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Dunki Review

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Dunki Review: Hirani And Khan Collaborate On Well-Intended Romance

The Long Road To Understanding Our Immigrant Dreams

Arash Nahandian by Arash Nahandian
1 year ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 6 mins read
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At its core, Dunki is about the universal hopes and yearnings that compel people to leave home in search of better lives abroad. This timely Bollywood drama from acclaimed director Rajkumar Hirani examines the complex push and pull between pursuing dreams versus accepting reality.

When a group of struggling friends in rural Punjab set their sights on emigrating to London, they soon discover the deck is stacked against the poor. After exhausting legal options, they resort to dangerous illegal methods with the help of Shah Rukh Khan’s worldly-wise soldier Hardy. He develops an affectionate bond with Taapsee Pannu’s headstrong Manu along their tumultuous journey crisscrossing borders.

While laced with Hirani’s signature warmth and humor, Dunki doesn’t shy away from the grim travails faced by migrants. It ultimately highlights how hopes for financial security and comfort in Western countries often clash with the ground realities of surviving as undocumented immigrants. As the characters age, they grapple with doubts over the sacrifices made for distant dreams.

More than a simple romance, this affecting story underscores universal questions of belonging, community, and what really constitutes the immigrant’s elusive better life. With resonant themes and Khan at his earnest best, Dunki tugs at the heartstrings.

Chasing Distant Dreams Across Borders

At its heart, Dunki follows a group of friends in 1990s Punjab struggling to better their lives through the prospect of immigrating abroad. After Manu’s family falls into debt, she becomes fixated on getting to London to restore their ancestral home. Her pals Buggu and Balli have similar dreams of escaping near-poverty in their village.

They try every trick to get a visa – from fake marriages to worthless degrees from sham schools. But the system keeps the poor down. Eventually their path crosses with Shah Rukh Khan’s kindly soldier Hardy, who takes pity on them and promises to smuggle the crew to the UK illegally by the underground “donkey” routes used by countless migrants.

What follows next is by turns a thrilling survival tale and a cutting social commentary. As the group slowly snakes through the Middle East and Europe, dodging gunfire and traversing punishing terrain, they lose many fellow travelers along the way. The nightmarish journey lays bare the incredible risks immigrants face chasing hopes of a better life.

Yet through all this, Hirani still finds moments of warmth and humor – whether in Manu and Hardy’s sweet romance or in laughs at the absurd hurdles to getting a visa. That glimmer of hope propels them forward, even as the gravity of their trip sets in.

Ultimately the tragedy is how the characters’ dreams clash with reality. Life in London as an undocumented immigrant proves an even more harrowing struggle than their passage overseas. Their vision of security and comfort remains distant as the threats of poverty and deportation loom. We’re left pondering whether the sacrifices and prices paid to get there were truly worth it in the end.

In resonant themes of dislocation and chasing distant dreams vs coming to terms with realities on the ground, Dunki proves a poignant, bittersweet reflection on ambition and community. More than just a romance, it highlights the humanity behind one of today’s most pressing global issues.

Earnest Ensemble Brings Heart to Trying Journey

In the pivotal role of world-weary soldier Hardy, Shah Rukh Khan brings his trademark earnest charm. Whether romancing Taapsee Pannu’s headstrong Manu or shepherding his band of misfits abroad, SRK’s empathy and grace anchors this emotional journey. He toggles convincingly between swashbuckling action hero, frustrated by red tape, and a softer romantic lead. We feel his heartache as dreams slip away from those he sworn to help.

Dunki Review

As the spirited Manu, Pannu vividly depicts her ambition to rebuild her family’s life. She captures both Manu’s feisty determination and her moments of doubt, grounded by palpable chemistry with Khan even into their later years. Anil Grover and Vikram Kochhar likewise exude comic camaraderie as her scheming, ever-bickering friends.

Yet the standout is Vicky Kaushal’s gut-wrenching turn as hot-headed Sukhi, who upends his life chasing lost love to London. Kaushal brings astonishing range to what amounts to a cameo role, fearlessly excavating layers of trauma and heartbreak.

Indeed, one success is how Hirani brings depth to roles that could have been mere quirky sidekicks. The friends and family back in Punjab feel multidimensional, heightening the stake in their thwarted dreams. We understand how this journey eats at their souls and tests the bounds of friendship & romance alike.

In living through every emotional beat of Dunki’s affectingly earnest ensemble, we come to profoundly understand the human hopes and sacrifices that fuel such an impossible odyssey. More than any sweeping camera move, it’s these performances that linger.

Signature Hirani Warmth With Sweeping Scale

In examining such a politically-charged issue, director Rajkumar Hirani brings his characteristic light touch, embedding social commentary within approachable humor and romance. Dunki bears all the hallmarks of his signature style – emotional resonance, laughs in unexpected places, misfit characters chasing dreams beyond their reach.

Dunki Review

Yet here Hirani also demonstrates newfound scale and visual panache. As the intrepid crew snakes across continents, we’re treated to sweeping tableaus – from the arid mountain passes of rural Iran to the snow-capped Turkish borderlands to the damp back alleys of London. Hirani stages border crossings and mountain treks with kinetic thrills. The perilous terrain becomes palpable, accentuating the odds stacked against our migrants.

Cinematographers Muraleedharan C.K. and Manush Nandan lens Dunki with a vibrantly glossy sheen befitting a blockbuster production. Melding old-school Bollywood razzmatazz with grittier contemporary realism, their versatile camerawork highlights both the visual splendor and emotional intimacy on display.

Likewise, composer Pritam’s versatile soundtrack runs the gamut from pulse-quickening tension to gentle romantic melody. Songs underscore every shade of feeling, enriching character depth through soulful vocals by Sonu Nigam, Javed Ali and more. The music stirs as strongly as the journey it accompanies.

Bolstered by its technical and directorial craft, Dunki makes an ambitious artistic leap while retaining the heartfelt compassion that defines Rajkumar Hirani’s cinema. If nothing else, it looks and sounds wonderful.

A Heartfelt Take on a Gut-Wrenching Journey

Dunki brings Rajkumar Hirani’s gift for emotional resonance to a timely topic, realized by an earnest ensemble. As we bond with its hopes and dreams, the fraught immigrant journey grows profoundly affecting. Khan makes for an always sympathetic lead, with ace support from rising star Taapsee Pannu and scene-stealer Vicky Kaushal. Hirani and D.O.P. Muraleedharan stage heart-pounding border crossings with newfound action verve.

Dunki Review

Pritam’s versatile soundtrack also soars. Songs amplify moods as conditions shift, underlining bonds of family, friendship and romance strained by circumstance. Though best suited for fans of glossy melodrama, the film bears universally relatable themes on building lives abroad. With people displaced worldwide today, Dunki strikes a chord.

Admittedly, the deliberately light tone can sometimes distract from harsh realities during the group’s passage overseas. For a film titled after dangerous illegal smuggling routes, the risky trip feels rushed onscreen. Given its lengthy runtime, later emotional beats also start to lose impact through repetition. Some gags miss the mark, including questionable punchlines around immigration processes and learning English.

Dunki offers thoughtful commentary on global migration, realized through fine lead performances. A few tonal hiccups aside, its compassionate lens puts recognizably human faces on an ongoing crisis. We could use more mainstream films tackling social issues with such grace.

An Affecting Ode to Immigrant Dreams

Flaws aside, Dunki marks an ambitious step for Rajkumar Hirani, marrying his signature empathetic style with a vital global issue. Khan makes for a soulful lead as ever, even if the overlong runtime tests our investment. Any repetitive gags fade beside vivid glimpses into an epic struggle faced by multitudes daily.

Dunki Review

In capturing the tug-of-war between dreams and reality across borders, Hirani presents a timely human story against an eternal backdrop. We see how national borders disproportionately curb the poor, yet cannot constrain hope itself. Wherever there are those kept down by circumstance, longing will stretch toward some brighter distant shore.

The director stumbles occasionally while splitting focus between sweeping thriller, trademarked comedy and cross-continental romance. But cameo ace Vicky Kaushal electrifies, while luminous DP work amplifies the emotional range. Whatever its flaws, Dunki tribute’s India’s timeless diasporic yearning with rare sympathy.

Bollywood fans will delight at Hirani’s long-awaited Shah Rukh Khan collaboration. Beyond just romance, here is a bittersweet ode to the immigrant condition – at once thrilling, amusing and quietly heartrending. Destined to spark dialogue around the globe, Dunki plays in theaters worldwide this December.

The Review

Dunki

7 Score

Though clunky at times, Dunki remains a well-intentioned, emotional journey about the personal toll of chasing distant dreams. Khan brings his signature empathy to a resonant global crisis, even when the script betrays hints of Bollywood excess. Beyond the spectacle, tender turns from Pannu and Kaushal leave a mark. For all its flaws, Hirani finds poignancy on an eternal human theme - our unavoidable tug between ambition and acceptance.

PROS

  • Strong lead performance by Shah Rukh Khan
  • Timely and resonant themes related to immigration
  • Effective direction and cinematography
  • Emotionally affecting love story
  • Strong chemistry between the lead actors
  • Memorable music soundtrack

CONS

  • Overlong runtime leads to repetition
  • Uneven blend of tones from thrilling to comedic
  • Secondary characters could be more developed
  • Illegal journey glossed over too quickly
  • Ending doesn't fully deliver on setup

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Amardeep JhaComedyDramaDunkiKetan DesaiManush NandanPriya SindherRajkumar HiraniRyan CretneyShah Rukh KhanTaapsee Pannu
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