Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Movie Reviews

'Shivaay': Defies Gravity And Conviction

Troy Ribeiro IANS, 28 Oct, 2016 12:18 PM
    Director: Ajay Devgn
     
    Cast: Ajay Devgn, Erica Kaar, Sayesha Saigal, Abigail Eames, Vir Das, Girish Karnad, Saurabh Shukla
     
    Rating: * * 1/2
     
    Ajay Devgn's Diwali bonanza for his fans, "Shivaay", touted to be a thriller, in reality, is an action-packed drama that begins and remains on a languid note for much too long, making the film a slog.
     
    It is a simple, straight-forward tale of a competent, "extra-ordinary" mountaineer, Shivaay, who is bogged down by "extraordinary circumstances". He is a lonely soul, who is glorified as a superhero and compared with the likes of Superman, Batman and Spider-Man, when he battles the thugs and the police upon his daughter Gaura getting kidnapped. At the core, Shivaay is a father-daughter bonding film.
     
    While this could have been a gripping tale, "Shivaay" has all the traits of an amateurishly written script, which include; poor characterisation, "tell and show" scenes and poorly penned dialogues that become unintentionally humourous.
     
    Case in point is; in a defying moment, when the wheelchair bound, Girish Karnad, says, "Kissi ko to khadaa rehna hoga", which literally means somebody has to stand up, which he does, and instantly plops! This unwarranted action, plied with the dialogue, makes the scene seem silly.
     
     
    Also, when the Indian Consulate in Bulgaria, asks his employee Anu as to why she is keen to help Shivaay, the tone in which she answers, "Comics ki duniya ke bahar bahut kam superheroes milte hain", which means, outside the comic universe you hardly see any superheroes. You chuckle when she says this because, though cliched, this is probably the only finest spoken sentence, in an otherwise mediocre set of lines.
     
    With a tattooed torso and his naturally gifted intense looks, Ajay Devgn as the gravity defying Shivaay, offers nothing that we have not seen earlier. His charm and appeal has shades of characters he has exhibited earlier. His onscreen chemistry with Erica Kaar, the free-spirited Olga seems forced and that with Sayesha Saigal who essays Anu, is non-existent.
     
    Erica and Sayesha are natural and convincing with their histrionics. But it is Abigail Eames as Shivaay's daughter Gaura, who is charming. She impresses you when she emotes with her speech disability.
     
     
    Girish Karnad as Anu's father and Saurabh Shukla, in miniscule roles have nothing much to offer.
     
    The antagonists, with their quirky traits are fairly interesting, but they are lost in the maze.
     
    On the directorial front, Ajay Devgn, has concentrated more on the technical brilliance than the emotional quotient. His screenplay is packed with artistically composed frames, brilliantly layered CGIs and visual effects. The film is dazzling to view, but, with snappy edits and tight close-ups, his action sequences with jaw-dropping set pieces, seem more manufactured than real. The impact of his story telling is lost. Also, the trekking scene is very amateurishly canned.
     
    Mithoon's music seamlessly integrates into the narrative. The songs are used to propel the story forward and the shlokas to lord Shiva are effectively used as the background score.
     
     
    With a runtime of two hours and fifty three minutes, don't be surprised to be hear yawns, from the audience, at regular intervals.
     
    Overall, the title, which resonates with magnetic appeal lacks conviction.

    MORE Movie Reviews ARTICLES

    Chilling, Nerve Wracking, NH10 Re-Defines The Thriller-Horror Genre

    Chilling, Nerve Wracking, NH10 Re-Defines The Thriller-Horror Genre
    NH10 is a relentlessly thoughtful, constantly edgy and dramatic telling of an urban fable, so real and yet so cinematic that you feast on the ferocious twists and turns wondering how Meera will ever wriggle out of her night-long nightmare. 

    Chilling, Nerve Wracking, NH10 Re-Defines The Thriller-Horror Genre

    'Dum Laga Ke Haisha': So real and heart-warming, it smells like life

    'Dum Laga Ke Haisha': So real and heart-warming, it smells like life
    Film: "Dum Laga Ke Haisha"; Cast: Ayushmann Khurrana, Bhumi Pedneker; Written and Directed by Sharat Katariya; Rating: ****(4 stars)

    'Dum Laga Ke Haisha': So real and heart-warming, it smells like life

    Badlapur Is An Exceptionally Engaging Drama

    Badlapur Is An Exceptionally Engaging Drama
    "Badlapur" takes the cinema of eye for an eye to a new high. The feral ferocious face-offs between Varun and Nawazuddin captured in the colour of wrath and doom by cinematographer Anil Mehta, confer a vital visceral velocity to the virile vendetta saga.

    Badlapur Is An Exceptionally Engaging Drama

    Irrfan Khan's 'Qissa' Is A Mystifying And Satisfying Masterpiece

    Irrfan Khan's 'Qissa' Is A Mystifying And Satisfying Masterpiece
    Like the ghost that follows the film's gender-challenged protagonist "Qissa" will haunt you forever. It takes the patriarchal obsession with the male heir to a level of lucid expression where geopolitical dislocation and gender ambivalence are locked in a visceral embrace.

    Irrfan Khan's 'Qissa' Is A Mystifying And Satisfying Masterpiece

    MSG - The Messenger: A Massive Crash-Course In Self-promotion

    MSG - The Messenger: A Massive Crash-Course In Self-promotion
    There's a lot to be said about a spiritual leader who takes to filmy "hero-giri" with such sincere gusto. Even Rajinikanth can't equal this Guruji's reformist fervour. He acts, directs, composes the songs, writes the lyrics and, of course, performs the miracles.

    MSG - The Messenger: A Massive Crash-Course In Self-promotion

    Roy Is An Intriguing Journey That Leads Nowhere

    Roy Is An Intriguing Journey That Leads Nowhere
    Perhaps the first-time director should have attempted the complexities of this film after making five other films. But the fact that he did attempt this film as his directorial debut is admirable.

    Roy Is An Intriguing Journey That Leads Nowhere