Starring Salman Khan, Salman Khan, Salman Khan, Salman Khan; Directed by Arbaaz Khan
For
those who thought Chulbul Pandey in Abinav Kashyap's "Dabangg" was
wacky and fun only because Salman Khan played him, here is more
spoof-proof in the sequel of how Salman adopts, embraces and assimilates
the characters he plays until one can't tell the star apart from the
character.
This is not to say Salman is a method actor.
God forbid! He's just the opposite. Chulbul Pandey, if ever such a
khaki-clad law-enforcer ever, would want to be as chirpy and obnoxious
as Chulbul Pandey.
So what does Chulbul do in "Dabangg 2"
that he didn't do in "Dabangg"? Nothing, and everything. There's more of
everything in the sequel and hence a sense of deja vu.
The
fights which begin, end and bolster the plot, are done with that
irrepressible mix of guffaws and grunts that Salman patented in Prabhu
Deva's "Wanted". Indeed it wouldn't be wrong to say that Prabhu Deva was
the father of Chulbul Pandey, in a manner of speaking.
Here
of course in "Dabangg 2" Vinod Khanna is back as Chulbul's father. The
scenes between Salman and his screen-dad are written with a delicious
mix of irreverence and affection. There is a hilarious encounter on the
rooftop of their Kanpur home where son asks his sleepy, annoyed father
about the deceased mother (Dimple Kapadia, a mere photo on the wall in
the sequel).
And then Salman leaves in a huff saying, "Mom was right. You're no fun to sleep with. I am better off sleeping with my wife."
Ahem.
Save the blushes for a rainy day. Salman's Chulbul gives us no time get
bothered with niceties. Chulbul simply sweeps us along into a tidal
wave of wackily written and executed action sequences undercut by a
sharp sense of self-deprecating humour.
The storytelling
is breathless. The characters can't really keep pace with the breakneck
storytelling. They are underveloped and largely kept in the shadows to
accentuate the hero's larger-than-life (though blessedly never
larger-than-laughs) persona.
Sonakshi Sinha, of course,
enjoys playing the seductress in the shadows. In film after film, she
plays the dutiful beloved soul-mate to the macho-hero. And really, her
sartorial styling and the designer sarees and backless blouses in a film
that pays a lot of attention to mofussil modes is way-way-way over the
top. It's hard to see her expressions beyond the eyeshadows.
That reminds me...Sonakshi shares the shadows with Arbaaz Khan who as Chulbul Pandey's brother is delightful daft and goofy.
The
villains have a coherent voice (never mind their livid screaming) and
more space to develop as characters. The plot goes into spasms of
explanation as to why one of the villains Niktin Dheer needed to take
off his shirt in the climax .Really, Salman's shirtless act needs no
accompaniment.
Prakash Raj does his usual snarling
sneering arch-villain act, no surprises here. Deepak Dobriyal who gets
to die in a rather gruesome way in the irate Chulbul's hands, is sharp
and cutting in his brief role. Some of Salman's subordinates in the
police station are also engaging.
But make no mistake.
This film belongs to Chulbul alias Salman from the first frame to the
last. Salman goes through the motions without any punctuation except a
string of exclamations. While the other characters remain dutifully
tenuous, Chulbul's comic-book valour is highlighted unapologetically.
"Dabangg
2" takes off effortlessly from the first frame creating a wackier,
wilder, wittier saga than "Dabangg" woven around Chulbul Pandey's agile,
anarchic antics.
Though the plot is written in
half-hearted measures leaving many episodes including the climax looking
incomplete, the film is loads of lowbrow fun with some peppy songs by
Sajid-Wajid which are filmed with an earthy gusto. Aseem Mishra's camera
looks at life in "Kanpur" through wide-eyed lenses that stare
unabashedly at the characters's quirks.
And now for the ek
crore ka sawaal. Does Kareena Kapoor's item song "Fevicol" match up to
Malaika Arora's "Munni badnaam" in the first "Dabangg"?
Redundant question. It's like asking, does "Dabangg 2" measure up to "Dabangg"?
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