Raavan (India)
By ROBERT KOEHLER<http://www.variety.com/index.asp?layout=bio&peopleID=1207>
MOST VIEWED:
Cameras roll on
'Atlas'<http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118020578.html?categoryid=2431&cs=1&ref=mv>
Early gander at
'Airbender'<http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118020704.html?categoryid=13&cs=1&ref=vertfilm&ref=mv>
Toy Story 
3<http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117942938.html?categoryId=31&cs=1&ref=mv>
Cage, Kidman take
'Trespass'<http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118020679.html?categoryid=13&cs=1&ref=mv>
Hot in 
Cleveland<http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117942955.html?categoryid=32&cs=1&ref=mv>
Lourd eyes changes in the
industry<http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118020681.html?categoryid=16&cs=1&ref=mv>
[image: Go Fandango!] <http://www.fandango.com/?wss=link234x60>

Read other reviews about this
film<http://www.mrqe.com/movie_reviews//Raavan/2010/VE1117942977>
Powered By [image: MRQE Review]
A Reliance Big Pictures release (in U.S./Canada) of a Madras Talkies
production. Produced by Mani Ratnam, Sharada Trilok. Executive producers,
Shaad Ali, B. Chintu Mohapatra. Directed, written by Mani Ratnam. Dialogue,
Vijay Krishna Acharya.

With: Abhishek Bachchan, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, Vikram, Govinda. (Hindi
dialogue)

*A cop and self-styled Robin Hood face off in a wild and brawny contest in
Mani Ratnam's bullets-and-dance spectacle "Raavan." Consistently one of
India's most versatile and exciting directors, Ratnam angles for one of his
bigger commercial vehicles by mixing knockout action sequences, primal
dramatic elements and superstar Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, who stays ravishing
even as she's sent through the physical wringer opposite husband and co-star
Abhishek Bachchan. Stellar cast and good word of mouth look to draw strong
B.O. worldwide.*

The delirious pre-credits sequence resembles not the start of an action
drama-musical so much as a fever dream, climaxing with crook and
working-class hero Beera (Bachchan) orchestrating the daring kidnapping of
Ragini (Rai Bachchan), wife of Dev (mono-monikered Vikram), the top cop in a
northern Indian town. Boiling mad and out for blood, Dev rounds up the local
militia to hunt down Beera, tracking him through a dense forest.

Dev recruits forest ranger Sanjeevani (Govinda), whose portly demeanor and
near-magical gifts for moving through the trees make him a kind of lumpen
proletariat wuxia-style action man. Sanjeevani's comic relief appears much
less than might be expected from his striking entrance, suggesting that some
of his scenes were sacrificed to the goal of getting the film under 2 1/2
hours.

Beera soon realizes he has more than he anticipated in Ragini, who attempts
a reckless escape by jumping over a high cliff next to a waterfall. This
launches a slowly growing attraction between the manic, borderline-mad
captor and strong-willed victim, and the fiery interplay between the
husband-and-wife stars serves as a counterweight to a charming musical
sequence -- Dev's rose-colored memory of better domestic times -- between
Rai Bachchan and Vikram.

Ratnam's screenplay takes a more complex turn near the midpoint, using
exposition to fill in Beera's backstory as a fearsome but respected man of
the people, forever besieged by police, as depicted in an extensive
flashback. Rai Bachchan proves much more than a gorgeous face as her Ragini
shows hints of sympathy and understanding for Beera's wrath.

Being a Ratnam production, "Raavan" was never going to be anything like a
typical Bollywood movie, displaying the director's long-developed abilities
to juggle several disparate elements within a vividly entertaining if
occasionally over-the-top action-adventure. His collaboration with action
directors Shyam Kaushal and Peter Hein reaps stirring sequences, including a
breathtaking Dev-vs.-Beera fist fight on a wooden bridge spanning a massive
ravine. A trio of musical dance sequences, in true Ratnam fashion, are
utterly different from one another (handled by a variety of choreographers),
including one wedding setpiece that builds like a great Broadway number.

Bachchan, though wonderful when playing opposite Rai Bachchan, is allowed to
ham it up more than is necessary, perhaps taking a bit too literally the
locally circulated myth about Beera possessing supernatural powers. Vikram
takes the more effective route of straight-ahead macho intensity.

Fabulous locales and lush surroundings provide a great backdrop, with Ratnam
carefully matching the work of two cinematographers, Santosh Sivan and V.
Manikandan. A.R. Rahman's bold score and songs rise to the occasion. A
simultaneously shot Tamil-language version features Prithviraj as Dev and,
most remarkably, Vikram (a major Tamil star) as Beera.

Reply via email to