

#JOHN ABRAHAM SHOOTOUT AT WADALA WALLPAPERS MOVIE#
Kismat gaadi ki gear ki tarah haim agar time par badal lo toh zindagi bhagne lagti hai."Īlso read: Sandeep Aur Pinky Faraar movie review: Parineeti Chopra, Arjun Kapoor reunite in Dibakar Banerjee's two-hour snooze-fest Dhokhe ki khasiyat hai ki dene wala aksar koi khaas hi hota hai. Sample these: "Kabhi suna hai ki andhere ne sawera hone nahi diya? Khatra agar uthaya na jaaye toh aur badh jaata hai. However, in scenes with Aggarwal, Abraham seemed to struggle a bit to let his emotional side take over.Įven though Mumbai Saga is more of a visual spectacle with all the action happening onscreen, the heavyweight dialogues are just as impressive. I also liked the endearing brotherly bond between Abraham and Babbar. I wish the only two women on the roster - Kajal Aggarwal and Anjana Sukhani - also had something more to offer in this male dominated screenplay. Hashmi's face-off scenes with Abraham are quite 'paisa vasool'.īabbar, Rohit Roy, and Samir Soni also have decent parts to play and do a fairly good job. Emraan Hashmi as encounter specialist Vijay Savarkar is on point. All these men, together, add a lot of gravitas to the story.Ībraham has effortlessly carried the film on his shoulders. Suneil Shetty appears in a short yet impressive cameo as Sada Anna Gulshan Grover stars as Nari Khan, Rao's closest aide Amole Gupte shows up as the cunning gangster Gaitonde and Mahesh Manjrekar plays Bhau, the kingmaker.

It's hard to overlook the 'swag' of the film's predominantly male cast.

The film narrates the story of a common man, Amartya Rao (Abraham) who resorts to violence and turns into a menacing gangster who takes on the mafia, corrupt politicians, cops, and local goons, to safeguard his younger brother Arjun (Prateik Babbar), after Arjun is nearly killed by a gang. Inspired by true events, Mumbai Saga is set in the 90s, when Mumbai was Bombay - the land of Bhaus and Bhais.
