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Added on: 2020-09-28 11:19:04 Total Views: 1,317
Description: Video details - XdxvizGxmFw: Sultan Full Movie In Hindi Salman Khan & Anushka Sharma | New Release Movie | Facts & Story Somewhere within the second half of the Ali Abbas Zafar film Randeep Hooda, who plays the coach of wrestler Sultan (Salman Khan) says of him: “Jat hai na asli (Isn’t he a true blue jat)”. i wont to be immensely amused by the unwitting irony embedded within the road . That a real off-screen jat should be giving brownie points to an eminently faux on-screen one sporting a laboured, indistinct Haryanvi accent that flits in and out of his mouth at its own sweet will and discretion. Not that my observation matters. Even the Haryanvis amongst his die-hard fans will cross swords with me for creating that disapproving comment. on the opposite hand Sultan (or for that matter the opposite Bhai film) possesses to be seen as independently of his crazy fans and their riotous reactions at Galaxy as of his infamous “rape” remarks. So let me stick my neck out and say that the Haryanvi and thus the Haryana within the film are cringingly irritating. As is that the accented English of the in-film Aaj Tak reporter (the willing suspension of disbelief be damned). Just a month back there was the much reviled Laal Rang, starring Hooda that got the rough and rustic lingo and earthy humour spot on. Here the accent itself becomes a joke. A juvenile, inane one at that. Saying “yo sai (it is)”, sory for sorry and test for taste doesn’t make things authentically Haryanvi but wildly witty for the fans it seems. However, I still can’t fathom what was so funny about the Chyawanprash, “Baby ko bass pasand hai” and “sit (shit) boy” jokes? The artificial divide of the interval renders the film into two distinct, disjointed halves. the first one refuses to return alive what with the forced humour, the in your face starry moments — a bit like the one of Sultan taking a tractor out of a pit, running past a train and also the overt, practised cuteness of a country bumpkin eventually winning over his hard to please girl. But these cribs apart the film does plan to aim to undertake to to plenty of things apart from presenting the colour coordinated, long, choreographed bouts of wrestling (in which tractors are given away for gifts) for our pleasure. Take the gender angle as an example . In spite of being a Bhai film it showcases the woman’s cause — PM’s beti bachao abhiyan within the backdrop of Haryana, infamous for female foeticide and a lopsided ratio. What could be nicer? There are posters upon posters plastered on the walls of the village homes — “yahi vachan hai sabse achcha, rahe surakshit jachha bachha (the best vow is that mother and new born should both remain safe)” or “ghar mein shauchalaya banwayein, bahu beti baahar na jaayein (build toilets reception so as that ladies don’t got to venture out)”. there's Aarfa, a woman wrestler for a heroine. apart from every breakthrough in breaking the stereotypes there's the curiously disconcerting comfort of the established order . That odd line that's thrown in about Aarfa’s father having brought her up “like a boy”. She gets a stamp of approval for being baahar se modern par andar se desi (Rani Lakshmibai if you'll please). which age-old cliché gets reinforced that a woman possesses to be a man’s muse, there possesses to be a woman behind every successful man (in this case she is made to feel the guilt for dissing him too, to eventually come around to marrying him). We are made to feel good implicitly that her husband allows her to carry on with sports after marriage. And when it involves the foremost important dilemma — child or career — she makes the expected choice. DISCLAIMER: This video make for Education and entertainment purpose. Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the copyright act 1976, the allowance was made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a copyright law that will otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use.