Following is the review of Jodhaa Akbar appeared on 
Musicindiaonline.com at following link

http://www.musicindiaonline.com/ar/i/movie_name/9539/1/

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Movie Review : 'Jodhaa-Akbar': Breathtaking tale of love, war, 
secularism

  
Producer: Ashutosh Gowariker, Ronnie Screwvala 
Director: Ashutosh Gowariker
Cast: Hrithik Roshan, Aishwarya Rai, Sonu Sood, Ila Arun, Niketan 
Dheer
Music:  A.R. Rahman

There is Hrithik Roshan as Akbar, in full regalia, watching a 
traditional sufi qawwalli when he suddenly goes into a spiritual 
trance and joins the qawwalls for a dance to divinity.

This historic moment that takes us beyond the dynasties of Mughal 
history, couldn't have been possible without Hrithik's amazing 
capacity to infiltrate the portals of divinity through dance 
movements.

As we traverse the simply stunning spectacle of Ashutosh Gowariker's 
historical epic, often wonder-eyed and open-mouthed, we end up 
looking at Akbar as interpreted by Hrithik rather than as what the 
Mughal legend might have been.

The body language of the sword-wielding poet-warrior reminds us of 
Mel Gibson in 'Braveheart' and Tom Cruise in 'The Last Samurai' 
rather than Prithviraj Kapoor who played Akbar in K. Asif's undying 
classic 'Mughal-e-Azam' with such imposing imperiousness.

In terms of the creative and visual terrain covered in the three-
hour, 20-minute journey, Gowariker's vision subsumes a reined-in 
wealth of ideas and images into an opulent but aesthetic tale of 
love, romance, war, hatred and secularism.

The director transports us into an era when brother battled brother 
in bitter rage. But love blossomed in the heart of a secular Muslim 
emperor who married a fiercely individualistic Rajput princess and 
allowed her space to be her own person.

The narrative patterns Akbar's chequered life of love and wars 
through the various characters who influence his mind and heart. To 
begin with, we see the young Akbar being moulded into a violent 
person, brimming with ideas of revenge and acquisition by his 
senapati-mentor Bairam Khan.
 
In a frightening burst of vengeful brutality, we see Akbar ordering 
his soldiers to throw a stubborn adversary head-first to death.

But all said and done, Gowariker's Akbar is a man who'd rather live 
in peace than wallow in war. Alas, Akbar lived in violent battle-
friendly times.

Then there's the complex relationship that Akbar shares with his 
foster mother, played by Ila Arun. But the friction between the 
foster mother and Akbar's new bride could be straight out of Indra 
Kumar's 'Beta'!

Gowariker also purposely brings in kitschy elements from commercial 
cinema to provide a kind of warm accessibility to his historic tale.

The filming of the durbar song 'Azeem-o-shaan shahenshah' is the last 
word in spectacle. Breathtaking is the word that often comes to mind 
in this tale of vibrant valour and vitality.

Never before have we seen battle sequences so spectacular and 
energetic in Hindi cinema. Take the opening sequence where the battle 
lines close ranks in such passionate movements that the audience 
almost feels trampled in the middle.

Kiran Deohans' swift but sublime cinematography is of international 
calibre, at par with 'Gladiator' or 'Braveheart'. A.R. Rahman's music 
is a bit of a letdown though. Veering between authenticity and 
listener-friendliness, it's a bit of a mellow mishmash signifying 
none of those enchanting echoes of Jodha and Akbar's ever-lasting 
romanticism.

 
The love story occupies the pride of place in 'Jodhaa-Akbar'. The 
sudden marital alliance between the benign king and the free-spirited 
Rajput princess, their post-marriage courtship, the misunderstanding 
that cuts through their growing fondness, and the final and 
irreversible reconciliation, are portrayed with exquisite fluidity.

Not once does the director allow the inherent opulence of his theme 
to overpower the love that grows between them.

Hrithik's pleading, poetic eyes in a warrior's face define the 
historic romance as much as Aishwarya's swan-like grace and 
passionate individualism. After 'Dhoom 2', this pair surely whips up 
a Mughlai feast of passion and romance.

Watch 'Jodhaa-Akbar' as a splendidly spiced-up slice of history. Or 
just savour the chemistry between the warrior and the princess, with 
hundreds of junior artistes, elephants, rabbits and parrots 
accompanying the couple's journey from secularism to eternity.
 
© Copyright 2008 by MusicIndiaOnLine.com
 


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