Fitoor : A slow burner
Cast: Aditya Roy Kapur, Katrina Kaif, Tabu, Aditi Rao Hydari, Rahul Bhat, Lara Dutta, Ajay Devgn
Rated: 6/10
This one comes with great expectations and fails to fulfill them even though Abhishek Kapoor has tried hard to give his tribute to this great classic with a lot of art work. Even though the leads — Aditya Roy Kapoor and Katrina Kaif — have a shortage of expressions, to put it mildly, this one at least is a good looking movie. The locales are stunning, much like Vishal Bhardwaj’s Haider, the sequences stitched up with a lot of dress sense and the story laden with a heavy shairana andaaz.
Now this shairana andaaz may not go too well with the modernities that afflict the boy from Dal once he leapfrogs from an unknown Kashmiri village to the splashy art world of Delhi, but it does make a statement.
And while talking of statements, the biggest one in this movie is made by the queen of the film, Begum Hazrat (Tabu). She is insanely ridden with angst after being let down by her lover, she carries herself well in her age-old sharers and garages, not to mention gaudy jewellery, a smoky hukka and of course a mysterious mansion in the middle of nowhere.
Noor, the Kashmiri boy who falls in love with the Begum’s daughter (Kat) is made a mess of by Tabu in style that intimidates with its subtleness. She does not care about breaking her daughter’s heart either, in her bid to take revenge through a similar but far removed beau she sees in Noor (Aditya).
It is Tabu’s movie if at all names are to be taken. Other than that, there’s an innate heaviness around the film which may not appeal to today’s population especially in a week where love has a syrupy, happy, dreamy flavour to it.
A slow burner that you may want to sit out.
Source: Sunday Pioneer, 14 February, 2016
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