When a family of ten including six noisy children got
into the theatre, talking and scrambling around for popcorn, we rolled
our eyes preparing for the most annoying movie-watching experience.
After “Sssssh”ing them around, we soon realised that they weren't the
villains, they were victims of Maximum boredom, having spent at least a thousand rupees to watch a film where nothing happens. Till the very end.
The
idea must have sounded great on paper. To build up a narrative where
the tension between two power-hungry crooked encounter cops keeps rising
and culminates in one explosive blood bath of a finale.
So,
director Kabeer Kaushik saves up the bullets. Every time there's
supposed to be an encounter or killing, he desists from showing it, to
keep it classy.
So everything's implied and
insinuated as the brooding camera attempts to create a moody character
study of the two cops in the picture, punctuating every dialogue heavy
scene with cops walking towards each other in slow-motion as the body
count keeps increasing throughout.
This is clearly a Ram Gopal Varma inspired film — it tries to evoke the gritty smartness of Ab Tak Chappan with intentions of telling us a Company like story within the police department. Yes, this is Department shot well minus the energy.
We
have to blame the dialogues and lack of clear and present danger for
this. But then, the makers are too scared to keep things classy all
through. So they thrust in quite a bit of cleavage, item numbers in
shady dance bars and dirty jokes to compensate but with the proceedings
spelt out largely through pretentious dialogue ranging from Twinkle,
Twinkle Little Star to Shakespeare.
Sonu Sood and
Naseeruddin Shah try their best to keep things real and Vinay Pathak
chips in with an earnest performance too, but it says a lot about a cop
film if the only burst of energy in the film comes from Hazel Keech
dancing to ‘Aa Ante Amalapuram’.
There are a couple
of gripping moments but they come in too late, way after our interest in
the film is long dead. So we didn’t have to worry about the noisy kids
in front of us… they slept like a baby through all that gun-fire.
Maximum
Genre: Drama
Director: Kabeer Kaushik
Cast: Sonu Sood, Naseeruddin Shah, Neha Dhupia, Mohan Agashe
Storyline: Two crooked encounter cops deal with betrayals and wrestle for power
Bottomline: Saves its bullets for the very end by which time we've already died of boredom
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