By Taran Adarsh, September 11, 2009 - 10:43 IST
Gangster movies - this genre has been done to death. Films like PARINDA [Vidhu Vinod Chopra] and SATYA [Ramgopal Varma] stand tall on this list. But, of late, the genre has taken a backseat since people aren't too keen on watching bloodshed and the same old saga of an innocent taking to the world of crime.
BAABARR belongs to the same genre, yet is an exception. It shows how people, even kids, live by the gun and die by the gun. It tells you that crime never ends, it only changes faces. It tells of the wicked nexus between cops-politicians-gangsters and the deterioration of the law and order machinery. Also, this one's not Mumbai-centric, but is set in Uttar Pradesh.

A 12-year-old boy picks up a country made gun and shoots a man in cold blood. His eyes are devoid of any emotion. His heart exhibits no remorse. After shooting the person in broad daylight, he walks the streets of Aman Ganj with a gun in one hand. Everyone present in the market watches this young lad walk with no fear.
The boy, who started from the streets of Aman Ganj, had trespassed every barrier of crime. For the 10 years that followed, he traumatized one and all. His reign of fear terrorized everyone in the state, right from the common man to the Government. He was Baabarr [Sohum Shah].
When this reign of fear knew no bounds, the Government summoned a man to put an end to all of this: Encounter specialist S.P. Dwivedi [Mithun Chakraborty]. The order was simple, arrest him or kill him.
What's the star cast like, that's one question people generally pose when you ask them out for a movie. BAABARR has a new face - Sohum - but that exactly is its USP. Fortunately, he doesn't carry the baggage of an image and that makes the character even more believable.

Writer Ikram Akhtar's script is power-packed and has several twists and turns in those 2 hours. In fact, even the final sequence of the film catches you unaware and that's what makes BAABARR stand out from the crowd. The dialogues deserve special mention.
BAABARR is Ashuu Trikha's best work so far. His handling of the dramatic sequences is commendable. Action scenes [Abbas Ali Moghul] are true to life. Cinematography [Suhass Gujarathi] deserves full marks. In fact, a film like BAABARR is difficult to shoot and it must've been a challenge for the DoP to give the right texture to the film.
Sohum lives the character of Baabarr and delivers a performance that you carry home after the show has concluded. The film would've fallen flat had it been entrusted to a lesser actor. Mithun Chakraborty is very good. In fact, this is amongst his better works. Om Puri stands out. This film should easily stride into 'Best of Om Puri' catalogue. Tinnu Anand is a revelation. Where was Tinnu all this while? Watch his death sequence in the film and it's sure to give you gooseflesh. Shakti Kapoor is top notch. Again, he seems to be in form after a long, long time.

On the whole, BAABARR is a captivating and powerful tale. Sure, there's excessive violence, but there's a reason behind it and that works in its favour. At the box-office, it has best chances in the Northern belt and also at single screens mainly.





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