Movie Review: Khiladi 786 (2012)

Advertisements

Khiladi_786_poster2 Stars (out of 4)

Buy the DVD at Amazon
Buy the soundtrack at Amazon

There’s a lot to like in Khiladi 786. The well-organized plot allows for plenty of humorous turns, and Akshay Kumar gives a charming performance. Yet needless racism keeps me from recommending Khiladi 786.

During a throwaway number about forty minutes into the film, Kumar’s character dances, surrounded by a troupe of male Indian dancers wearing blackface makeup and Afro wigs, while female Anglo dancers writhe around wearing bikinis.

Kumar apparently doesn’t find blackface offensive, since he donned it himself in Kambakkht Ishq. If he did, he surely could’ve had the number changed since his wife, Twinkle Khanna, is one of the film’s producers. Since Kumar and Khanna already consider blackface acceptable, arguing with them over the obvious sexual objectification of Anglo women seems pointless.

The offensive dance number negatively affected my perception of an otherwise enjoyable movie. Kumar plays Bahattar Singh, a crook with superhuman speed and strength. Bahattar, his father, and his uncle work with the local police to stop smugglers on Punjabi highways. The work is dangerous and illegal, and the family splits the proceeds from their warrantless searches with the police.

Because seemingly everyone in the state of Punjab knows that Bahattar is thief, he can’t find a single local woman willing to marry him. This follows the family tradition of marrying foreigners. Bahattar’s mother is Canadian, his grandmother is African, and his aunt is Chinese.

(I also had a problem with the musical cues that accompany the introduction of each of the foreign women. The Chinese aunt appears to an East-Asian string-instrument theme, the African grandmother gets drums and chanting, and the white Canadian mother gets jazz saxophone. We get it. They aren’t ethnic Indians. That’s obvious from looking at them, though I’m not quite sure how jazz represents Canada. I would’ve gone with prog rock.)

Bahattar’s nuptial troubles present the perfect opportunity for marriage arranger Mansukh (Himesh Reshammiya), who’s recently been fired from the family wedding firm. He tries to fix up Bahattar with Indu (Asin Thottumkal), the reckless younger sister of a famous Mumbai don, TT (Mithun Chakraborty).

Indu knows that a woman from a family of criminals will only be accepted as a bride by another criminal, like her boyfriend, Azad (Rahul Singh). TT insists on marrying his sister into a good family, and the Singhs want the same for Bahattar, so Mansukh convinces the men of both families to masquerade as police officers.

Despite the fact that Khiladi 786 is an Akshay Kumar vehicle, the most important character is Mansukh. He’s desperate for Bahattar and Indu to get married in order to prove to his own father that he’s not a screw-up. To make that happen, he has to juggle the lies he’s told and encouraged others to tell. Mansukh’s uncle, Jeevan (Sanjai Mishra), hinders the process as much as he helps and provides comic relief.

Reshammiya plays Mansukh as animated, but not over the top. He needs to be the regular guy among a crowd of nutty criminals. Also, Reshammiya knows who the real star of the movie is.

Kumar plays much the same character as he always does: a sweet guy who’s tough when he needs to be. Bahattar notes: “Punjabis don’t come or go quietly,” which gives Kumar the freedom to act with extra exuberance. Bahattar’s superhuman speed is played to good comic effect, as he flattens bad guys in the blink of an eye.

The rest of the supporting cast is generally fine. Asin doesn’t have much to do, but Mithun Chakraborty gets to bash some heads in the final fight scene. There are a couple of side plots that come to nothing, involving characters like TT’s maid and an inspector played by Johnny Lever.

Of all the supporting characters, Azad is the funniest. Even though his name means “freedom,” he spends most of the film on the brink of being released from jail, only to screw it up and get himself thrown back into the pokey.

If it weren’t for one dumb dance number, Khiladi 786 would be a fun, harmless movie. There are just certain offenses that can’t be overlooked.

Links

16 thoughts on “Movie Review: Khiladi 786 (2012)

  1. Shah Shahid

    I’m surprised you liked this. From all the trailers and dialogues, this seemed like such a horrible waste. The issues you had with the introduction of the women to stereotypical music, is kind of what I expect the tone of the film to be through out.

    I guess I’ll give this a look.

    Reply
    1. Kathy

      Hold your horses, Shah Shahid. 🙂 With Dabangg 2 coming out in a couple of weeks, are you sure you want to spend your “lovable rebel cop who busts his enemies’ heads” ticket on Khiladi 786? (BTW, the decision to release two big budget films with such similar lead characters only two weeks apart mystifies me.)

      What I liked about Khiladi 786 is that every character — major or minor — has clear motivations. This is a storytelling element that many writers of masala films ignore. As I mentioned in the review, the movie also works better because the plot progress isn’t dependent upon Kumar’s character. I’ve seen a couple of reviews that said that the film lacks logic (which is true when it comes to the laws of physics), but the story adheres to the rules laid out by the writer and director. Compared to many other mass-market action comedy flicks, Khiladi 786 is relatively well-made. I’m not sure if that’s reason enough to see it.

      Reply
      1. Shah Shahid

        Unfortunately, I am but a slave to my emotional horses, otherwise I would’ve reigned them in. I guess the makers behind DABANNG 2 don’t see KHILADI 786 as competition, given their strong 1st-movie-was-a-hit buzz to fall back on.

        What you’ve pointed out about KHILADI 786, (the story staying true to the logic set out by itself initially) IS actually reason enough for me to watch it. It’s something I constantly gripe about with Bollywood films, so would love to see an example of it done well.

        To be honest though, the marketing + song promos for this movie were done very poorly, creating a complete lack of interest in me… until your Review that is.

        Reply
  2. Karma

    Kathy loves Bollywood movies and is a serious Rush fan! I have literally never felt more compelled to beg a woman to marry me in my entire life! 🙂

    (not that your husband or my wife would buy into this plan…. but I digress).

    I was suggesting to a friend yesterday that Rush should play By-Tor as one of their Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame songs instead of just knocking out Tom Sawyer as everyone will expect (he said digressing a second time).

    Reply
    1. Kathy

      Karma, although I’m already married, I appreciate the sentiment. 🙂 One of my husband’s many fine points is that he can play much of the Rush catalog on guitar, though I draw the line at “Rivendell.” They have to play something from “2112” at their induction, right? Now I’m inspired to watch “Classic Albums: Rush: 2112 & Moving Pictures” on Netflix again.

      Reply
  3. Pingback: In Theaters December 14, 2012 « Access Bollywood

  4. Pingback: Opening December 21: Dabangg 2 « Access Bollywood

  5. Pingback: Movie Review: Singham (2011) « Access Bollywood

  6. Pingback: Trailer Talk: Bollywood Version - October 2013 : Blank Page Beatdown

  7. Pingback: Box Office Star Analysis: Akshay Kumar | Access Bollywood

  8. Pingback: Bollywood Box Office: August 8-10 | Access Bollywood

  9. Pingback: Trailer Talk: Bollywood - October 2013| Blank Page Beatdown

Leave a ReplyCancel reply