ movies, has enjoyed a sort of exclusive cult status among the
moviegoers. The reason is pretty simple enough- despite its obvious flaws- the
meandering storyline, the self-conscious seriousness and the self-indulgence-
there is quite nothing like it when it comes to mainstream entertainment.
The
threadbare plot- of a femme fatale (Kareena Kapoor in sizzling, sensuous form)
flying the coop with wads of cash and egging colorful and linguistically
challenged gangster Bhaiyyaji (Anil Kapoor, part fun part frustratingly
incoherent) to hire two unlikely bounty hunters (Akshay Kumar and Saif Ali
Khan) on her trail- has all the profundity of a Robert Rodriguez formula film
but Acharya also seems to have the same’s visual chutzpah and the result is an
evocatively shot, if eccentrically written and enacted, yarn that spans across
immersive landscapes, blends 90’s style Bollywood hokum and Tarantino-style cheek
with obvious relish and the quirky, silly yet always enjoyably comic book-like
action delights in its own deliciously trashy way. The end result is not
exactly the cream of crop of entertainment- parts stretch too much, especially
a sentimentalized latter hour- and the jokes take a time to tickle but Akshay
has never been better and there is plenty of whimsical eye-candy in offer in
terms of action- from a cycle rickshaw chase in Varanasi’s streets set to an
infectious qawwali to a car crashing over the cliff due to a tiff over the
right music to play right down to a blowout finale where Acharya and
action-director Peter Hein make Subhash-Ghai cheesiness and Rodriguez’s
Western-genre parody look like kitschy art.
19- Agent Vinod (2012)
Director- Sriram Raghavan
The plot- Saif Ali
Khan as a slick Indian 007 trotting the world’s hotspots, in hunt for, as a
character from the film puts it, ‘both Ruby and Rubaiyat’
Dishum-dishum
moment- The RAW Agent With No Name suddenly recognizes a former
Lankan militant amidst a grand auction and fists of fury, in both present and
flashbacks, ensue, set to the killer-tune of a Tamil dance number.
Yet another misunderstood action classic. Sriram Raghavan is
clearly a master of firecracker caper action punctuated by references to his
favorite movies and a killer background score as well and all of them come
together in delicious servings in this breezy, brilliantly paced spy outing
that never ever feels the need to be serious. The plot- of our own Indian James
Bond, here as a cool-as-ice Saif Ali Khan, trying to find a nuclear bomb
trigger hidden in a poetry book (yikes!) (and finding enough time to look into
fellow-spook Ruby’s (Kareena Kapoor) troubled, exquisite eyes)- has all the
logic and rationale of that of an early Bond film- think ‘Diamonds Are Forever’
or ‘You Only Live Twice’ and thankfully, Raghavan makes the entire thing
equally tongue-in-cheek, sexy, smart and self-assured never to digress into
weightier complexities, as well as crammed with deliciously nasty baddies
(Aadil Hussain, Prem Chopra and Ram Kapoor make a mark).
Nearly every setpiece
in every single location is awesome- a drop-dead gorgeous prelude in
Afghanistan, a botched assassination in Tangiers, a furious car-chase in Riga
and a beautifully scored single-take shootout inside a hotel. Curiously, it is
only when the film returns to the subcontinent- an underfleshed escape in
Karachi and an underwhelming climax in Delhi- that it falls a bit flat. But
till then, turn off your mind and enjoy.
18- Shootout At Lokhandwala (2007)
Director- Apoorva
Lakhia
Plot- The name
says it all- a little-known piece of historical cops and criminals standoff
recast as a typical Bollywood saga
Dishum-dishum
moment- The grand climactic eponymous confrontation- an action sequence
so gloriously, unashamedly unhinged that it is like an adolescent’s
blood-splattered wet dream come true.
Yes, it is full of flaws- the style overtakes any complexity
or substance, the actors are all well-chosen but often stuffed with
one-dimensional characters, the historical detail is dodgy and often fudged,
which is a shame, in face of such meticulous, factual realism in another movie the
same year (check my number 4) and the clichés and stereotypes begin to crowd
the frames, diminishing the film’s honest attempts at grittiness.
But this is
all the scene until the grilled finale- when the cops come home with an arsenal
of guns and the more brazen of them (essayed here by the action heroes of the
nineties themselves- Suniel Shetty, Arbaaz Khan and Sanjay Dutt) enter the
eponymous building to take on a really wild bunch of ruffians and all hell
breaks loose. Recreating the little-publicized shootout between gangster Maya
Dolas (played here with chilling supremacy by a never-better Viveik Oberoi) and
clean-cut, though controversial, cop Aftab Khan (Dutt’s aging, crusty yet
shifty inspector) in the early 90s Bombay, Lakhia’s usually ham-handed style
pays off in spades when it comes to the frenetic bursts of action along with
the slick, sepia-tinted cinematography. The street chases and the gory gangster
brutality are compelling, as much as they are unsubtle, but it is the finale,
erupting into flames and fists of fury that lends the flawed film its emotional
weight. Plus, there is an inanely catchy song about someone named ‘Ganpat’ as
well. Call it the ‘Braveheart’ of the Bombay gangster genre.
17- Ghulam (1998)
Director- Vikram
Bhatt
Plot- ‘On The
Waterfront’……recut as a saga of boxing, Bombay mafia and teary-eyed bimbettes.
Dishum-dishum
moment- Aamir Khan runs in the face of a Bombay fast local train
and then, a splitsecond before collision, leaps away- a stunt that will shame
the likes of Ajay Devgn and Akshay Kumar
Looking back at it now, Vikram Bhatt’s only good outing, a
compellingly gritty remake of Elia Kazan’s stately ‘On The Waterfront’, has a
lot more to it than just Aamir Khan’s lurid choice of jeans and his first-ever
playback song in which he asks a girl if she will accompany him to, of all
places, Khandala. The Bombay flavor is also captured pretty authentically in a
mainstream film like this (which has Khan and Rani Mukerji getting hot and
bothered in a muscular bike)- with the action relocated from the waterfront to
the grimy ghettoes, while the boxing scenes and the brother-as-manager angle
are transplanted rather slickly into the screen. Also, the casting is pretty
solid and strategic- Sharat Saxena might not be the most effective actor around
but he is a riot as the beefed-up and nasty Ronnie Singh, running a vicious
racket of match-fixing and hammering the people around him, armed with a
devilish smile.
Most of all, the film is incredibly memorable for Khan himself-
in a fiercely passionate performance, after the scene-stealing turn in RGV’s
‘Rangeela’. As the plucky and furious Siddhu, who bludgeons his way through the
law as well as the domineering force of Ronnie, Khan’s free-wheeling drifter is
a mix of Nicholson-style edginess with the masculine charm that Brando brought
in the original and his fury in the frenetic ‘local train scene’ as well as the
final bloody fistfight indicated that this actor was now game for bigger things
in future.
16- Mission Kashmir (2000)
Director- Vidhu
Vinod Chopra
Plot- The
penultimate story of good versus evil- symbolized here by a young wannabe
terrorist and the idealistic cop who once raised him- against the backdrop of
Paradise on Earth.
Dishum-dishum
moment- The dashing entry of Altaf (Hrithik Roshan) landing like a
wild angel through the roof- the official arrival of hi-tech action
choreography in Bollywood
It is actually a pity how little do we see of Vidhu Vinod
Chopra, the angry young director of the 80s in today’s times. His directorial
outings are too distanced from each other; his latest- a rerun of a past
masterpiece (see number 3)- was a Hollywood project that bombed and his last
Hindi outing- the elaborate but emotionally unengaging ‘Eklavya’ boasted only
technical prowess (and even almost made the list). But this 2000 slick
Bollywood drama sits somewhere between the greatness of the heyday and the
slackness of the present.
It is unashamedly mainstream and unsubtle in its
values- it often nails its head villain (played by Jackie Shroff with typical
ham-handed recklessness) and his cronies as stereotypes, Roshan’s torn rookie
terrorist Altaf merely screams when asked to essay pain and agony and the
elaborately-staged song and melodrama scenes often undermine the pace. But
‘Mission Kashmir’ also does what it has to do- absolutely rock as an action
film, clear and simple. It is superbly shot (by Chopra regular Binod Pradhan),
makes the spectacular explosions and gun-fights of the hell-fire climax look
particularly sobering and thrilling and it also brought the whole art of
slow-motion takes, thundering background score and expertly executed
wire-stunts into Bollywood, which would then be abused a lot.
15- Nayak- The Real Hero (2001)
Director- Shankar
The plot- A simple,
honest and lovelorn (!) reporter becomes the CM of Maharashtra for one day and
all hell breaks loose- for good.
Dishum-dishum
moment- The normally meek Anil Kapoor jumps into a pool of muck and
transforms, within moments, into an avenging creature of the night.
Granted, there is much to bash about in Shankar’s Hindi
version of his Tamil hit ‘Gentleman’. The entire premise- of dedicated reporter
Shivaji (Kapoor, self-assured and subtle) challenged by the alleged corrupt
Chief Minister of Maharashtra (a devilish Amrish Puri in top, campy villain
form) to wear his sandals and homespun for 24 hours, who goes on changing the
status quo by a shockingly simple solution (‘Sabko suspend karne ke liye!’)- is
one that is ripe for political satire and not full-blown Bollywood masala but
the film starts taking itself too seriously- further stretching the gag into a
total plot- and suddenly, all pretensions of satire are chucked out.
But, hey,
this was one of those gloriously silly and inexhaustibly entertaining films- a
celebration of daftness of the highest order and there is no better evidence of
it than in its super-charged and overblown action scenes- including the
above-mentioned knockout scene with a pair of chains and derelict cars- and the
fact that it all looks and sounds (firecracker dialogue by Anurag Kashyap, no
less) too tongue-in-cheek to resist. AIB even made a spoof of Arvind Kejriwal,
using this film as the source for its barbed mockery.
14- Ghajini (2008)
Director- A R
Murugadoss
Plot-
Christopher Nolan’s ‘Memento’….recycled into a typical Bollywood action film.
Dishum-dishum
moment- Aamir Khan’s perennially angry avenging lover stabs a goon
with….a bathroom tap….and forgets everything about it….
Suppose that Christopher Nolan had made ‘Memento’ not as a
spare and spine-chilling psycho-thriller but as a hardcore action film like his
work on the ‘Batman’ series. Suppose Leonard Shelby was not Guy Pierce playing
a lean, shifty and enigmatic man but rather Arnold Schwarzenegger’s beefcake
given an insane bald haircut (that became so popular!) as well as a pair of
excited, flappy and distinct ears. And suppose that the film proceeded on the
straightforward track instead of going back and fro as it originally did. You
might still not be able to get right the amount of Bollywood schmaltz that
Murugadoss packed in his Bollywood remake of his Tamil remake of Nolan’s
greatest film. Also thrown in are Asin’s screechy and self-sympathetic heroine,
a bunch of great but misplaced songs by the great A.R Rahman and an overlong
running time (cue needless supporting characters and overlong, nonsensical
flashbacks).
But despite it all, there is no denying the film’s thrust of
action- furious, a tad gritty, a touch of emotionally wrenching and delivered
with panache. For once more, action director Peter Hein orchestrates incredible
fists of fury soaked in both adrenalin and blood-thirsty anger while Resul
Pookutty’s edgy sound and Ravi K Chandran’s visuals lend both immediacy and
emotional wallop. And Aamir Khan, lending both demented brawn and a delicious
subtlety to his character, proved that here was a mainstream action hero with
brains as well.
13- Mr. India (1987)
Director- Shekhar
Kapur
Plot- ‘The
Invisible Man’ versus the supervillain who always needs to be ‘satisfied’. End
of story.
Dishum-dishum
moment- The final standoff between Mr. India and Mogambo- a
pulse-pounding climax bathed in red light, lots of smoke and missiles poised to
destroy dear India. Whoa!
There are some cast-iron reasons as to why Amrish Puri was so,
so terrific when given both black and grey shades to sport. To begin with,
those famous devilish eyes with their majestically curled brows and that
booming voice was enough to send shivers down the spine, even when he was not
completely evil. And more crucially, he always embodied a sort of twisted
father figure to the very heroes he fought and to someone or the other in the
film. So, from the maniacal Mola Ram in Spielberg’s ‘Indiana Jones and The
Temple Of Doom’ to the warm yet strict patriarch in the classic ‘Dilwale Dulhania
Le Jaayenge’ , his presence was always overwhelmingly large and awesome- it was
never just villainy- it also elicited awe and respect. And he never really
killed it better than as Mogambo- the gold-wig sporting, Sgt. Peppers jacket
clad kingpin whose ethnic origins could either be British or Nordic Aryan (his
henchmen even salute him by raising their right hands) and who should always be
made ‘happy’.
Pitted against him is the very definition of an everyguy in the
movies- Anil Kapoor’s effortlessly charming Arun, who is given both a clutch of
cute orphans and a wonderful armband to handle and it is the latter that turns
him visible and a sort of vigilante against Mogambo’s minions who do all sorts
of rough stuff. It’s classic hero vs villain stuff, a touch unspectacular by
today’s standards but its grand finale- of the two men confronting each other,
of the everyguy standing up to his father-like nemesis who demands total
obeisance- was best summed up by Salman Rushdie in his compelling ‘The Moor’s
Last Sigh’ as the ‘life-and-death oppositions of many movie fathers and sons’.
Kapur nailed the scene with suitably grand fireworks and imaginative effects
that would still shame the likes of Rakesh Roshan.
12- Aks (2001)
Director- Rakeysh
Omprakash Mehra
Plot- Cop kills
terrorist….the latter’s spirit enters the former and the stage is set for a
maniacal Amitabh Bachchan enjoying the spoils.
Dishum-dishum
moment- The explosive jungle fever chase ending with a perfectly
executed waterfall jump
If one was to point the most obvious weakness in Rakeysh
Omprakash Mehra’s directorial style, it would be the obvious way in which he
resorts to facile metaphors and personifications to make his arguments- it is
all strewn over his disastrous ‘Delhi 6’- a film which soaks its political and
social commentary in all sorts of illogical and far-fetched metaphors-
including, of all things, a fabled black monkey and even a pigeon (!) and it is
also present a bit in his superior urban patriot yarn ‘Rang De Basanti’-
notably in the scene where a flaming Raavan effigy falls over a team of English
cops rounding on Aamir Khan’s Chandrashekhar Azad. But it is only in his
little-seen yet highly effective and well-crafted debut that the metaphors
actually add the zing- with Manoj Bajpai’s slithery, psychotic terrorist
quoting a line from the Bhagwad Gita as he commits a spree of spine-chilling
murders- imagine ‘The Joker’ quoting The Holy Bible.
The metaphor part aside- ‘Aks’
is nevertheless a great example of Bollywood formula given a very
unconventional touch. It is also the finest example of psycho-thriller action
in Bollywood and its thundering, bizarre set-pieces do pack a punch- the
frenetic chase in the jungle ending with a stunner of a free-fall in a
waterfall gushing from a cave as well as the gripping interlude in Budapest
deliver both thrills and spills. And yes, Bajpai’s wavy locks and Bachchan’s
furious French-beard still look slick today.
11- Ab Tak Chappan (2004)
Director- Shimit
Amin
Plot- A
world-weary encounter specialist has to figure out who is hell-bent on bumping
him off.
Dishum-dishum
moment- Nana Patekar’s worn-out yet combustible Sadhu Agashe hides
a shard of broken glass up his sleeve and uses it to get his revenge.
It is rather incredible how, like Michael Mann, Shimit Amin
can squeeze crackling, sudorific tension out of the most unlikely situations.
So, be it a finale in which everything rests completely on how quick your
reflexes are in defending a hockey goal (‘Chak De! India’) or in a particularly
uncomfortable moment when you stand up to the boss who always thought you to be
a loser (‘Rocket Singh- Salesman Of The Year), the mood for Amin will always be
terse, brisk and it is only when it ends that you actually feel the relief of
release. This kind of taut style fits a textbook cop and criminal thriller like
‘Ab Tak Chappan’ by default but there is also something emotionally sobering
about how the film handles its cold, clinical brutality.
As Agashe (a fiery and
charismatic Patekar in top form) and his crack-team of fellow encounter killers
take down targets in the gullies and chawls of a messy, blood-splattered Bombay
in the first half, the mood never lets up but it is in the second half- with a
grittily executed surprise cold-blooded murder and the subsequent dark-edged
blood-spurts- where the film finds its true sober rhythm and strikes darkly at
the vein. It is in every sense a compelling action thriller- the kind of gritty
potboiler that would later, possibly, inspire the likes of Anurag Kashyap and
Rajkumar Gupta.
10- Mughal-E-Azam (1960- Original and 2004- Colored
re-release)
Director- K. Asif
Dishum-dishum
moment- The just emperor yet autocratic father faces his belligerent
son in the midst of the raging battlefield.
You can name almost any amount of reasons as to why
Bollywood’s only perfect effort at the historical epic genre is considered so
much in high praise even as it might look dated to some. To begin with, like
some of the films to pop up in the list ahead, it influenced a whole culture of
moviegoers and it would be forever that rivalry of father and son would be
identified as the clash between Salim and Akbar and forbidden love would always
be fondly, candidly described as one involving an ‘Anarkali’ who would be inevitably
chained behind a layer of masonry.
Regardless of the gimmickry (even today
entire dialogues are lampooned), Asif’s (and arguably Bollywood’s)only magnum
opus has plenty of narrative weight (by blending mythical romance with a cast
of real-life characters from textbooks), towering acting (Dilip Kumar as a
self-assured, determined Salim and Prithiviraj Kapoor as the mercurial yet
surprisingly affectionate Akbar are historical portrayals that still need to be
bettered), truly monumental sequences (love set to the tune of Tansen’s
insistent melodies, the court sculptor cheering Salim’s courage moments before
the latter’s execution, the final coup de grace and the still-stunning ‘Pyaar
Kiya To Darna Kya’ ballad set inside an eye-scorching palace made of mirrors)
and truly impressive battle sequences with sand and dust literally flung at the viewers. With its
Technicolor glory rightfully restored in its colored re-release in 2004, this
will always be the epic to beat (take that, Ashutosh Gowariker)
9- Aamir (2008)
Director- Rajkumar
Gupta
Plot- A man
lands at an airport, is handed a phone and told to do terrible things, lest his
family faces the same fate.
Dishum-dishum
moment- A cop looks suspiciously at Aamir (Rajeev Khandelwal) after
the latter finishes a not-too-innocent call and a chase of nerve-racking
paranoia follows through the gullies of a hot and hostile Dongri.
After the initial fanfare for this low-budget and supremely
effective debut outing from Gupta, some viewers and critics pointed out how the
film, beneath all its authentically gritty street flavor, is little else than a
vigilante formula given a typically slick presentation. And then, there were
the similarities with the Filipino thriller ‘Cavite’.
But on its own, ‘Aamir’
is pretty solid as a thriller- its thrillingly-captured Muslim ghettoes of
Maximum City serve as a stirring, spectacular backdrop to a simple plot that
deals with a fine day gone wrong and then tackles themes of communalism in the
simplest way possible. Aamir, an otherwise cultivated doctor, is robbed of his
luggage and handed a phone and called up periodically by a menacing operator,
seen only in shadows, and told to shuttle from here and there and carry a red
bag to a destination. In the way, the city’s traffic is a hindrance and pretty
much everyone is spying on the unlikely puppet trying to figure out the
strings. Even as it turns obvious by the end, you will be more than hooked by
the frenetic street chases and unrelenting paranoia (shot terrifically by
Alfonse Roy and set to Amit Trivedi’s breakout score) and Khandelwal’s
searingly honest debut.
8- Deewar (1975)
Director- Yash
Chopra
Plot- Do you
really need to know about it? Of course, you are not confusing it with a film
of the same name starring the same famous man.
Dishum-dishum
moment- The ‘Daddy-Long-Legs’ of an action hero gives a nasty
little surprise to the goons who are looking out exclusively for him inside a
grimy warehouse.
Can there be a more genre-defining film like
‘Deewar’(excepting the top three of the list, that is)? Even today, we find
faint echoes of Chopra’s well-entrenched soap-operatic tropes and the blazing
quotability and power of Salim-Javed’s writing in every single attempt at the
retro-masala potboiler. And can there be a more efficient and overwhelmingly
heroic action hero than Amitabh Bachchan himself? The answer to the question
will always remain a firm and resolute ‘No’.
Like ‘Shree 420’, the lovers of
‘Deewar’ would go beyond the formula on the top and perceive it as a prophetic
picture of capitalism in India’s sole big-minded metropolis but that is in many
ways detracting from the basic pleasures of the film- this is Chopra at his
sensational- crafting entire sequences of raw emotional power and melodrama
without a hiccup, letting the famous one-liners explode between the warring
brothers- the determined and ruthless yet torn Vijay (Bachchan) and the
righteous cop Ravi (Shashi Kapoor) who may not have anything but has a mother
in the suitably teary-eyed Nirupa Roy and letting up a storm of truly iconic
action scenes- including of course the scene in the warehouse and a bloody
climax at the temple. To quote Vijay, ‘Khush toh bahut hoge tum’ after watching
it all over again.
7- Johnny Gaddar (2007)
Director- Sriram
Raghavan
Plot- A rookie
member of a crooked gang decides to fly the coop with some cash and earns a
nickname inspired by a famous Bollywood caper.
Dishum-dishum
moment- A near-botched murder attempt on a train in the night- with
a napkin of chloroform and lust for money.
It is pleasantly surprising that a caper that boldly and
cockily doffs its hat to almost every classic caper in the past should emerge
itself as such a rollicking ride, driven as a sleek vehicle geared up by a
cool, cool retro soundtrack (Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy having a blast) and sly
performances and saucy murders to match the overall seventies feel to a modern
story.
Once the film gets rolling and wheeling, with five crooks (played by the
likes of veteran action hero Dharmendra and character actors Vinay Pathak and Zakir
Hussain) deciding to raise some illegal cash to buy some contraband, the film
turns into a crackling whodunit- even as the traitor, an effete Vikram (Neil
Nitin Mukesh), is revealed pretty early on. As he goes around, pocketing the
cash in a split-second, stealthy standoff in the train and then bumping
everyone else who does not even suspect him, the film emerges as a deliciously
morbid picture of part-funny, part-mercurial men driven not by loyalty but by
self-centered interest. It is Raghavan’s deliberate streak of pitch-black
comedy and frequent Bollywood and James Hadley Chase referencing that makes the
sudden, shocking and suspenseful scenes of murder and treachery so much
terrific fun.
6- Sarfarosh (1999)
Director- John Matthew
Matthan
Plot- Bollywood’s first decent attempt at a serious spy
thriller- about cross-border gun smuggling, pulpy patriotism and a cop who can
even quote poetry and fall in love.
Dishum-dishum
moment- A slow-burn stakeout at a roadside dhaba in the middle of
the night and a white-knuckle foot-chase in crowded Colaba.
The likes of ‘Baazi’, ‘Rangeela’ and ‘Ghulaam’ might have
rescued Aamir Khan from the ridiculous roles handed out to a talent like him
(though there was still the occasional disaster- ‘Mann’ and ‘Mela’). But it is
mainly Matthan’s slick and fast entertainer that really put him up in the crew
of great actors who would then go on to chew up the frames with every subsequent
outing.
Our big-eared chocolate boy hero plays Ajay, a hot-shot cop who landed
the job thanks to a bunch of over-sympathetic superiors who felt bad for little
sonny when his righteous dad (Akash Khurana) is left paralyzed by a nasty gang
of terrorists. Somewhere between commanding a crack team of diligent enforcers
and leading them to a gun-smuggling racket spanning India and Pakistan, he also
finds time to think of waterfall kisses with a simpering Sonali Bendre and
vociferously laud the poetry of the mysterious yet charming Gulfam (Naseeruddin
Shah, in top form).
The obvious mainstream clichés not withstanding, this is a
little triumph of entertainment- devoting arduous plot time to the clean-cut
thrust of Ajay and his men investigating clues, nabbing suspects in a series of
deftly executed combat scenes and it all culminates edgily inside an embattled
stronghold with terrific panache. It is then a pity how little we saw of
Matthan in the subsequent times- don’t even ask about his 2005 dampener
‘Shikhar’- which was ‘Wall Street’ given a formulaic treatment.
5- Kaminey (2009)
Director- Vishal
Bhardwaj
Plot- Two
twins- one lisps, the other slips-totally crazy goons, a guitar with powder and
a conch with diamonds and literal chaos.
Dishum-dishum
moment- The messy, dirty mayhem of the climax with guns raging in
the ghettoes and the blood diamonds earning their name well.
Composer-cum-filmmaker-extraordinaire Vishal Bhardwaj has
always lifted mere violence to new levels of sophisticated artistry- be it
Langda Tyagi’s rusty carabine or the Kalashnikov-toting grave diggers taking
down an army in a snow-buried cemetery. But with his 2009 blistering Bollywood
drama fitted like a ‘City Of God’-meets-‘Pulp Fiction’ gangster thriller, he
got a full-fledged chance to experiment with the very pulpy ingredient of
action and the results are nothing less of breathtakingly breakneck and
dazzlingly bold. Armed with Tassaduq Hussain (the man who shot ‘Omkara’), the
wily director decided to leave the leisurely, Sergio-Leone-style idyll behind
and went all fast and furious for the film’s visual canvas- the end result is a
rain-soaked, bloody, muddy and grimy backdrop against which the fast and
relentless violence is played out ruthlessly and expertly.
So, when the
determined ruffian Charlie (Shahid Kapoor in one of his twin turbulent
performances) chases a traitor down the slippery and glistening nooks and
crannies of Bombay’s Cotton Green station or when a simple drug-deal turns from
funnily bloody to frenetic within moments inside a hotel and all the while the
background score races along with the staccato images, you can’t help but feel
that you are riding a fast Bombay local without brakes and headed for obvious
collision. The terrifically twisted storyline- uniting enstranged twins Charlie
and Guddu against a seemingly whole army of delicious baddies (Amole Gupte as
the cocky nativist politician Bhope Bhau steals the show as does Chandan Roy
Sanyal as the demented Mikhail)- the totally unpredictable verbal fireworks and
the emotional undertow and graphic deaths add to the menace. Now that is what
one would call darn dangerous. And a hell of a time, too. ‘Dhan Te Nan’!
4- Black Friday (2007)
Director- Anurag
Kashyap
Plot- The true
story of the Bombay 1993 bomb blasts and a lot, lot more than just that….
Dishum-dishum
moment- A sweaty, exhausting, exhilarating foot chase down the
filthy alleys of Bombay’s sordid slums, with the somber background music giving
way to a classic Bollywood one-liner from the yesteryears.
Most of Bollywood’s attempts to shine a light into the dark
crevices of recent history are fraught with faked names, changed identities,
glorified parts and a timid sort of hesitation to make a scandalous statement.
None of that is the case with Kashyap’s loaded bomb of a film- an early triumph
that made viewers and critics sit up and take view of the man who would then
release a whole assortment of incendiary devices, all lit to go boom. Not only
does ‘Black Friday’ stick admirably well to its equally provocative source- S.
Hussain Zaidi’s page-turning, compelling non-fiction book- by depicting, in
stark honesty, first the senseless destruction by the blasts and then the
shocking inquest and the political and criminal background to the tumultuous
events.
It also goes a stretch further, amping up the horror of the blasts, the
grim brutality of the arrests and the tortures, the sweaty dread of the
interrogations and the ultimate gut-wrenching impact of the distorted,
sprawling truth that is eventually wriggled out. Armed with cinematographer N.
Natraja Subramanium’s gritty, neon, blood and mud soaked visuals of a Bombay
reeling under a maelstrom of communal riots, devastating terrorism and police
brutality, this is nothing less than a conspiracy thriller of the highest order-
as Kashyap beautifully and brashly mixes sound and image to stun, to shock, to
force into submission and mostly to show the messy, bloody truth at the heart
of it all.
The acting, too, is fantastic- Kay Kay Menon as an upright yet tough
Rakesh Maria is matched and surpassed only by Pavan Malhotra as the vicious
Tiger Memon and the clean-cut, urgent and crackling action- the afore-mentioned
street-chase which would beat even the opening pursuit of ‘Slumdog Millionaire’
for sheer, blistering energy and the truly horrific and tense blast scenes
themselves- tug you into the heart of the chaos but it is when Kashyap
navigates the intimately personal strands in the expertly paced latter half
that the film achieves utmost perfection.
3- Parinda (1989)
Director- Vidhu
Vinod Chopra
Plot- To avenge
the loss of innocence, Anil Kapoor’s Karan joins his brother’s gang to take
them down all.
Dishum-dishum
moment- A peaceful, friendly rendezvous near Gateway of India
turns, gruesomely, into a spurt of blood and a furious flight of pigeons,
setting the unforgettably brutal tenor of the film to follow.
In many cases in this list (‘Ghulam’, ‘Ghajini’, ‘Mission
Kashmir’, ‘Sarfarosh’), the brutal thrust of action has been seriously, and
distractingly, undermined by the more formulaic proceedings in the plots. This
is clearly not the case with Chopra’s greatest, grittiest film- ‘Parinda’ is
that rare example of a grown-up, intelligent and well-crafted Bollywood drama
in which the mainstream elements- the lovely, lovely ‘Tumse Milke Aisa Laga’
ballad or the oh-so-sweet bromance in the beginning- come as the perfect foil
to the blistering darkness elsewhere in the film. Storywise, this is too
Bollywood revenge- pure and simple- as Karan (Anil Kapoor) decides to avenge
the cold-blooded (and undoubtedly iconic) murder of cop-friend Prakash (Anupam
Kher) by joining alongside his henchman brother Kishen (Jackie Shroff) in the
gang of the seemingly invincible kingpin Anna ( a stunning Nana Patekar) and them bumping
everyone off.
But Chopra also proved that smaller and more minute detailing
mattered as much as the dramatic thrust of the main storyline- so this is also
about Anna’s secret, hideous fear- of fire- which erupts at the most unexpected
places in the film and lends the already growingly dark film its spine-chilling
aspect. Let’s not forget of course the stellar supporting cast- Suresh Oberoi’s
flute-playing suavely dressed killer Abdul, screenwriter Shiv Subramanium as
the oily and sinister Francis and some other great turns- and the continuous
streak of vengeful anger and brutality that marks every single stunning frame
shot by Binod Pradhan and edited by Renu Saluja with razor-sharp precision.
But
the ultimate hero of it all is Chopra- crafting a Bombay gangster drama like a
livewire Hitchcock thriller- blending menacing visuals with an assortment of
thumping sounds and effects to create an atmosphere of unrelenting dread. Like
all great films, the smaller stunning bits- the aforementioned shootout in
broad daylight, a dinner rendezvous turning unbearably tense and then bloody
(in a nice twist on the scene from ‘The Godfather’) and more- are all used
along with the remarkable tension for the film’s final upsurge of violence and
insanity- an epilogue that needs to be seen to be believed.
2- Sholay (1975)
Director- Ramesh
Sippy
Plot- ‘The
Magnificent Seven’ meets ‘Once Upon A Time In The West’ meets Salim-Javed and
instant history is created.
Dishum-dishum
moment- Many iconic moments to choose from, but the opening howler
of a setpiece- with a coal train and horsemen on the horizon- beats nearly
everything that Bollywood has manufactured in full-blown action.
Its 40 years since it first wowed the audiences and
accordingly set a whole new fervor among the cinegoers and went on to be an
indispensable part of Hindi movie culture but Ramesh Sippy’s sole, rugged
magnum opus (and not surprisingly India’s only true Western yarn) is still the
action-packed blockbuster that it was back in the seventies. In many ways, it
is representative of the ubiquitous clash between the growing arthouse scene of
Gulzar, Benegal and Sathyu and the mainstream masala of Chopra, Sippy and
Prakash Mehra.
But ‘Sholay’ is more than just Bollywood masala superbly
executed- it is more than just a retread of ‘The Magnificent Seven’ in its
story of bandits raiding a village and defeated by mercenary heroes, it also
borrows a crucial massacre scene from ‘Once Upon A Time In The West’ and rips
pretty much the entire style of the Western genre. In its own way, it is still
a film of towering, fiery achievement- delivering solidly on unforgettable
characterizations- a winning combination of heroic (Amitabh Bachchan and
Dharmendra striking up a fine rapport), dramatic (Sanjeev Kumar’s amputated
cop-turned-vengeful Thakur may be gimmicky but also raw and powerful),
hilarious (Asrani doing a fabulous charade on Charlie Chaplin in ‘The Great
Dictator’ as jailer from British times) and most memorably villainous (do we
even need to talk of the most famous dacoit in Bollywood history?).
It also talks
quite a bit about the plight of the forlorn villagers, it gave us a whole horde
of narrative treasure which could be both quoted verbatim and even joked about
and it also gave us a series of finest action scenes ever filmed- those
gun-shots, explosions and marvelous rugged images (by Dwarka Diwecha) still
pack a punch.
1
1
1 1- Gangs Of Wasseypur- Parts 1 and 2 (2012)
Director- Anurag Kashyap
Plot- Revenge begets revenge begets revenge, all served with
style, substance and (tortured) soul in a hinterland that would become the coolest
destination in rural India.
Dishum-dishum moment- A stealthy, slinky stabbing in the gullies and a
fiery, guns blazing raid on a citadel-like house.
So, finally, we arrive at Numero
Uno- the finest action film that Bollywood has produced- the film that really
made bloodshed, bullets, brawn and brains a form of art and carried with it to
new levels of sophistication. But then Anurag Kashyap’s double-bill film did
not have any high-stakes stunts, fancy locations, or even brawny heroes. Nor
does it have bimbettes and nor does it have gadgets or vehicles or even luxury.
It doesn’t matter. For Kashyap’s
film- wrap the two together and you get a solid chunk of cinema- did not just
pack in guns, gore and glory but it also rooted it wonderfully into its dirty,
filthy, coarse, profane yet vivid world- so much that the punches are
authentically primitive and crude and cruel, the punchlines cruder, crueler and
even more deadly than them are the thuggish men who wield them.
Also, this is a cinematic triumph
that embraced action and violence in all its different forms, as captured so
effectively by Bollywood and Hollywood alike- it could be grotesque and
gruesome (people are chopped up, diced, sliced, beheaded, stabbed, exploded and
blood splashes across the frames like it is an element of this world itself,
along with dusty earth and muddy water), it could also be lethally,
infectiously hilarious (both daring gunslingers and cocky wannabes could find
themselves in a soup with misfiring guns and petty squabbles), emotionally
draining (a mother collapses at the sight of her son’s decapitated head, while
an angry man, soiled with coal and clay, stones a fellow mine worker to death
as to exact revenge ), supremely epic (improvised bombs rained during the
chaotic and bloody Moharram rites and a blood-spurting finale that matches
Brian De Palma’s shootout in his ‘Scarface’) and much, much more.
Kashyap seems to be born to make a
film like this. It reflects so much of his taste in movies- it is relentlessly
nihilistic like Peckinpah, unashamedly indulgent like Prakash Mehra, it borrows
a gruesome murder from ‘The Godfather’ and gives its own snazzy twist and like
Scorsese, it makes violence and violent people stylish and glorifies them
without a shred of guilt. And there is also his voice- strident, ambitious and
aggressive, yet mesmeric, elegiac and yet never dull- blending both reference
and his own cocky, fast and frenetic and visually spectacular and spicy
directorial style into full-flow, while not compromising admirably on emotion
and substance. And even the actors pack their parts with the right amount of
dynamite- Manoj Bajpai, Nawazzudin Siddiqui, Huma Qureshi, Tigmanshu Dhulia
and, most importantly, the brilliant, brilliant Richa Chadha as the biggest
bomb in the crew. It is done then- this is the action movie and even the
Bollywood movie to beat. ‘Bata dijiyega sab ko’.
3 comments:
GoW gets the top spot! Thumbs up!
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