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Border 2, By far The Best Indian War Film Since Border

Rating: **** ½

When J P Dutta made the  genre-defining  Border  in 1997, little did he know  that 29 years later, the crossborder crisis would only be exacerbated.This spirited spiritual  sequel, if one may call it that, is an absolute winner: razor-sharp dialogues, tears and  witticisms  flowing in a  stream of compelling consciousness, characters including the  women etched in strokes  of  veracity, the war scenes spectacular and the  interaction among the soldiers and between soldiers and  their loved ones  so brilliantly constructed, …this  feels like the best war film since Border and makes the other recent war films feel utterly battle fatigued.

Border  2 is  a triumph on every level. The writing(Anurag Singh,Sumit Arora)  moves in  divergent often  devilishly unforeseen ways, but the scattered strands of storytelling  always meets  at  the crucial intersections to remind us that good writing, like good travel, is  all about timing.

This is  a film that  doesn’t let us  feel the weight of its length.  Even after  sitting open-mouthed,  smiling and  sobbing sometimes simultaneously, for more than three hours, I wanted more. I wanted to know about the soldiers’ and their  family. How  do Fateh Singh(Sunny Deol) and his wife Simi(Mona Singh) cope with the death of their  only son , after the  dust and blood on the battlefront has  settled  down,when   all the blazing guns  have quietened down…

Judiciously, Border 2  concentrates  more on the  soldiers’  family life than the  battle itself. When war breaks out , it is captured  with  flawless  fireworks  and  subdued  hijinks.The backstory for every soldier is  written  vividly and  absorbingly.

Indeed  I have not seen cinema  achieve a better merger of  human drama and  battle action than this.

Edited(by  Manish More) with  not a  single superfluous frame to spoil the flow , and with a  background score(by John Stewart Eduri) which is aggressive and exhilarating without getting in the way of the  storytelling, Border 2  invites us into  its soldierly  world  without  overdoing the  jingoism.

As  expected Sunny Deol has the  most crowdpleasing  lines.He  chews on them with  arrogant  pride, letting the ‘boys’ know  who  the man of the show is.  The  ‘boys’ do well for themselves  too. Varun Dhawan and  Diljit Dosanjh are the cloud and the sunshine  duo. Without cutting into Deol’s supremacy , they  bring  a whole lot of heft to the  proceedings.

Among the female  actors, Mona Singh scores a  sweeping sentimental sixer. She is part  of the best written sequence in which Deol receives  a letter from his dead son.Pause for goosebumps.

Moments that remind us of how precious every moment of life is, even when  death awaits at the next streetcorner, validate  the  film’s  highly  persuasive dramatic  pitch. Border 2 is one of those films that just makes you feel  good to be alive.

 

 

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