Synopsis: Ravi (Ajay Devgn) returns to his family's village once he finds out his mother and sister were not dead as he had long thought. There he finds a village cowering at the grip of Sher Singh (Mahesh Manjrekar), his daughter Rekha (Tamannaah) and his brother-in-law Narayandas (Paresh Rawal). Of course the himmatwala (braveheart) is tasked with setting the village free.
That bears being in all caps at the beginning of any
discussion because no one I know in
the blogosphere was willing to go see Himmatwala. The bad word of mouth even
had me dreading the fact that I was hooked into it via the Bollywood group.
But… I didn’t hate Himmatwala!
In fact, I had a good laugh… or maybe a hundred!
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| They are the same and not. |
If you didn’t like the original Himmatwala, don’t worry — I
didn’t either. I gave up on it less than halfway in. Kitna boring hai!
But this version is definitely not boring. If you don’t like
silly movies and heroic antics — aka Paresh Rawal and Ajay Devgn — or you are
in fact one of the snobbish tight-asses I recently complained about, then you
won’t like the bulk of it. But there are some plot tweaks and twists thrown in
that even this queen of spotting the twists wasn’t expecting in such a film!
(Hint hint: Ritesh Deshmukh’s appearance is short-lived but very important!)
But I think the crux of what makes this Himmatwala different
from the first is that this Himmatwala is a slapstick comedy (hullo, Sajid Khan), and if you try to pretend it’s the original or take it seriously, you’re gonna have a bad time.
So, simple advice: Don’t take it too seriously.
There were some lagging moments, but for the most part,
Himmatwala made me laugh from start to finish. There’s some mincing words, some
putting crabs (ACTUAL CRABS) in people’s pajamas, asides directed right at the
audience, a couple of visits from a tiger, the chicken dance (at a wedding!),
some literal butt-kicking/bum pe laat (also at a wedding!),
spoofing the infamous shower scene from Psycho…
Does Paresh Rawal’s squeaking voice get old? Yes. Are some
of his lines flat? Yes. Does that negate the fact that he is hilarious and the
master of comic timing and that he rocks that Dali-style mustache? Absolutely
not.
Even the hero himself cracks some rib-tickling good lines
when, of course, he’s not being overly serious and macho. If you’ve seen
Singham or any of his movies since, you know Ajay Devgn is all about the ultra-dramatized
hero role — and playing the titular himmatwala
seems tailor-made for him. I’d say that this role is a lot more geared
toward Ajay than the original was toward Jeetendra, though I can’t profess to
be any great fan of Jeetendra anyway.
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| Have some fun, ji! |
Less perfectly fit for the role is the heroine. Sure, she
generates her own share of laughs, but I wish Tamannaah’s thighs hadn’t been on
glaring display the whole time. C’mon, guys. They’re not that great. Really.
And she’s fine enough that she didn’t bother me, but she’s certainly not the
next Sridevi.
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| Sadly could have done without Sonakshi, though I liked TGIF. |
If you are expecting something groundbreaking and new, that
Himmatwala is certainly not. If you are expecting something archetypal that
will generate laughs with its ridiculousness, that it certainly is.
Oh, and wait, this movie is set in the 80s? Not just remaking the 80s? Could’ve fooled me,
minus a few not
so special references to the year.
Though its tagline of “the 80’s will be back” seems to ring
true since a Chashme Baddoor remake comes out next week.





