Director: Rajkumar Hirani
Cast: Aamir Khan, Anushka Sharma, Boman Irani, Saurabh
Shukla, Sushant Singh Rajput
Rating: 3 stars
Source : Deccan Hearled
The trinity of Rajkumar Hirani, Aamir Khan and Vidhu Vinod
Chopra guarded “pk” with their lives till it was fit for the world to see him.
There was a carefully constructed mystery around the film leading us to expect
something out-of-the-world from makers of the Munnabhai series and 3 idiots.
Well, with an alien protagonist, you do have something that is quite literally
out of this world. But pk, even though an outsider, has a heart that’s similar
to Munnabhai and Rancho, the brave souls who lay bare the medical, real estate
and the education system in Hirani’s previous films.
Almost as if taking a leaf from his predecessors, pk takes
on the god-men and the farce called religion. Which is where the subject of pk
is not entirely original. The last film that battled it out against the god-men
was the delightful Oh My God! starring Paresh Rawal and Akshay Kumar. It was
the sleeper hit of 2013 but even then the buzz it created fell short of what a
nude Aamir managed with a transistor on the poster of pk. But that’s another
story.
Pk is laced with the Hirani brand of feel-good; it’s a
satire, which is hilarious in parts. The script and screenplay penned by Hirani
and Abhijat Joshi are the strong points of the film. The story unfolds in
Brussels, Rajasthan and Delhi. Jaggu, aka Jagat Janani Anushka Sharma is
studying journalism in Brussels where she stumbles upon and falls in love with
a Pakistani student Sarfaraz (Sushant Singh Rajput). After getting ditched at
the alter, she comes back to her hometown Delhi and takes up a job with a
leading news channel. That’s when she encounters this strange creature on the
roads (Aamir Khan), he resembles a human, has a wide, unblinking stare, wears a
yellow helmet while walking on the streets with a transistor around his neck.
More intriguing than his appearance, are his questions. People call him pk.
He’s looking for bhagwan because bhagwan has something that belongs to him. His
search for his “property” and how his journey exposes the absurdities of not
just religion but civilisation on the whole, forms the crux of the story.
There are ample laughs and the surprises happen now and
again. While dialogues are the hero, the editing could have been crisper. Aamir
gives his all to the role, tries to bring out the childlike curiosity in his
mannerisms, but the superstar shines brighter than his character. Perhaps the
innocence is a bit too practised. Anushka has a meaty role and she excels the
part of a feisty journalist with a story to tell. Boman Irani and Saurabh
Shukla make their screen time count with nuanced renditions of their
characters.
The first half is fast-paced and gradually dilutes the
mystery that pk has been all these months. The second half slumps. While the
satire remains sharp, it blends into a dramatic, tear-jerking climax. But are
satires meant to make you cry? Some of the songs are a “bhaste of time” but
Hirani’s genius lies in that there are no dull moments. Had we not seen OMG!,
pk could have been a work of brilliance. It’s engaging, entertaining and even
thought-provoking. There’s also an alien in this one, but it is out of the
world? Not quite.
From the man who made Munnabhai and 3 Idiots, pk is
certainly not his best work. But this is Raju Hirani. Even his average leaves
the industry far behind.

No comments:
Post a Comment