Watch the trailor here
Mumbai 28th Aug 2015(Sana Sayed): A Phantom-like
vigilante is surreptitiously chosen by RAW officers to bring the perpetrators
of the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks to book.
A shamed army
officer, Daniyal Khan (Saif) is living a life of anonymity. Court-martialed
because evidence points out that he was not with his team when the enemy
attacked, he yearns to earn his stripes back. As it so happens, there is a
covert intelligence group, who is seething that the Centre has not been able to
avenge the 26/11 Mumbai carnage.
They know permissions from official
quarters will not come. So, they just take it upon themselves to launch a
`punish-those-terrorists' movement. After all, like one young officer (Zeeshan
Ayub) says, 10 audacious guys from across the border did bring Mumbai to her
knees on that fateful night in 2008, killing 166 people.
So Daniyal is
despatched across continents to find the fanatic four who plotted 26/11. They
even whisper to him that, he can `accidentally' kill.
As court-martial led soldier Daniyal, Khan takes the idea
of a game face to a whole new level. For all of 147 minutes, he sports
precisely one expression, give or take some make up and facial hair. He doesn't
move as much as lumber, he is thoroughly indiscreet and everywhere he goes, he
sticks out like a sore thumb. If this was because of his good looks, we'd
forgive it. But Khan spends the entire film looking both awkward and impassive,
as though he's got a hangover and is doing his best to block out the headache.
One can't help but feel that
there was hope and a prayer governing the decision to name Katrina Kaif's
character Nawaz in Phantom. Sadly, those prayers were not answered.
Almost sharing a name with Nawazuddin Siddiqui doesn't ensure the transference
of his acting ability. Compared to Khan's one expression, Kaif has none.
Whether she's crying over lives lost or reminiscing about having tea at the Taj
Mahal Hotel, there's not a hint of emotion to mar her perfect complexion and
gorgeous features.
As cinema, this
thriller is over-simplified, though the gloss adds to the large-screen appeal.
Saif is adept; Kat is pretty appealing (pun on the pretty because her make-up
is intact even in the battlefield). Zeeshan and his jingoism in the climax
gives you that proud-India moment. And, if you're still licking the wounds of
that senseless Mumbai massacre, then Phantom is the
balm you should reach out for.
PHANTOM RAISES A TOAST TO THE ANONYMOUS INDIAN
BRAVE HEART
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