A Flying Jatt movie reviews
Here's what the critics are saying about 'A
Flying Jatt', starring Tiger Shroff, Jacqueline Fernandez, Nathan Jones, Kay
Kay Menon and Amrita Singh:
Hindustan Times
A Flying Jatt begins on a good note, picks up the
pace, throws some light-hearted moments, and then faces the curse of the second
half. It drags its feet from becoming the smart film just when it’s needed and
goes for the all-explaining commentary. Without the spoon-feeding, it would
have become a much more entertaining film.
The Indian Express
Apart from the usual high-octane stunts of Tiger
Shroff, one can expect to see some intimidating villainy courtesy Hollywood
import Nathan Jones. For those who want to see some romance, Jacqueline
promises to fulfill that desire as she seals her love for Tiger with an
onscreen kiss. For kids, there is much entertainment in store right from action
to Tiger's amazing dancing skills. Not to forget, Amrita Singh makes an
appearance on the silver screen after long.
The story revolves around Mrs Dhillon (Amrita
Singh) and her son Aman (Tiger Shroff), a martial arts instructor who is afraid
of heights and dogs, and is often the butt of pranks in the school where he
teaches. The industrialist Malhotra (Kay Kay Menon) runs factories that are
ruining the air and water in the vicinity. Mrs D stands up to him when he
demands to buy land belonging to her and her neighbours, including a patch on
which stands a sacred tree.
LiveMint
To begin a superhero film with a plaintive song
about the environment may seem like an unusual choice, but pollution isn’t just
a major theme in A Flying Jatt, it’s literally the villain. The bald brawler
who appears in Aman’s nightmare is buried under toxic waste. As per comic book
tradition, what doesn’t kill you makes you a supervillain, in this case one who
grows stronger with every sniff of exhaust fumes and cigarette smoke (for once,
that painful ‘smoking kills’ warning seemed justified). Raka (former wrestler
Nathan Jones) is resurrected and is employed by crooked business Malhotra (Kay
Kay Menon)—who’s been trying to acquire the land owned by Aman’s family—to kill
the Jatt.
India Today
Choreographer-turned-director Remo D'Souza sticks
to the good-versus-evil formula, essential to the genre. But here he stretches
it even further with his didactic approach highlighting the perils of pollution
and embarking on his own Swachh Bharat Abhiyan. Remo even s himself -
"Everything has an alternative. Except Mother Earth." Move over Rumi,
Remo the environmentalist is here. Remo and his writers are certainly not
devoid of vision - in the epic climatic fight a Chinese shuttle is damaged and
a space station turns into a battleground - but the execution is amateurish
with poor special effects and camp production.
Movie Talkies
As for the film itself, it becomes very obvious
from the opening credits itself that Remo considered kids to be his target
audience for the film. We would have not minded it but for the preachy
undertone throughout the film, whether it be about pollution (there is one
scene wherein even the antagonist Malhotra delivers a lecture to the audience
about how pollution is killing the planet!) or the Sikh culture. At one point,
you will be tempted to wonder if Remo was slyly making a funny documentary on
pollution under the garb of a superhero flick.
Title: A Flying Jatt movie reviews
Description:
A Flying Jatt movie reviews – A
Flying Jatt, starring Tiger Shroff, Jacqueline Fernandez, Nathan Jones, Kay
Kay Menon and Amrita Singh
Keywords: A Flying Jatt, Entertainment, Movie, Tiger Shroff, Hindustan Times, The Indian Express, LiveMint,
India Today, Movie Talkies
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