After the memorable screen heat they generated in dumb megahit“Dhoom:2,” 
Bollywood marquee thesps Hrithik Roshan and Aishwarya Rai gofor the slow, slow 
burn in costume romancer “Jodhaa Akbar,” aconnoisseur’s epic that relies more 
on character and dialogue than onbig battles and teeming extras. A return to 
form by writer-directorAshutosh Gowariker (”Lagaan”) after his sappy “Swades,” 
thiscross-cultural big-budgeter about a legendary romance between a 
Muslimemperor and a feisty Hindu princess opened pretty well in its firstframe 
Feb. 15. In the longer run, it looks to carve rosy, though notspectacular, 
returns.
Effectively a prequel to the 1960 classic “Mughal-e-azam,” centered ona romance 
between the couple’s son and a court dancer, “Jodhaa Akbar”is much more than 
just a preachy tale about religious tolerance betweenMuslims and Hindus. Along 
with scripters Haider Ali and K.P. Saxena,Gowariker has come up with a 
long-limbed story that is utterly simplein structure, but decorated with enough 
character interplay and sideplots to keep the movie ticking over to a powerful 
finale.
Clocking in at a mere 205 minutes, compared with the 223-minute
“Lagaan,” the movie lacks the latter’s narrative tautness, and could
benefit from trimming in the early stages of part one. But from the
first musical interlude a half-hour or so in, there’s little downtime,
despite the intimate nature of the material.
Solemnly narrated by veteran Amitabh Bachchan, pic’s intro sketches
the era, starting in the mid-15th century, when the Mughals (supposedly
descended from the Mongols) invaded India. After a succinctly staged
battle,resistance crumbles a century later and Mughal influence spreads
through northern India.

The first Mughal emperor to be born on Indian soil, Jalaluddin
Mohammad Akbar (Roshan), is a strong but tolerant guy. His arranged
marriage to Jodhaa (Rai)is meant to forge links with the Rajputs, the
dominant clan of northern India with a strong warrior tradition.
However, Jodhaa has two demands: She doesn’t have to convert to
Islam, and she can have a Hindu shrine in her quarters at the Mughal
palace in Agra. Jalaluddin admires her spunk and agrees; when, on their
wedding night, she says she needs more time before sharing a bed, he
agrees again.
Next two hours chart Jalaluddin’s patient “courting” of Jodhaa in
between various attempts by others to destroy the relationship and what
it symbolizes. Villains include Jalaluddin’s devoted but ambitious wet
nurse, Maham Anga (Ila Arun, wonderfully evil), Sharifuddin Hussain
(Nikitin Dheer), Jodhaa’s relative, who teams up with a snubbed Muslim
cleric (Abeer Abrar); and a corrupt governor (Shaji Chaudhary). But
aside from a manufactured misunderstanding between Jalaluddin and
Jodhaa that provides the pre-intermission climax, their growing bond
proves stronger than anything politics can throw at them.
Pic is bookended by well-staged setpieces in which opposing armies
face each other on a vast plain. Otherwise, Gowariker avoids military
spectacle, concentrating instead on sequences that define the central
relationship: the putative lovers dueling in a courtyard; Jalaluddin
identifying Jodhaa among a bevy of veiled women; their eventual,
elaborately choreographed declaration of love.
As well as managing the story’s epic span (and showing a natural
feel for framing his characters in widescreen), Gowariker seems to have
a liking for classic Hollywood epics. Parallels abound, the most
obvious being with “Cleopatra” and “The Fall of the Roman Empire.”
No stranger to elegant-cum-spunky costume role, Rai (here billed
under her married surname, Rai Bachchan) handles Jodhaa with ease.
Biggest surprise is Roshan, who brings a commanding physical presence
and vocal heft that he’s shown in none of his earlier,
standard-Bollyhunk roles.
Production values are lavish, with Neeta Lulla’s costumes
complemented by richly dressed locations in Rajasthan and northern
India. Typically rhythmic, percussive score by A.R. Rahman is stronger
in ceremonial setpieces than lyrical ones, though most of the songs are
not directly sung onscreen. CGI in the battle sequences is OK.

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