Tag Archives: Jaideep Ahlawat

Film Review: Jaane Jaan (2023)

STORY

In Kalimpong, Maya kills her husband Ajit in self-defense in her apartment. Her next-door neighbor Naru offers help and gets rid of the body. But Karan, the investigative officer, arrives from Mumbai in quest of Ajit because he is also a policeman.


INTRODUCTION

Jaane Jaan is an official adaptation of the Japanese novel “The Devotion of Suspect X” by Keigo Higashino. And with the involvement of Hyunwoo Thomas Kim‘s South Korean film production company “Kross Pictures“, the official remake is more distinctive because the same company also financed a Chinese film based on the same novel.


REVIEW

Jaane Jaan has a compelling tone of frankly addressing the elephant in the room. The film has a quality start and nicely introduces Maya and Naru. The first twenty minutes easily settles the viewers and grows their characters on us. Then the real game begins when Maya’s psycho husband predictably gets dusted. It is Naru whose character gets more interesting and surely we all viewers, at this moment, begin to take more interest.

The whole proceeding of the screenplay is fitting. There is no wastage of silliness as Bollywood does often. The film in its entirety is servant to dedication and novelty. Thanks to the adaptation that gifts us freshness in to the story. And this is why, Bollywood needs to refine their cringe content and prefer making films based on novels.

Yes some scenes looked pretty artificial to realism like Maya hugging Naru, Maya performing after karaoke, Maya changing her shirt (could have made sense if Karan had noticed some serious injury marks on her back), etc. These were avoidable and there were alternatives to proceed ahead.

Although this novel-based so the story cannot be curved but I was thinking, what if there could have been another angle of watching the entire story from the angle of Karan and then we might have enjoyed further more because then, the element of suspense would have thrilled us. But then the adaptation would have compromised.


TECHNICALITIES

The technicalities of the film deserves the praise. Besides the screenplay, what impressed me the most was fabulous editing. Much of the film’s credibility goes sound if the editing of a mystery thriller aids the screenplay.

Sujoy Ghosh has written the script and directed this film. And this is why Jaane Jaan is so good. He has a habit of bluntly moving a serious story. And he has done that before in Kahaani and Badla.

Shooting in Kalimpong may make the viewers wonder, why Kalimpong? Only the director knows a better answer but I felt such a plot heavily suited a small town or a district where mysterious Maya and her daughter wants to start a new life. And being a Japanese novel, I felt Kalimpong served the right aesthetics. The shots of that smoky place were beautiful.


PERFORMANCES

Jaane Jaan stars Kareena Kapoor Khan, Jaideep Ahlawat, and Vijay Varma, who are quite different actors from each other. I felt Kareena’s Maya needed more aggression after what she has been through. Vijay’s body language of a detective was skilled. Notice his interrogation scene with Maya in the police station. Jaideep is the winner between them, he impressively built growth of the character. There was sanity as well as insanity. I just felt that his character had such a strong reputation in the district, the director must have dramatized his teaching scene for a minute or two to justify why people of Kalimpong regard him highly.


CLOSING REMARKS

Jaane Jaan is a terrific mystery thriller that grabs a lot of attention due to a strong grip of the script.

RATING 8.5/10


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Film Review: An Action Hero (2022)

STORY

After annoying a strongman Vicky during the film shooting, the popular action film star Maanav accidentally kills him when he chases Maanav. In fear of getting caught, Maanav runs away to his home in the UK but he is unaware that Vicky’s brother Bhoora is coming to take revenge.


REVIEW

The plot line indicates that I was up for a cat-and-mouse chase and a survival action thriller. An interesting idea was pitched for a typical Ayushmann Khurrana pandemic. The first 50 minutes were the best part of the film. But the entire comical setup of a thoughtful plot devalued after that, because Maanav faces off Bhoora too early.

My opinion about the continuity of such plot is that “An Action Hero” must have been written in a way that Bhoora would make efforts searching for his head and Maanav running from him and the local police throughout the film. That would have built the intensity and their eventual face-off had captivated more interest and undivided attention. But since the writer decided to let Bhoora meet Maanav too early in the film, the question mark over Maanav’s survival become vital. Instead of killing off the character, knowing the fact naturally how furious a brother will be for the deceased, Bhoora comes to his face and wishes to go no-holds-barred. Brother, you came all over from India to Portsmouth just to fight and then kill him? Of course, it is unrealistic and the main purpose of the plot gets killed before Maanav due to such premature encounter.

There is no doubt that the action choreography, besides a couple of scenes, were above-average because Maanav is action master so performing stunts and fighting against all odds was natural. But in a given scenario, I felt it was pretty unnatural for a film star to go Die-Hard or Mission Impossible against firing bullets and going one-on-one against the trained fighters of crime.

The film’s hype is centered around two extremely different actors in Ayushmann Khurrana and Jaideep Ahlawat. But due to bad screenplay and execution, and much effort put on a comedy unsuccessfully transforming into a black comedy, Maanav-Bhoora chemistry fell flat. With an introduction of a don in the second half that made Maanav and Bhoora became tag-team, the film completely slipped from its purpose and went far from logic and reality.


CLOSING REMARKS

Some of you may criticize me finding logic in a mainstream Bollywood film. But try to understand my point. In 2015, a similar story in this very industry blended with realism and black comedy ran a full life circle due to excellent execution. And that was Badlapur. I do not demand for another Badlapur. I opine that the quality of writing a screenplay and a fitting execution could have done justice with the plot. Sadly, that is not the case.

RATING 2/10


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