Published Jan 1, 1970
4 mins read
707 words
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Pathaan Movie Review (Shahrukh Khan) And My Opinion

Published Jan 1, 1970
4 mins read
707 words

My Opinion about Pathaan Movie:

As a part of the audience, I feel that I just have to write this review, as unfortunate as it may be. I watched Pathaan with my family and there were multiple scenes that were just inappropriate and unnecessary. Other than that, the plot was super unclear and I didn't understand why a virus was brought into it. I thought we would be seeing something new, as there are many films from the past that have this same trope of a deadly virus. The movie was 2 hrs and 30 minutes approximately, quite a long film but I don't understand why everything in the film, every sequence, felt rushed and like it didn't make much sense. I also found the CGI and VFX extremely fake and artificial, which was disappointing. I know that a team and actors worked really hard to make this film as they do others, but I feel that Pathaan just took advantage of the fact that there were stars like SRK, Deepika, John Abraham, and Salman Khan in it. Would you genuinely enjoy the film had it been some other actors? Anyway, I do feel like I had my hopes up too high for this film. I just hope that Bollywood can make good films again soon.

Pathaan Movie Review:

Something of an event film to mark Shah Rukh Khan's return to the big screen after a four-year hiatus, Pathaan is an ambitious action thriller that flirts with galleries and lives up to the hype. Pathaan is outrageously written, but full of star power and style. Pathaan initially seemed like a cinematic Mountain Dew commercial, but it's slowly but steadily gaining traction.

The plot follows India's repeal of Article 370 (the special status of Jammu and Kashmir) and the impact on Pakistani officers who want India to pay for this "mistake". He turns to the formidable Jim, a former RAW agent who has been wronged by his own people. He joins up with his pompous accomplice Rubai, a former ISI agent (Deepika Padukone) with ambiguous motives. Pattern, Jim, and Rubai meet Eyes and Horns as they traverse continents in a dangerous game of betrayal and revenge. The three seek to destroy and protect the world they believe in. Siddharth his Anand director over-treats his spy thriller. He portrays it like a superhero movie that requires a massive distrust lift—his fascination with mainstream Hollywood blockbusters such as the Marvel movies and Tom Cruise's Mission Impossible series. And fanboy worship is evident here. Imbued with Falcon-inspired wingsuits, over-the-top action and chase sequences, death and gravity-defying stunts in cars, bikes, ice cream, and helicopters, immortal heroes and villains crafting intense dialogue, femme fatales, and more I'm in. To the idea of ​​patriotism.

Action takes precedence over emotion for much of the film. This is new territory for SRK, who is best loved for his romantic and conversational roles. At the age of 57, he is a full-fledged action hero, and it is interesting that he moves his body with impressive eyes. It's his presence that saves the average script and his subpar VFX. Background Although his music doesn't feel perfectly in sync with the scenario, Vishal & Shekhar's film score manages to reflect the heroism and bravery on display. A highlight of Pathaan is also John Abraham's solid portrayal of Jim. Whether it's his Bane-esque masked performance or stunt sequences, Jon is menacing and pulls off the classic case of the villain partially obscuring the hero.

Deepika Padukone is perfectly cast as a leggy agent who can kick butt and is loyal and morally ambiguous, but her chemistry with SRK feels immature. is missing. Dimple Kapadia creates another credo, bringing much-needed seriousness and emotional weight to the proceedings. They wanted the other characters to radiate the sincerity of their roles.

The YRF spy universe reunites Karan and Arjun (a wink-wink) and delivers the iconic whistling moment where Bhai meets her Badshah. If you're willing to miss the flirtatiousness of dialogue like "You're pretty messed up", Pathaan has all the elements of a masala pot her boiler. A smoldering Shah Rukh Khan who fights well both inside and outside the screen. He is still the undisputed champion.

PS:
Wait for the post-credits scene. 

Sharuk

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