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KAANTE (MA) 2002
SYNOPSIS:
May contain
spoilers...
In a world where loyalties are easily abandoned and allegiances bought six perfect strangers come together to pull off the perfect crime.
To get the job done, they must all do what they have never done before - trust each other.
But when their simple robbery explodes into an ambush, the ruthless killers realise that one of them is a cop. But which one???
Under siege and racing the clock, the six lock in a deadly battle of wits in a climax filled with spiraling tension and volatility.
Bollywood crime thriller directed by Sanjay Gupta
Produced by Sanjay Gupta & Raju Sharad Patel
Starring: Amitabh Bachchan, Sanjay Dutt, Sunil Shetty, Kumar Gaurav, Mahesh
Manjrekar, Lucky Ali, Isha Koppikar, and Malaika Arora Khan.
Music: Anand Raaj Anand, Lucky Ali, & Vishal-Shekhar.
Lyrics: Dev Kohli, Anand Raaj Anand, Lucky Ali, & Vishal.
In Hindu, with English subtitles
Running time 175 mins, plus intermission
OFFICIAL WEBSITE:
www.kaantethefilm.com
Australian Distributor: www.mgdistribution.com.au
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HEROIC-CINEMA REVIEW:
Is it a remake of Reservoir Dogs? Does
it rip off The Usual Suspects? All of the above! Considering
that Reservoir Dogs was inspired by Ringo Lam’s
City on Fire and The Usual Suspects was
inspired by Kurasawa’s Rashomon, it’s no surprise that
this baby is a mixed kettle of fish. You can even throw in some
Martin Scorsese and John Woo in there too. The director claimed that
Kaante was also ‘inspired’ by several well known crime
thrillers but he’s going to have a hard time convincing the
average punter. Complete chunks of plot and scene set-ups are
directly lifted so the comparison is blatantly obvious.
The question isn’t so much whether who
inspired whom but whether the fruit of this inspiration is something
worth your time. So is Kaante worth forking out the dough?
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Well, consider this. There’s enough
testosterone in this movie to knock over a whole herd of rampaging
cows. This crime caper felt like a Bruckheimer secret side project,
an all boys affair running on adrenaline, with big ideas, big guns
and even bigger explosions.
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Where Corey Yuen’s the all-chick action fest So
Close was all lipgloss and sexual innuendo, Saanjay
Gupta’s Kaante is all bad boy gun-toting coolness and
machismo stylistics.
Despite being derivative to Hollywood and a nod to HK cinema in
nearly every way possible in terms of plot, style, direction and
music, Kaante still score points for retaining some inherent
Bollywood goodness. It’s fantastically paced with superb
direction, cinematography and editing. The attempt to integrate
Bollywood over-the top escapist fare with tense emotional drama is
also commendable, with some degree of success.
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In its over eagerness to be hip and impressive
though, the film does shoot itself in the foot at times – certain
scenes are hackneyed and heavy handed. There’s a scene with an
arms dealer, which I think could easily be deleted for the singular
purpose of promoting peace, love and harmony among humankind.
Other times, style rules over content. A five
minute slow mo’ montage of the boys fondling and testing out their
guns is an indulgent show-off piece, bordering on eroticism so
intently serious that it cracked me up.
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Writing wise, the script is generally snappy
and funny, capturing some of Tarantino’s irreverent humour,
although a conversation about Madonna was strangely absent. The
mostly Indian audience [that is excluding me and my friend] had a
ball, cacking themselves at jokes and moments that obviously
didn’t come through on the subtitles.
Stretching at nearly 3 hours, it could have
done with a little trimming, especially the two extraneous musical
numbers, since they were done pretty much out of context, serving
little purpose other than titillating eye-candy.
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Kaante receives no points for
originality, in fact most of the time I can’t help but feel that
it’s a Hollywood action fest disguised in Hindi right down to its
gaudy little shoes.
But I quite enjoyed it despite … well maybe
because of its charged up fervour.
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Rating: 7½ drunk toe-tapping criminals
out of 10
Reviewed by Ching Yee
OTHER REVIEWS:
Preview from Times
of India
Preview at apunkachoice.com
Wallpapers at Santabanta
Planet Bollywood review of the soundtrack
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H E R O I C * C I N E M A
http://www.heroic-cinema.com
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