Rating: 4/5
"Khel khel mein, Khel khel ke, Khel khel ye aa jaayega
"Khel khel mein, Khel khel ke, Khel khel ye aa jaayega
Haar jeet se,
Haar jeet ke, Jeet haar sikhaayega."
The above
words in Amitabh Bachchan's baritone sets this steady emotional thriller.
Two mourning
fathers delving for revenge with Chess playing their mentor constitutes the
basic premise of Wazir. Poignant story, crisp writing, runs high on diverse emotions
painted beautifully by excellent performances, Wazir tops in almost all
departments.
Danish
(Farhan), an officer in anti-terrorism squad, loses his daughter in a shootout
resulting in his wife, Ruhaana (Aditi Hydari) distancing herself from him,
blaming him for the loss of their little daughter. Deep in grief and boiling in
need for revenge, Danish sabotages an encounter operation leading in his
suspension. He meets Omkarnath Dhar (Amitabh) who is a wheelchair ridden, queer chess
master, who slowly brings Danish out of his depression. Omkar subsequently
shares his own grief at the loss of his wife in an accident, his own handicap and
then the death of his daughter under mysterious circumstances.
The movie
begins with a beautiful song "Tere Bin" picturised on Danish and Ruhaana-
their marriage, their daughter and their happy life in slow motion. A perfect
happy family. The first half offers thrill and is gripping. The shootout scenes
and action sequences are sharply done. Danish's sorrow and rage are established
effectively in quick time. On the other hand, Omkar's practical approach yet
the sadness in his eyes not concealed, his witty remarks and words with deeply
hidden meaning easily makes him lovable. The friendship between Danish and
Omkar build effortlessly especially in the scene when they get drunk. The
moments when Omkar says "Yaara" automatically brings a smile. Omkar's
attempts in finding truth is met with hurdles as his own life comes under
threat. Danish, who had been in mourning finally gets a motive in life. To get
justice for Omkar- to find the truth behind the death of Omkar's daughter.
The film's
only little flaw would be the second half- not completely, but the story
falters a bit, not meeting the standards set by the first half. Chess plays its
role but not to the extent anticipated.
Standout
moments : Danish playing chess with kids, attacks on Omkar and his house, Omkar
and Danish's friendship and of course the climax.
Music is fair.
Dialogues are clever. Cinematography does its part perfectly. Writing - though
good could have been better especially in the second half. The writing of the
play and the direction in the climax deserves an extra point. Aditi Rao Hydari
plays her role elegantly. Neil Nitin Mukesh and John Abraham do guest
appearances but doesn't leave a mark. But what makes the movie work superlatively
is the masterly performances from Farhan Akhtar and Amitabh Bachchan. Farhan
plays his role with extreme sincerity while Amitabh portrays his character with
finesse. They shoulder the entire movie with diligence.
Wazir is a welcome watch after a dry run of mindless movies.

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