RaavanNikhat Kazmi, TNN, Jun 17, 2010, 09.11pm IST

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Critic's Rating: 3.5
Cast: Abhishek Bachchan, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, Vikram, Govinda, Ravi
Kishan
Direction: Mani Ratnam
Genre: Drama
Duration: 2 hours 6 minutes
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*More from Raavan*
Trailer
Making of Mani Ratnam's 'Raavan'
First look: Abhishek's wild tribal dance in 'Raavan'
Aishwarya is the 'hero' of Raavan
Watch: 'Raagini' Ash's bubblier side in 'Raavan'
Abhi-Ash promote 'Raavan' at Cannes
'Raavan' will not be screened at IIFA: Mani Ratnam
[image: 
Photogallery]<http://photogallery.indiatimes.com/articleshow/5862546.cms>
Photogallery <http://photogallery.indiatimes.com/articleshow/5862546.cms>[image:
Official Site] <http://www.raavan-thefilm.com/>
Official Site <http://www.raavan-thefilm.com/>
Story: Cop Dev Pratap Sharma (Vikram) has just one mission in his life. He
wants to capture the local outlaw, Beera (Abhishek Bachchan) who may be a
Robin Hood for the tribals around, nevertheless, he is a law breaker. More
importantly, he has kidnapped the cop's beautiful wife, Ragini (Aishwarya
Rai Bachchan) to avenge a personal grouse and has escaped into the dense
jungles. Turn ofevents: the kidnapper falls in love with his trophy victim
who too gets indecisive about where her loyalties lie....

Movie Review: The epics return again to contemporary cinema. After a
re-telling of the Mahabharata against a political backdrop in Prakash Jha's
Raajneeti, cineastes can now feast their eyes on a modern-day rewrite of the
Ramayana, against a cops-and-robbers canvas.

Feast? Yes. The high point of Mani Ratnam's film is primarily its visual
opulence. The film is literally a work of art where one luminescent frame
follows another as the scenes keep shifting from one wet and rocky landscape
to another misty mountainscape. You can't seem to get enough of the montages
that leave you breathless with the excellent camera artistry by Santosh
Sivan and Manikandan. From the opening sequences where Beera (Abhishek)
smashes his boat into wide-eyed Aishwarya's canoe, to the fleeing, flinging,
fulminating visage of Aishwarya, captured against wild waterfalls, turbulent
tidal rivers, crumbling trees and silken drizzle, the film is a string of
breath taking images. So much so, you seem to forget -- and almost forgive
-- the fact that the first half hardly has any story. It is essentially just
one prolonged chase, where cop Dev (Vikram) relentlessly pursues criminal
Beera (Abhishek Bachchan) in order to rescue his wife (Ragini) and book the
fugitive who garners great local support.
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Best Readers' Reviews Vikram performance is real gud unless somebody's
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The paper-thin plot in the first half, does get you somewhat restless,
despite a seminal scene where Sita-esque Aishwarya suddenly discovers a
strange new emotion for a Raavan-esque Abhishek. After having labelled him
beastly and brutish, a complete low-life when compared to her devta-like
husband Dev, she finds herself being involuntarily drawn towards her
kidnapper, despite his muddy visage and his gory past. And herein lies the
second hook that draws you to the film: it's revisionist tale of a Sita-like
heroine flipping for a Raavan-like anti-hero, even as the traditional hero
gets imbued in grey tones.... The anti-hero has always remained an alluring
figure in cinema lore and Mani Ratnam carries his charisma forward with
Raavan.

The second half of the film does get a semblance of story, with adequate
twists and turns which reflect the Surpanakha legend (again revised), the
Hanuman-Sita encounter, the Agni-pariksha demand (re-interpreted again as a
polygraph test) and the film moves from sheer visual to visceral too. There
are enough punches in the second half to keep the momentum going, but by and
large, the film scores mostly on art and aesthete. Everything seems to be
geared to make Raavan an object d'art, including the music (AR Rahman and
Gulzar create a few foot-tapping numbers), the stunts, the cinematography
and the no-make-up and heavily-made-up look of Aishwarya and Abhishek
respectively. However, a little more attention to the narrative was
desperately needed in Raavan.

In terms of performance, Aishwarya stands out as the lead actor, with her
competent rendition of a woman who is torn between her love and loyalty
towards her husband and her attraction towards a misunderstood brigand, with
a heart of gold. Vikram, by and large remains a side hero: somewhat
undefined and formless while Govinda's Hanuman-like rendition of the forest
guard is flippant. Which brings us to Beera: Abhishek Bachchan is immensely
watchable, but he fails to lift the character of the anti-hero to another
level altogether. Maybe, a less of multani mitti (mud packs) and `bagad
billa' antics would have allowed the natural actor in him to surface and
bloom. Also, his other two outings with Mani Ratnam -- Yuva and Guru --
definitely tower above Beera.

But hey, Raavan is chicken soup for the senses. Go, indulge yourself.

A word about:

Performances: Aishwarya leads, Abhishek follows, Vikram lags behind,
Govinda's going nowhere.

Story: The screenplay by Mani Ratnam needed more substance and bite.

Cinematography: Absolutely riveting! The camera artistry by Santosh Sivan
and Manikandan is the heart and soul of Raavan.

Music: AR Rahman and Gulzar create an interesting audio track, although
Rahman's earlier associations with Mani Ratnam remain unforgettable. Numbers
to watch out for: Beera, Behne De and Khili Re.

Styling: Sabyasachi Mukherji's costumes are apt, blending modernity with
tradition, just as the film tries to do. Aishwarya's no-make-up look is a
winner.

Inspiration: The film is a modern day, revisionist adaptation of the epic,
Ramayana.

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