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Karam Movie Review

Do accomplished cinematographers make excellent story tellers? Can they narrate
a story with flourish in those two hours when seated in the director's chair?
Well, they do deliver sometimes. But, at times, they miss the target. When a
cinematographer narrates a tale, be assured of picture perfect frames. But
there's more to a film than astounding visuals.
Sanjay F. Gupta's directorial debut KARAM suffers on these grounds. The film has
a hackneyed plot [screenplay: Suparn Verma] and though Gupta compensates it with
style and panache, the film lacks the power to keep you hooked as it unfolds.
Very frankly, KARAM is akin to a mannequin. You admire it for all its dressings,
but you cannot overlook the fact that it lacks life.

John [John Abraham] is an assassin who works for mob boss Captain [Bharat
Dabholkar].
One fateful day, John ends up massacring an entire family. As he stares into the
eyes of the little girl, whose life is slowly ebbing away from her, realization
hits John and he decides to quit and start life afresh, sans bloodshed, with his
wife Shalini [Priyanka Chopra].
Captain is facing a major threat from a rival don Yunus [Vishwajeet Pradhan] and
after an attack on his life, he decides to retaliate. Captain wants to kill the
city's top industrialist, top film producer, the cop backing Yunus and lastly,
Yunus himself. His strategy: Set a precedent so that everyone else toes the line
and no one dreams of becoming another Yunus.
But to execute this plan, Captain needs the help of his ace assassin - John. One
man who can make this audacious plan work, but he is one man who has sworn never
to pick up his gun again.

Captain takes John's love, his wife, away from him and holds her hostage; in
return, he has to kill the five targets in the next 36 hours. From this point
on, John plots, double crosses and triple crosses everyone. Friends turn foes
and the body count begins to grow.
On John's trail is Mumbai's tough cop Wagh [Shiney Ahuja]. In a game of cat and
mouse, John tries to fight the forces of nature and cut loose from the masters
of puppets.
Gangsters and the underworld rivalries are subjects that have been tackled a
zillion times in Bollywood. KARAM falters primarily in this sphere. With not
much clay on hand, debutante director Sanjay F. Gupta dares to attempt a work of
art that tries to be different. But the sad part is, the film constantly gives
you the feeling of d? vu.
For any high-octaine thriller to leave a mark, it ought to be embellished with
nail-biting moments, but that razor sharp impact is clearly missing in KARAM.
After a reasonably impressive start, the screenplay meanders in the same lane
that the viewer has visited umpteen times earlier.
A major flaw of the film, in fact two flaws, is the way the film has been shot
and its slow narrative. In fact, you constantly feel that Gupta has made a
Hollywoodish film in the garb of a Hindi film. One wonders why the director has
gone overboard in filming the scenes in sepia and tint effects.
Besides, the slow narrative is another deterrent. The story unfolds at a weary
and lackluster pace, with boredom seeping in soon after it has taken off. Even
the pre-climax and climax have been stretched unnecessarily.
Yes, there are a few well executed sequences. Sequences that do leave an impact.
Like, the murder at the start of the film keeps you spellbound. Also, the
interaction [dialogue] between John and Priyanka in the post-interval portions [Priyanka's
finger has been cut] is another sequence that stands out. But a handful of deft
strokes aren't enough to camouflage the defects. For a thriller, the script has
to be taut and the screenplay ever crisper and sharper. But KARAM piggybacks on
trite situations.
Director Sanjay F. Gupta has mounted the film well, but the film will be
remembered more as a stylish fare than a gripping fare. As a director, the
emotional moments between John and Priyanka seem superficial. Music [Vishal-Shekhar]
gets no scope in a film like this. Yet, 'Tinka Tinka' is the only track that
seems decent. The track in B & W, 'Tera Hi Karam', should be deleted for it only
acts as a speed breaker.
Cinematography is in keeping with the mood of the film. Action scenes seem
repetitive, especially the 'Matrix' kind of stunts. But the one in the bank
seems innovative and is well implemented.
John Abraham makes a sincere effort to live his role and he succeeds largely.
The extremely talented actor seems to be taking giant strides with every film.
Priyanka Chopra is quite effective.
Bharat Dabholkar seems more convincing than his earlier film outings [PAAGALPAN,
GOD ONLY KNOWS]. Shiny Ahuja suffers due to a sketchy characterization. He is
okay nonetheless. Vishwajeet Pradhan is passable. Murali Sharma is efficient.
Rajesh Khera is adequate. Anjan Shrivastava is wasted.
On the whole, KARAM is all gloss, no substance. At the box-office, its rejection
is foreseeable. |