Every time a terrorist attack happens
in any part of our country, the conversation among common people & the
‘on serious note’ panel discussions on TV get heated with mostly unrequited-unresolved
demand for the exile of the most wanted criminal, reportedly residing now in
one of the posh cities of our neighboring country.
We all have wanted that much-awaited
extradition for ages, and God only knows if that would be possible ever in the
future but for now, Nikhil Advani’s sincerely executed yet flawed-Bollywood at
heart-taut thriller of high promises D-DAY offers a ‘dream come true’ fictional
story line, largely getting built up on ‘would have been-should have been’
conditions applied.
Taking cues from real incidents, in-depth
functioning of intelligence agencies & the earnest psyche of undercover
agents, where an impressive first half suggests it being an intelligent, well
researched, on real locations espionage drama with four Indian secret agents
starting off their mission to get Goldman [the man in pink shades modeled on
the Dawood Ibrahim, played by immensely likeable Rishi Kapoor] back to India,
the second half pointlessly falters with focusing more on the masala; Bollywood
is known to plant whenever they start lacking on gripping plots. So, we see emotional
urges taking over obvious astuteness, regular tiffs between the team, hard-to-believe
successful escape plans and an unfeasible end that totally is to please &
blow away audience’s various sentiments regarding this national issue sounded
more like a personal war for every countryman. Get your hands ready for claps
when see that happen what if only on screen!
Advani’s premise is very appealing-very
mass attracting. The execution part is also thoroughly intended and incessantly
belongs to the likes of any docu-drama shot in the crowded lanes of Karachi . Narrative pattern
that includes timelines of the events on screen to make it look documented
effort, works in favor. Special mention to the ‘Alvida’ song for its bloody beautiful
visualization, literally! On the acting front, Irrfan does his part with sheer
honesty. Watch out for him in heartrending scenes with his family. Arjun Rampal,
Shruti Haasan & Huma Quareshi is standard. But if we are talking about
performances par expectations, Rishi Kapoor as stylishly dressed Don, Aakash Dahiya
as fourth player in the operation and Shriswara as Irrfan’s affably adorable
wife top the list. Chandan Roy Sanyal is a complete waste.
At the end, this thrilling operation that
had all the means to finish the long-awaited drought of a good thriller miserably
could not meet its desirable end, thanks to its own flaws that lie in the high
octane drama & a forcibly commercial end in the second half. A troubled case
of wasted opportunity! [2.5/5]
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