Flying Jatt is the nice super hero film a very cute guy who listens her mother.
How do you recognise a desi superhero? He’s the guy whose costume is stitched by his mom. And at some point, he flies to the local sabzi mandi because mom needslauki. These were my two favourite moments in A Flying Jatt, in which director and co-writer Remo D’Souza presents what is probably the world’s first Sikh superhero in cinema.
It’s a terrific idea and who better to play the superhero and his bebe than Tiger Shroff and Amrita Singh. He combines an astonishing agility with a guileless demeanour and is entirely convincing as an invincible do-gooder who saves the world. And she has a defined strength of character, which sadly too few filmmakers have put to good use.
A Flying Jatt could have been a fun entertainer with mum as the moral centre. Instead, it is just exhausting.
Some of the blame can be placed on the oversized shoulders of WWE wrestler Nathan Jones, who plays the baddie Raka. Raka, as the name suggests, is an old-school villain (remember the days when all the villains were called Raka and Teja?). Like those guys, he keeps laughing maniacally. He also spends so much time grunting and growling before he actually attacks that I wondered why his opponents didn’t just run away.
Raka is powered by pollution, so the more we pollute, the stronger he gets. Yes, A Flying Jatt is also an eco-fable.
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