
1 minute read
GOOD INTENTIONS GONE TO WASTE
from 2018-06 Adelaide
by Indian Link
With one man (Boman Irani) from the PM’s of ce supporting Ashwat Rana’s mission, India’s nuclear prospects have nothing to fear. With John Abraham playing the rebellious anti-establishment hero hell bent on doing right no matter what the cost, the lm reads more like a Hollywood cop thriller than a faithful chronicle of India’s nuclear makeover in the deserts of Pokhran.
PARMANU: THE STORY OF POKHRAN
STARRING John Abraham, Boman Irani, Anuja Sathe, Diana Penty DIRECTOR Abhishek Sharma
HHHHH
If good intentions make good cinema then every propaganda lm would be a classic. In the absence of a hefty grip and a budget to rev up the key sequences pertaining to India’s historic nuclear explosions Parmanu: The Story Of Pokhran ends up more like a fable of one man’s heroism rather than the saga of a nation that woke up to a nuclear dawn.
The facts are twisted into commercial shapes including a ash point buttonon-the- ngertip climax where the lm’s editor runs with breathless bravado from pillar to post, trying to keep the audience’s interest alive.
But all in vain. Parmanu is like a promised havoc that never goes beyond a wound-up whimper. The lm’s opening shows the bureaucrat-hero Ashwat Rana (John Abraham, starchy and un appable) grappling with a roomful of bored colleagues who are more interested in the samosas than Ashwat’s plans to nuclearize Apna Bharat Mahaan.
It’s an opening paying a direct homage to Shimit Amin’s Chak De
Throughout John Abraham remains in character, implacably committed to the mission even if it means pissing off his wife (played by Anuja Sathe who was excellent just recently in Blackmail, what happened here?) and even if America gets on the wrong side.
‘America’ is imagined with outrageous tackiness: a bunch of Caucasians (probably tourists picked from the Gateway Of India) sitting in front of obsolete computers monitoring India’s nuclear movements, that’s Uncle Sam watching. Their computers, and one antiquated cellphone, are just about the sum-total of period references