CAST: Shah Rukh Khan, Mahira Khan, Nawazuddin Siddiqui
DIRECTION: Rahul Dholakia
GENRE: Action
DURATION: 2 hours 35 minutes
RAEES STORY: Raees Alam runs an illegal alcohol empire in a
Gujarat shrouded in prohibition; ACP Majmudar is in charge of toppling him off
his high position. Will Raees’s own brand of righteousness save him?
RAEES REVIEW: Gear up for a throwback to the great
Salim-Javed blockbusters of the Seventies, where the hero grows up mid-action,
every second line is meant to show off the character’s swagger, a Helen song
(Sunny Leone here) breaks the tension and action sequences compel you to
whistle.
Carrying that legacy forward, is Raees. Shah Rukh Khan plays
the titular character of a spectacled goon who hates being called “battery”; he
starts from harmless Ponzi schemes but graduates to pre-planned rackets and
becomes the top bootlegger of his town.
Also Read: Mahira Khan on her ‘Raees’ co-star: Shah Rukh
Khan spoilt me for life
The first half is well-paced; it draws you in and makes you
root for the bootlegger; Majmudar’s one-liners and the music whet your appetite
and the Laila Main Laila sequence ups the ante.
But the second half plunges
into a weird Robin Hood zone where the antihero’s morals are suddenly
defibrillated and he becomes a messiah. The movie takes a rough path there on,
and the long runtime makes the ride bumpier.
Shah Rukh Khan has never looked better; he’s full of fury
and for once, isn’t spreading his arms, but breaking others’. The film lies
entirely on his shoulders and he carries the weight most of the times.
When he
doesn’t, the ever-so-reliable Nawazuddin Siddiqui steps in with his crackling
performance. In the trademark Nawaz style, he delivers some comic relief while
playing the Tom to Khan’s Jerry. Mahirah is restricted to songs and a few
emotional scenes, but doesn’t really add much. If her purpose was to soften the
baddie, it’s lost on the viewer.
The movie can feel a bit long, but if you’re going for a
great Shah Rukh performance and some good ol’ popcorn-entertainment, it might
just ‘raees’ to the occasion.
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