Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Shoot On Sight


Starring: Naseeruddin Shah, Greta Scacchi, Mikaal Zulfikar
Directed by: Jag Mundhra
Rating: ***

In this season of prolonged terrorism both on and off -screen here comes this bit of cold yet compelling candour on film.

Shoot On Sight is a work that works as a wake-up call for those slumbering in their bourgeois belief that terrorism is as far away from home as Osama Bin Laden is from America.

It's a frightening piece of fiction laced with a fair amount of warmth and affection that lulls us into a false sense of wellbeing.

In essence the plot takes us back to the domesticated terrorism of Alan Pakula's The Devil's Own, or more recently Subhash Ghai's Black And White where a young wide-eyed seemingly- unspoilt guest in the house turns out to be a closet-terrorism.

Where Shoot On Sight scores is in laying out the blueprint for global terrorism throught characters who appear real in words, body language and political ideology.

Jagmohan Mundhra has earlier balanced a social cause with a message in Provoked. Here the 'thrill' element emanates far more effortlessly from the characters and their predicament, partly because the theme of terrorism renders itself far dramatically to a cinematic treatment than domestic violence.

London is shot by cinematographer Madhu Ambat with all its inherent buzz and blemishes without fuss or rush. The flow of adrenaline as the British cops zero- in on their distinguished Pakistani colleague's nephew as a terrorist is rather reined-in than rushed.This isn't a film that's in a hurry to get there. But it knows how to value the audiences' time.

And this is where Shoot On Sight scores the optimum impact. Mundhra revels in generous levels of understatement most of the time.

Whether showing the fanaticism in the mosque(Om Puri, aptly extravagant) or the dilemma of the cop's Pakistan-British daughter whose boyfriend wants to go 'all the way' (and come fast)….Mundhra packs it all into the simmering cultural cauldron with dexterity and dignity.

While on the whole the characters in the cop- protagonist Tariq Ali's home and workplace come to life with vigorous fluency, some portions of the storytelling fall flat.

Naseer's assistant played by Laila Rouass (is there a stifled sexual attraction here?) comes to a soggy end in a river with the suddenness of a video-game with its socket pulled out.

The hastily -executed climax in a shoppingmall where Tariq Ali's nephew is shot down with a sweeping-under-the-carpet haste, is a screaming shame.

What happened?!

Mostly, Mundhra uses economy of expression to great effect. Sometimes just one or two scenes are enough to establish the camaraderie between characters creating a crisscross of inter-relations with disconcerting deftness.

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