Gunday: Bro Code Fail Alert
Bhaisexual (noun): Bad boys with beefy biceps and shaved chests,
who love to fight each other after ripping each other’s shirts off. The origin
dates back to Bhai films, circa Dabanng.
Meet the Bhaisexuals — bros against buttons
— Bikram (Ranveer) and Bala (Arjun), two orphan kids from Bangladesh who took
control of the coal trade and made Calcutta their home.
We know it is Calcutta because
a. Every other scene has a visual of the
Howrah bridge.
b. Scenes without the Howrah bridge have a
nightclub called Calcutta.
c. And scenes without either have Durga
Puja.
The boys wear their heart on the sleeve…
okay, shirts. We know this because
a. The heroes wear identical shirts with
hearts painted on them
b. There’s a scene where they are shown
sharing a heart-shaped glass
c. They fall for the girl together and even
woo her together with the same song
Otherwise, the boys are totally evil
Gunday, their hearts are as black as coal. They are not cool, but all coal.
Imagine if Jai and Veeru switched over to
the dark side, became twin Gabbar Singhs and fought over Helen after watching
her gyrate to ‘Mehbooba’.
Which brings us to the problem area of the
film: Why would we then root for them when they kill a man in front of his
brother and scores of innocent policemen? There’s nothing likeable about these
goons. If Bala is the trigger-happy angry young man (cue in cliché), Bikram is
the more responsible elder brother figure who owes his life to Bala because
(ahem, cliché) he once saved his life.
It’s as if director Ali Abbas Zafar
borrowed Arjun Kapoor from Ishaqzaade and
Ranveer Singh fromRam-Leela (both films that end with lovers
who take on the cruel world and prefer to kill and die for love) and never bothered
rewriting their characters or changing their wardrobe. He just added Priyanka
Chopra for misdirection. Otherwise, this is exactly the same story as Romeo and
Juliet but for the fact that the Romeos really love each other more than they
love Juliet.
As if those clichés were not enough, we
have Irrfan Khan as the worst policeman in Bollywood history. He makes even Jai
and Ali (from the Dhoom franchise)
look smarter when instead of arresting the goons after framing them for murder,
he decides to gift them a cabaret dancer girlfriend to fight over and even
orchestrates a public gunfight during Durga Puja, endangering the lives of
innocent civilians.
Bikram and Bala predictably end up enemies
because one of them breaks the Bro Code and covets the girl in the absence of
the other bro.
One becomes good and the other evil as the
makers soon decide to employ yet another Bollywood cliché — the Ramayan
template. The evil Bala who has sworn “to become blacker than coal” kidnaps
“the Sita who claims she has become Ram’s” (short for BikRam’s… Smart no? said
the makers as they hi-fived each other).
It would have been all right if the clichés
were used for a larger reason. But no, the only point the film wants to make is
the biggest cliché of them all — that it is the System *yawn* that breeds
Gunday!
If only the director had the guts to
channel all the sexual tension into a Brokeback Mountain-esque love story instead of this
faux bromance. Unfortunately, the characters are completely in denial of this
chemistry and stick to the unwritten rules of the System. That Bollywood heroes
who love each other to death can only be brothers even if they aren’t blood
related… It’s a strange Bollywood phenomenon. The bromance of the Bhaisexuals.
Genre: Action
Director: Ali Abbas Zafar
Cast: Ranveer Singh, Arjun Kapoor, Irrfan Khan, Priyanka Chopra
Storyline: Instead of arresting two bad boys after framing them, the worst
police officer in Bollywood history gifts them a cabaret dancer to fight over.
Bottomline: Once
Upon a Time in Calcutta Dobaara
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