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Aks (Action Movie
,2001)
Starring
| Amitabh Bachchan |
.... Manu Verma |
| Manoj Bajpai |
.... Raghavan |
| Nandita Das |
.... Supriya |
| Raveena Tondon |
.... Neeta |
Director : Rakesh Omprakash Mehra
Producer : A.B. Corp and Flicks Motion Picture
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Review
“Aks” can better be described as an adman’s adventures with the cinematic form to tell a story that is abstract and strewn with
preternatural tones.
The film explores different shades of a human being rather than simply defining things in black and white without touching upon the
gray areas that form the crux of life. The concept is novel, the plot taut and the attempt by the director (to do something
unconventional) is daring but the film veers off into the land of chaos and confusion in the second half.
The setting is Budapest (Hungary) and Manu Verma (Amitabh Bachchan), security chief of Indian Defense minister (Amol Palekar) has a
job to do. A cold-blooded serial killer Raghavan (Manoj Bajpai) is out to assassinate the minister because he wants a floppy
containing the top-secret information.
Manu’s sixth sense tells him Raghavan is nearby, stalking them like a bid of prey and he literally feels him breathing down his neck.
He is right. Raghavan kills the minister and flees with the floppy. Raghavan’s next target is the Prime Minister of India.
Manu is a dedicated cop with a young and beautiful wife Supriya (Nandita Das) and a cute and effervescent daughter. His search for
Raghavan takes him from the clean streets of Budapest to the squalor-ridden Mumbai bars where he comes across Raghavan’s confidante
Neeta (Raveena Tandon) a svelte bar dancer. After a series of chases, Manu nabs Raghavan.
On the day Raghavan is to be executed he makes a desperate bid to escape but Manu foils his attempts. What follows is riveting action
sequences before Raghavan is killed in a shoot out. But the question arises – is Raghavan really dead? Here Rakesh Mehra dabbles into
Philosophy from Gita that “Body is mortal but not the spirit which is eternal.” And what if his spirit enters Manu’s body to fulfill
his dastardly motives?
The look of the film speaks volumes about Rakesh’s credentials as an ad-filmmaker. He brings about a riot of colors on the screen and
strews the plot with subtleties. For instance, the Ramleela song that has a much greater relevance in the latter half of the film.
However, he seems to draw a lot of inspiration from Hollywood flicks like “Face off”, “Fallen” and “Mission Impossible”.
Amitabh Bachchan delivers yet another consummate performance as the never-say-die cop. His quicksilver transition from a dedicated
security officer to a mellow husband and slaphappy prankster father and again to a gore-loving killer (in the second half) is superb.
Nandita Das maintains her customary ease before the camera playing his under-aged wife, but is wasted in a role that puts her on the
margins.
Manoj Bajpai’s portrayal of the impassive assassin with a passion to spill blood is pretty good but not exceptional, as his on-screen
performances normally turn out to be. He does lend a psychotic touch to his character and his screen presence is convincing but there
are times when he seems to overdo it.
As a bar dancer Raveena Tandon looks gorgeous and chips in for the zing factor in an otherwise chaste story. Her hot love sequences
and raunchy dance numbers are something to look forward to although her striptease act in a slinky (but not skimpy) dress is a bit of
a disappointment for those who have seen Demi Moore do it.
In a nutshell “Aks” is a welcome respite for the movie buff sated with the saccharine sweet romantic capers.
Rating: Worth watching. |