Director:
Kabir Khan
Writers:
Vijayendra Prasad (original story),
Vijayendra Prasad (screenplay),
Stars: Salman Khan, Kareena Kapoor, Harshaali Malthotra |
Storyline
While he wants to look out for his own, Bajrangi's (Salman Khan)
affection for an infant makes him cross India Pakistan border in order
to reunite the infant with her family. Written by
Anonymous
Details
Country:India
Language:Hindi
Release Date:17 July 2015
movie Reviews
Thoroughly enjoyable from start to finish
I went to see BB on the
day of release with my wife and 17 year old son. I'm not Indian or
Pakistani, but white British, so it was fun sat in a cinema full of
Pakistanis, to watch a film that could have painted Pakistani in a
negative light.
Judging by the murmuring I could her there did seem to be some people during the interval that were not too impressed with the film - slow, boring, blah, blah - but by the end I think everyone left happy.
From a white British guys perspective I thought it was a terrific film, and so did my wife and son. Great story, interesting characters, a ridiculously cute kid who stole the show without saying very much, excellent music, and some scenery that took your breath away.
I thought Salman Kahn was great, much more three dimensional than I was expecting. Kareena Kapoor provided a massive dose of eye-candy and played her part well too, although it would have been nice for that part to have been developed more.
But for me the star of the show - other than Harshaali Malthotra, the little girl - was definitely Nawazuddin Siddiqui. He is one of the most mesmerising actors I've ever seen. He could read the label of a sauce bottle and have everyone transfixed.
In typical Bollywood style the first half was your typical setting-the-scene, which I thought was done very well, and it kept me interested throughout, but after the interval, as soon as Nawazuddin Siddiqui made his appearance, the film took off and didn't let-up until the end.
All-in-all a thoroughly enjoyable film for all the family.
Judging by the murmuring I could her there did seem to be some people during the interval that were not too impressed with the film - slow, boring, blah, blah - but by the end I think everyone left happy.
From a white British guys perspective I thought it was a terrific film, and so did my wife and son. Great story, interesting characters, a ridiculously cute kid who stole the show without saying very much, excellent music, and some scenery that took your breath away.
I thought Salman Kahn was great, much more three dimensional than I was expecting. Kareena Kapoor provided a massive dose of eye-candy and played her part well too, although it would have been nice for that part to have been developed more.
But for me the star of the show - other than Harshaali Malthotra, the little girl - was definitely Nawazuddin Siddiqui. He is one of the most mesmerising actors I've ever seen. He could read the label of a sauce bottle and have everyone transfixed.
In typical Bollywood style the first half was your typical setting-the-scene, which I thought was done very well, and it kept me interested throughout, but after the interval, as soon as Nawazuddin Siddiqui made his appearance, the film took off and didn't let-up until the end.
All-in-all a thoroughly enjoyable film for all the family.