
#Bhag milkha bhag movie review movie
Movie takes around extra half an hour before reaching to its finale. Like an every fantastic experience, this also comes with its dull moments. Rakeyesh Omprakash Mehra like an expert captain provides movie its uniqueness, technical perfection, soul and purpose.

Music by Shankar Ehsaan Loy is first rate and awe inspiring. Divya Dutta is excellent, Sonam Kapoor looks fresh, Pawan Malhotra and Parkash Raj's performance are heartwarming. Farhan Akhtar can easily be given all best actor awards of 2013. When he loves, he loves with innocence and passion.

When he dances, he dances like a pure Punjabi. Farhan Akhtar seems to be enjoying every bit of the movie. Farhan Akhtar excels playing Milkha Singh like Ben Kingsley excelled playing Gandhi. One it is based on the story of a sports person whose personal life is dramatic enough to keep you engaged apart from its racing track achievements and second it is played by Farhan Akhtar who plays his role as if he is really Milkha Singh himself. Kudos! Can be watched with a typical Indian family? YES Profanity: No | Nudity: Mild | Sex/Foreplay/Mouth-Kiss: Mild | Violence/Gore: Strong | Alcohol: Mild | Smoking/Drugs: Noīhaag Milkha Bhaag works for two basic reasons. It feels good that the team has brought an epitome into reel. BOTTOM LINE: A very good entertainer with mentoring prowess. Otherwise, everybody rise for this cinema of massive potential. Only, the running time of 190 minutes COULD'VE. Overall, an entertaining biography which is well-written and well- executed. Humor touches the script at times, as well. I was blown away by Akhtar's bod and his expressions. That is the power of Rakeysh O Mehra and his crew. The songs & score are energetic which do cause an urge that we run with the athletes on-screen. Fresh writing, inventive editing & below-average SFX/CGI makes me wanna give it a humble 8.0/10. The relation of every detail is astronomical and very well adapted. Much like last year's Paan Singh Tomar, BMB does have lots of surprises in store. The childhood story MAY bore you a little, but every other biopic has to be honest. Most of the story is told in flashbacks and there is where the screenplay works. But, the actresses were sidelined which is very apt for a bio-film. His demeanor is appreciable and the film does showcase his hard-work. Akhtar now has totally proved himself as a successful actor. Milkha Singh, wonderfully portrayed by the talented Farhan Akhtar is one character that induces inspiration. It talks more about perseverance and how man can excel even in the worst conditions than the actual atheltic history.

You get into high-spirits and then the story of The Flying Sikh begins. But aside from a horrifying experience in childhood and some major triumphs on the track, much of the rest of his history feels like filler held together by a faulty framing device.In less than ten minutes into the film, you get goosebumps all over your body. Like most Bollywood films, Milkha’s story is supposed to be a saga. The movie also spotlights the exuberant moment Milkha first discovered competitive running. There is a sweet subplot involving the beloved sister that raised him and some lively comic relief from his early days in the military (amusingly, the setting for the film’s most memorable song-and-dance number). Some of the stories offer a bit of comedy, a chance to stage a requisite Bollywood musical number or offer some insight into Milkha’s personality.
#Bhag milkha bhag movie review full
But the coach weaves an epic tale instead, and his hyper-detoured response, full of tales of first love and youthful troublemaking, lasts about twice as long as it should. There is a short version: As a child, Milkha’s family was killed in front of him after the 1947 partition landed his Sikh village on the Pakistani side of the border. Naturally, the government official asks for further explanation. One of the organizers can’t comprehend why Milkha would quit, but the runner’s coach explains (complete with sorrowful music) that the young man has personal reasons.

Despondent, he tries to withdraw from a government-orchestrated race in Pakistan. The movie begins in 1960 with Milkha’s failed attempt at securing a medal during the Rome Olympics. A biopic gets the Bollywood treatment in “ Bhaag Milkha Bhaag” (“Run Milkha Run”), which dramatizes the life of record-breaking Indian sprinter Milkha Singh, played by the talented Farhan Akhtar.
