
Directed By - Karan Malhotra
Starring - Hrithik Roshan, Sanjay Dutt, Rishi kapoor, Priyanka Chopra, Zarina Wahab,Dewen Bhojani.
In one of the scenes in the cult Agneepath (1990), we see Vijay Dinanath Chauhan (Bachchan) mouth a famous dialogue "Hawa tez chalta hai Dinka Rao, topi sambhaalo gir jaayega". It's the first time in the film you see Vijay openly showing his anger and bitterness regarding his father's unjustified killing, while in the remake you see Vijay (Roshan) carrying that streak of vengeance in every frame. What one understands (and should keep in mind) is that the two films work essentially on two different tangents. While the original was a crime drama about the rise of a man from the slums to the high echelons of the underworld with the revenge subplot thrown in somewhere, the remake is purely a revenge saga.
The remake starts exactly like its predecessor, in the seaside village of mandwa in 1977.The plot kicks in with the unjust killing of village schoolteacher Dinanath Chauhan. His murder at the hands of sadistic villain Kancha, played menacingly by Dutt, is witnessed by his young son Vijay who grows up with an indefatigable thirst for revenge. As Vijay comes to mumbai with his pregnant mother, played by Zarina Wahab,he aligns himself with Kancha's rival - drug lord and pim Rauf Lala, taken on in an unforgettable turn by Rishi Kapoor.
Fifteen years down the line. Vijay is a trusted hitman and scion to Lala's empire. Estranged from his mother and teenage sister for the life of crime he chooses. He is the gunman with a heart of gold and the residents of his chawl look upto him as their godfather. In the midst of this he also manages to fall in love with the motor mouth local girl Kali (Chopra)
The film forges ahead with high voltage action sequences, chilling confrontations, double crossing and bloodshed and Vijay moves ahead with the single minded purpose of destroying Kancha. He plans his moves carefully as if on a chessboard and is ready to kill anybody in his way even Lala who is a father like figure. Ultimately how he finishes kancha and redeems his father's death is what Agneepath is about.
Karan Malhotra does an admirable job for a first timer. Remaking a film which has acquired a cult status over the years, not to mention has fetched national awards for its popular leads, is a difficult task. What he does smartly is that he builds his own characters, borrowing from the orginal only when absolutely needed. For example, the Vijay of the earlier film is a don with a heart of goldd who would do no harm to the people who have been good to him. The Vijay of this film is not absolutely devoid of morals but yet is more cruel and ruthless than its predecessor. Unlike the earlier film the Vijay is not larger than life but is like an everyday man who is suffering with the agony of his father's unjust death. The film proclaims 'Revenge is the purest emotion' and the character of Vijay sticks to that perfectly. Of course the characterisations have loopholes like the absolutely useless character of Lala's mentally retarded son and the underused Gaitonde played by Om Puri who pops up now and then to give Vijay moral sermons. But the character of kancha and Rauf are geniuses while one is sadistic, the other is ruthless. While one is menacing the other is calculative. Ultimately what becomes the biggest problem for the film is its over-indulgent length.
Of the cast Priyanka Chopra has precious litttle to do, Zarina Wahab is underuused and Om Puri is plain wasted. What pulls the film through is the three leading men. We will start in ascending order. Firstly its refreshing to see sanjay dutt in a role he truly enjoys after seeing him sleepwalk througha dozen or so films earlier. The character in the remake is refined. There is a sadistic streak in him that comes of the low self esteem he has in himself through out his life which comes out as a superiority complex. This complicated character is brought to life by Dutt who lights up the screen with his menacing swagger and sheer bulk. Rishi Kapoor possibly delivers the greatest performance of his career as Rauf Lala. You will be stunned to see this man etch out this cruel and classless character withe ease and grace after seeing him play the quintessential chocolate boy/man for 3 decades or so. Finally the greatest strength of the film is Hrithik Roshan. It's Hrithik Roshan who redefines Agneepath.He plays the character without the flourish that Bachchan brought, instead turning him into a ruthless machine for revenge. Yet shouldering layers of pain, hurt and rage making you match each step with him on his journey. He commands the camera once again and delivers a riveting, sincere performance.
All in All its a decent one time watch if the two agneepath's are not compared (which frankly they cannot be). Only if the film was not so agonisingly long..
Rating - 7.7/10