Close X
Sunday, December 22, 2024
ADVT 
Movie Reviews

'Race 3' Is A Glamorous Disgrace

Subhash K Jha IANS, 15 Jun, 2018 01:24 PM
  • 'Race 3' Is A Glamorous Disgrace
Starring Salman Khan, Anil Kapoor, Bobby Deol, Jacqueline Fernandez, Saqib Saleem, Daisy Shah
 
 
Director: Remo D'Souza
 
 
Rating: * * 
 
 
By the time, Salman Khan ripped off his short and Bobby Deol followed suit, I was ready to rip off my hair in exasperation. This maddening mishmash of hot babes and cool guys (including Anil Kapoor who lets his beard grow grey and his accent falter from Angrezi to Bhojpuri, all for a cause) is a roaring grunting mess of a movie.
 
 
Trashy beyond endurance, loud beyond the threshold of tolerance and outrageous beyond all definitions of lowbrow entertainment, "Race 3" gives a bad name to the Salman Khan brand. 
 
 
Just when we though he was trying to build a more durable variety of mass entertainment by reinventing himself in "Bajrangi Bhaijan", "Sultan" and the unfortunate "Tubelight", "Race 3" comes along to remind us with infuriating aggressiveness, that when it comes to Salman, there is a very thin line between rationale and absurdity.
 
 
 
 
He skips, jumps and crosses over into the kingdom of crassness with such daring impunity that you wonder what lies ahead in store for this hero of the masses who it seems, has decided to abandon all efforts to give a performance. Here in "Race 3", Salman is so indifferent and openly bored by the bustling balderdash, he makes no effort to make sense of the tangled mess of a plot.
 
 
Sensible decision. I tried to understand what was going on, and failed. The migraine-inducing plot begins with Anil Kapoor striding insouciantly across the screen in a panther-line pantomime of machismo. 
 
 
This, I soon realized, is the brief given to all the actors by director Remo d'Souza. Everyone is required to stride purposefully across the wide-screen, pretending to look like they are on to something that could change the way we look at cinema.
 
 
Anil Kapoor plays an arms dealer. We are supposed to applaud his enterprising spirit. Everybody is doing hugely illegal stuff throughout the length and breadth of the perversely panoramic plot which wastefully traverses several countries including China and Cambodia (why Cambodia, if not to create touristic awareness among the Salmaniacs?).
 
 
 
There are 'heroes' blackmailing politicians in a sex scandal, heroines running away with millions of dollars that don't belong to them, that is, when they are not fighting each other on what looks like the dance floor.
 
 
While every character is a bit of joke dressed up in self-important colours that fool nobody except the team behind this dim-witted atrocity, Anil Kapoor's twin children Sanjana and Suraj, played by Daisy Shah and Saqib Saleem, take the cake. They call each other 'Bro' and spend most of the time partying and smirking about their Sikandar Bhaiyya who is such a do-gooder, he could kill us with his kindness if only he knew how to.
 
 
Salman's Sikandar act is a feat of supreme somnambulism. He has plenty of action to perform. In fact his introduction shows him jumping off a steep skyscraper - blessedly with a parachute for company - and dropping straight into a villain's den where the aforementioned Sanjana-Suraj siblings are shooting blanks with a harvest expressions that try to compensate for the blankness of the bullets.
 
 
Everyone hams, except Salman. He is too bored to ham.
 
 
 
 
Throughout the film, the characters keep changing sides from good to bad, as if the scriptwriters had decided to free the characters from all responsibilities of self-discipline. Yup, it's a free for all in "Race 3".
 
 
A very costly and disturbing anarchy rules the plot of this jejune actioner. Why are producers with the power to pump up puerility, being allowed to spend so much money on a film that makes no sense, even on a trashy level?
 
 
Expensive cars are blown up, lavish parties are thrown, adversaries are snuffed, and the characters behave as if blackmailing politicians for their sexual indiscretion is somehow right when it comes to Salman Khan. Morality is not the only casualty in this head-banger of a movie where every character suffers from a flamboyant fatigue.
 
 
This would have been a hugely entertaining film if it were a comedy. Alas, these people are serious about their commitment to ersatz mayhem.
 
 
 
Heavens help the cult of Salman worshippers. "Race 3" is a heretical anomaly.

MORE Movie Reviews ARTICLES

Crude, Crass, Unimpressive 'Mastizaade' Is A Blow To Your Sensibilities

Crude, Crass, Unimpressive 'Mastizaade' Is A Blow To Your Sensibilities
A sex comedy, high on testosterone and low on IQ, "Mastizaade" is a blow to your sensibilities. It even slips notches below "Kyaa Kool Hain Hum 3".

Crude, Crass, Unimpressive 'Mastizaade' Is A Blow To Your Sensibilities

'Saala Khadoos': Clearly A Champ

'Saala Khadoos': Clearly A Champ
"Saala Khadoos" is an inspirational sports drama, based on some true incidents. The film revolves around the theme of exalting women to join and shine as sports stars.

'Saala Khadoos': Clearly A Champ

'Airlift': A Salute To An Unsung Hero

'Airlift': A Salute To An Unsung Hero
With minor flaws that can be overlooked, "Airlift" is a well made film that would definitely appeal to patriotic Indians.

'Airlift': A Salute To An Unsung Hero

'Wazir': Intelligently Crafted Emotional Thriller

'Wazir': Intelligently Crafted Emotional Thriller
"Wazir" from Vidhu Vinod Chopra's stable and directed by Bejoy Nambiar is a dramatic thriller that is artistically crafted with a gripping screenplay and brilliant performances by its ace star cast.

'Wazir': Intelligently Crafted Emotional Thriller

'Bajirao Mastani' - A Visually Captivating Masterpiece

'Bajirao Mastani' - A Visually Captivating Masterpiece
Overall, "Bajirao Mastani" is a spectacular masterpiece which will stay with you much after you leave the cinema hall.

'Bajirao Mastani' - A Visually Captivating Masterpiece

'Tamasha' - Visually Bright, But Low On Entertainment

'Tamasha' - Visually Bright, But Low On Entertainment
 The film entertains you in parts. If you have patience for Imtiaz Ali's serious existential philosophy, then you might like the film

'Tamasha' - Visually Bright, But Low On Entertainment