9 January 2016

WELL PLAYED WAZIR

WITH A QUITE SYNCHRONIZED GAME, WELL PLAYED WAZIR

Image Credit:edumovlive.com


Wazir, the name in itself reveals enormous epic visions of serious and political fighting issues picturized somewhere in mind. Wazir is going to be the first big release of the year 2016. After Shaitaan and David, The action thriller film Wazir was directed by professionally fabled Bejoy Nambiar, produced by Vidhu Vinod Chopra and written by Abhijat Joshi. It took more than a decade for vidhu vinod chopra to plot the influencing idea of making Wazir and virtually transforming it into a reality until he met his writer abhijat joshi, and after several improvising changes the film was ready to hit the silver screens.
Wazir starcast includes the legendary Amitabh Bachchan as Pandit Omkar Nath Dhar, the multi-talented Farhan Akhtar as Daanish Ali and Aditi Rao Hydari as Ruhana in a lead roles followed by john Abraham in a special appearance, Neil Nitin Mukesh as wazir in a pivotal role and many grounded actors who seemingly performing well with their acting.
Basically, the movie reveals a traumatic story of young anti-terror squad (ATS) assassin who lost his four year old daughter in a terrorist attack while chasing the terrorists and a physically disabled old chess-master; a Kashmiri pandit who lost his wife in an car  accident and his daughter at politician’s house by accidentally falling from steps, but somewhere inside he feels it was a murder.


 Image Credit:indianexpress.com


The first half of story of action thriller drama starts with romantic song featuring Danish Ali (Farhan) and kathak dancer Ruhana’s (Aditi) love story which ends up with tragic sequence of events which ruin their happy life with depression and misfortunes. Next, it disunites the relation of husband-wife and danish chooses to follow the vengeance path to terminate the in-depth roots of Terrorism. During the dark phase of life Anti-Terror squad (ATS) officer Danish Ali encounters with Pandit Omkar Nath Dhar, who was apparently conjoined with wheel-chair after losing his both legs in an accident, trying to solve the unsolved mystery of his daughter’s death by comparing the ploys of chess metaphors with strewed aspects of life. A mutual talk turns out into a tactful delineation and articulate implementation of a fight against terrorism.

The second half of film was plotted with many interesting twists and turns including the deceptive face of politics through the adroit acting of Manav Kaul as Razad Qureshi which turn out to be firmly convincing in terms of his performance. Neil Nitin Mukesh as Wazir has manage to sketch himself at his best with his raving looks and whimsical appearance which was proven influential for the film, but the role was expected more to get focused to some extent. Furthermore, following the upsurged negotiation of two fathers undergoing similar circumstances in executing the plans of fight against the terrorism ahead.

 Overall, the sarcastically plotted movie does well on the ground of actions, emotions, and dramatically implementing flawless story and few very impacting monologues of megastar Amitabh Bachchan such as, “Khel khel mein khel khel ke khel khel ye aa jayega. Haar jeet se haar jeet ke jeet haar sikhaega” Has eventually raised the credits of Wazir.  It’s definitely a one-time must watch movie.

Reference:
http://edumovlive.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/f4b541c8-9c9a-4f44-9190-011e3eb30e42_final-wazr-logo1.jpg
http://images.indianexpress.com/2016/01/wazirreview1-bigb-farhan.jpg?w=820?w=681

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