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Starring:
Amitabh Bachchan, Hrithik Roshan,
Preity Zinta, Sushant Singh, Sharad Kapoor
and Om Puri
Story,Screenplay,Dialogues: Javed
Akhtar
Director of Photography: Christopher Popp
Sound Designer: Nakul Kamte
Costumes: Arjun Bhasin
Choreography: Prabhu Deva, Vaibhavi, Bosco
Ceaser
Lyrics: Javed Akhtar
Music composed by: Shankar, Ehsaan &
Loy
Executive Producer: Zoya Akhtar
Produced by: Ritesh Sidhwani
Directed by: Farhan Akhtar
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War
films in India off-late have been, frankly speaking,
quite nonsensical. Starting with Border
and all the way to LOC, these pop-patriotic
efforts have been anything but cinematically
satisfactory. Farhan Akhtar changes all that
with his film by making Lakshya an intimate
film in an expansive setting where war is incidental
and emotions aren't evoked from mindless Paki
butt-kicking.
What
Lakhsya lacks is originality. The freshness
(comparisons may be odious but necessary) of
Dil Chahta Hai (DCH) is missing. Akhtar
is bogged down by a need for a thematically
different film and is heavily inspired by Hollywood.
And while one can accept a certain level of
imitation, there isn't really any need to 'play
it safe.' One can plainly see shades of The
Longest Day, Saving Private Ryan,
An Officer and a Gentleman, The Guns
of Navarone and even unexpected, unrelated
films like The Beach. Lakshya
is in many ways, a more generic film, catering
to a wider audience (fair enough, considering
the 30 cr budget.)
The
heart and soul of Lakshya is Hrithik
Roshan's performance as Karan Shergill. He is
extremely convincing as the wayward boy, the
weak-willed individual and the focused Lieutenant.
Good directorial choices and ably supported
performances make a clique of moments work wonders
for the film. The transitions of his persona
are short yet extremely well scripted. It must've
been difficult for the Akhtars, but they've
pulled it off marvelously. Between quitting
the IMA to going back to it, there are only
two brief scenes which completes the transition,
yet they are impactful and highly believable
which is reinforced with a fantastic song during
the training sequence that follows immediately.
The
other performances are rock solid and very good.
Amitabh Bachchan,
Om Puri, Sushant Singh and Boman Irani, despite
their limited screen time have enough high-quality
dialogue that helps develop their characters
and screen presence. Akhtar has made a bold
move to cast huge names for might be called
'bit' roles. And while the industry seems aghast
at this, we didn't see much of a problem with
it: to a certain extent it ruptures the aura
of the stars and the film remains above them
all. Make no mistake, Preity Zinta is very much
part of this too. Her role is limited and she
plays what is yet another cog in Karan Shergill's
life. This is not supposed to be a typical Bollywood
romantic track. In fact, Akhtar might have compromised
the ideal of the script by making her the instrumental
reason in his life to make his life-altering
decisions.
The
IMA graduation scene, the rock climbing sequence
and the locales are impressive (shooting in
Ladakh must've been a mammoth effort). Key scenes
like the telephone conversation between Karan
and his father (Boman Irani) and where Karan
and Romilla Dutta (Preity Zinta) meet briefly
but cannot hug each other are extremely well
scripted and performed. For once in a Bollywood
film, it's the eyes that do the talking.
Technically,
the camerawork is average at most times and
quite disappointing at its worst. The night
war sequences are unevenly grainy and tacky,
almost to the point where you can't see anything
at all. War sequences work with a certain kind
of basic formula when it comes to framing and
lighting but Christopher Popp has surprisingly
stayed away from all that. The background score
is excellent and really, really adds to the
film. The songs are good too, with the army
song and the title track standing out. Art direction
is very believable and so are the special effects.
At the script level, the idea of a faceless
enemy works very well till the last 20 minutes
of film where suddenly you are spending unnecessary
time with 2D Pakistani militants. Also, perhaps
a little more deliberation when Shergill kills
his first enemy. There is a moment, but its
not enough. Overall, the structure of the film
is slightly awkward - if Shergill's college
life is a flashback, its too long. Perhaps the
film should've started from the beginning? Predictability
in the screenplay also takes away from it all.
By
choosing such a broad canvas, Akhtar has missed
out on the little details that the people identify
with. There is enough evidence of the painstaking
research that he has put into it, but that is
lost on the aam janta (quite the converse of
DCH).
Upperstall,
in 2001, rated Dil Chahta Hai even higher
than Lagaan and gave it the film of the
year award. There was good reason for that;
we thought the film to be extremely forward
thinking in its concept and execution and it
didn't make any excuses for what it was. Needless
to say, there was great anticipation for Lakshya,
Farhan Akhtar's next
and though we weren't
disappointed, Lakshya isn't exactly landmark
cinema. Blame it on expectations.
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