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Shaitaan movie review: If a raucous and mildly unsettling hostage drama with a more-than-mildly entertaining R Madhavan is enough for you, go watch it.

Shaitaan movie review: I often find myself marvelling at Ajay Devgn’s unending appetite for stories and treatments that showcase him as the inevitable liberator. He plays a specific kind of ultra-masculine, unfaltering hero — someone overly preoccupied with ideals and a supposedly endearing naivete that’s supposed to be compensated for with brawn, a cultivated smoothness and a fiery temper. Cases in point include Gangaajal (2003), the Singham franchise and Raid (2018). (Also Read – Maidaan trailer: Ajay Devgn plays a tough coach in Chak De! India for football. Watch) Shaitaan movie review: R Madhavan invades Ajay Devgn's house Shaitaan movie review: R Madhavan invades Ajay Devgn's house What I marvel more at is the other half of his recent filmography, where he plays the goofy, rough-around-the-edges dad type who has everything going for him in life, including a loving family that are at the centre of his world. He’s done it in the Drishyam films and Shivaay (2016). In Vikas Bahl’s Shaitaan, the saviour in Ajay Devgn meets the father in him. Why I go on so much about his filmography is because there’s much in this torture porno that hinges on Ajay’s set character mould as Kabir Rishi, yet another compromised father fighting for the life and honour of his daughter. Hindustan Times - your fastest source for breaking news! Read now. Hostage drama tropes galore The chills and flinching that come with Shaitaan are not because the film and the situations its screenplay conjures up are actually, genuinely, organically horrifying. They come as a product of the situational response template that twisted psychological thrillers and hostage dramas always deliver. Vikas' film takes both of those sub-genres and tosses it in an overdone gravy of the supernatural. That is what makes the final product so vapid. An uninvited guest (R Madhavan) at a family’s remote farmhouse in the hills isn’t unnerving enough — he needs to be a “vashikaran” specialist whose methods are beyond the grasp of science (are we really still saying that?) and whose ends have something to do with, well, with hypnotising and abducting teenage girls and rounding them up for a jauhar-style sacrifice so that the reins of the netherworld could be his. Many Indian children grow up being told not to accept candy or treats from strangers, which is how this diabolical sadist gains control of Janhvi (Janki Bodiwala), Ajay’s daughter. For his portrayal of this unhinged interloper, Madhavan taps into his proclivity for mischief-monger characters. His insinuating himself into the family’s interpersonal dynamics and soon after into their house might begin to seem some kind of masterful, but this too has been done countless number of times on screen (my favourites being The Killing of a Sacred Deer and Funny Games in the West, and Kaun? and Road closer home). What’s also become boring and rather icky in a lot of movies starring Ajay Devgn is the reliance on brutality, torture and the sexual vulnerability of young women. Everybody, including the psychotic intruder, is beaten up and should you flinch and close your eyes to escape the unnecessary heft of it, the movie makes sure the volume reaches your ears. The antagonist commands his subject to clobber her eight-year-old brother’s head against a sharp-edged bannister before casually asking her to slap her face hard enough for her parents standing on the porch to hear it, with their heads hanging low and their eyes bloodshot Additionally, some elements are not only off-putting but rather dated – the gaze on young women, particularly Janhvi, because she gets more screen time, and the closeted transphobia coming to light in the wee hours when Ajay, stabbed through his palm, grapples with two characters that seem like transwomen.

Shaitaan movie review: I often find myself marvelling at Ajay Devgn’s unending appetite for stories and treatments that showcase him as the inevitable liberator. He plays a specific kind of ultra-masculine, unfaltering hero — someone overly preoccupied with ideals and a supposedly endearing naivete that’s supposed to be compensated for with brawn, a cultivated smoothness and a fiery temper. Cases in point include Gangaajal (2003), the Singham franchise and Raid (2018). (Also Read – Maidaan trailer: Ajay Devgn plays a tough coach in Chak De! India for football. Watch)

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