Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Movie Reviews

Parmanu Good Intentions Gone To Waste

Subhash K Jha IANS, 25 May, 2018 01:26 PM
    Starring: John Abraham, Boman Irani, Anuja Sathe, Diana Penty
     
    Directed by Abhishek Sharma
     
    Rating: * *
     
     
    If good intentions made good cinema then every propaganda film by films division would be a classic. In the absence of a hefty grip and a budget to rev up the key sequences pertaining to the historical nucleur explosions "Parmanu: The Story Of Pokhran" ends up more as a fable of one man's heroism than the saga of a nation that woke up to a nuclear dawn.
     
     
    The facts are twisted into commercial shapes including a flash point button-on-the-fingertip climax where the film's editor runs with breathless bravado from pillar to post trying to keep the audiences' interest alive.
     
     
    But all in vainm, Parmanu is like a promised havoc that never goes beyond a wound-up whimper, the film's opening shows the bureaucrat-hero Ashwat Rana (John Abraham, starchy and imperturbable) grappling with a roomful of bored colleagues who are more interested in the samosas than Ashwat's plans to nucleurize Apna Bharat Mahaan.
     
     
    It's an opening paying a direct homage to Shimit Amin's "Chak De".
     
     
    Throughout John Abraham remains in character, implacably committed to the mission even if it means pissing off his wife (played by Anuja Sathe who was excellent just recently in Blackmail, what happened here???) and even if America gets on the wrong side.
     
     
    "America" is imagined with outrageous tackiness, a bunch of Caucasians (probably tourists picked from Gateway Of India) sitting in front obsolete computers monitoring India's nuclear movements, that's Uncle Sam watching.
     
     
     
     
    The computers and one antiquated celphone are just about the sum-total of period references that work in the film. The film gets its Mahabharat sinfully wrong, firstly, the serial by B. R. Chopra shown being aired in 1998 when the serial was on Doordarshan until 1990, names of the five Pandavas are used as code names for John and his four colleagues thrown at the vortex of the Pokhran deserts even if it means pissing off the entire government machinery.
     
     
    With one man (Boman Irani) from the PM's office supporting Ashwat Rana's mission India's nuclear prospects have nothing to fear.
     
     
    With John Abraham playing the rebellious anti-establishment hero helbent on doing right no matter what the cost, the film reads more like a Hollywood cops thriller than a faithful chronicle of India's nuclear makeover in the deserts of Pokhran. 
     
     
    While sections of the film get unbearably jingoistic, towards midpoint the plot gets absurdly ‘espionaged'. 
     
     
    An immoral spy (who is the film's most interesting character) from Pakistan named Sajjan snoops into our hero's hotel room in Pokhran, plants an eavesdropping device and gets Ashwat's wife to suspect him of infidelity.
     
     
    It all seems highly improbable and manipulated, by all means, honour the country with flag-waving films, but at least make sure that the film does not prove unworthy of its nationalistic aspirations.

    MORE Movie Reviews ARTICLES

    Heropanti is a one-time watch

    Heropanti is a one-time watch
    "Heropanti" is a full-on 'paisa vasool' Sajid Nadiadwala entertainer. It doesn't quite measure up to the requirements of the theme of honour killing that it so valiantly puts forward. But as a masala entertainer, that has more to say than one would expect from a film of this nature, "Heropanti" gets its fundas right.

    Heropanti is a one-time watch

    Kochadaiiyaan Needed to be full-fledged live action film

    Kochadaiiyaan Needed to be full-fledged live action film
    "Kochadaiiyaan" as a Rajinikanth film has all the elements to satisfy his fans but as an animated feature, which is used making motion capture technology, fails to live up to the expectations of all those who watch a Rajinikanth film just for the sake of entertainment

    Kochadaiiyaan Needed to be full-fledged live action film

    Godzilla's Technical Brilliance Overshadows Monster

    Godzilla's Technical Brilliance Overshadows Monster
    Giftwrapped in an emotional father-son and family bonding story that hooks you on the sensitivity graph, "Godzilla" doesn't give anybody time to be endearing or sarcastic or human in any way. It is a conundrum of a techno-thriller and a fabled nightmare put together.

    Godzilla's Technical Brilliance Overshadows Monster

    Children Of War is masterpiece on ravages of war

    Children Of War is masterpiece on ravages of war
    In one of the many mind-numbing images in this exceptionally vivid work on the ravages of war, the back of a truck is jolted open and out tumble a bunch of women one on top of another at a Pakistani prison camp for Bangladeshi women run by a despicable tyrant, who could be the Nazi mass murderer Ralph Fiennes in Steven Spielberg's "Schindler's List".

    Children Of War is masterpiece on ravages of war

    The Xpose - At last, an intelligent Bollywood whodunit

    The Xpose - At last, an intelligent Bollywood whodunit
     Yup, there is no business like show business. This whodunit means business. The suspense drama is bright, bouncy,believable and entertaining.

    The Xpose - At last, an intelligent Bollywood whodunit

    'Hawaa Hawaai' inspiring window into a child's dreams

    'Hawaa Hawaai' inspiring window into a child's dreams
    "Hawaa Hawaai" is an extraordinary saga of ordinary lives, the kind we often pass by at traffic signals. Gupte penetrates the heart mind soul and dreams of those unsung lives. This is the most moving film on street kids since Mira Nair's "Salaam Bombay".

    'Hawaa Hawaai' inspiring window into a child's dreams