Ticker

6/recent/ticker-posts

Header Ads Widget

Responsive Advertisement

The Empire Review: A Visually Scintillating Tale With Moving Performances That Breathes Under Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Shadow

https://ift.tt/3BekZoQ

The Empire Review Out!
The Empire Review Starring Kunal Kapoor, Shabana Azmi, Dino Morea & Drashti Dhami(Photo Credit: Disney Plus Hotstar/Instagram)

The Empire Review Rating: 3.5/5 Stars (Three and half stars)

Star Cast: Kunal Kapoor, Dino Morea, Shabana Azmi, Drashti Dhami, Aditya Seal, Rahul Dev, Imaad Shah, Sahher Bambba & ensemble.

Creator: Nikkhil Advani

Director: Mitakshara Kumar

Streaming On: Disney Plus Hotstar

Language: Hindi

The Empire Review Out!
The Empire Review Starring Kunal Kapoor, Shabana Azmi, Dino Morea & Drashti Dhami(Photo Credit: Still From Movie)

The Empire Review: What’s It About:

Adapted from the book Empire Of The Moghul: Raiders From The North by Alex Rutherford, The Empire scales the journey of Mughal emperor, Babur, from the age of 14 to 47 when he died (dare you to call it a spoiler, this is literally 7th-grade history chapter). The show talks about the highs and lows of Babur’s life in this part of fiction, partly inspired by a real-life tale. We meet him in the war where swords are blood bathed and one inside the palace where the mind is the weapon. The ‘Game Of Thrones’ in between all of this takes the center stage and relationships are put to test.

The Empire Review: What Works:

If you are a History enthusiast, you must know that Babur’s life is an open book. The Mughal Emperor was known for a lot of things literally reflected his life in Baburnama (his autobiography). Even the fact that he was bis*xual and was attracted to a boy he saw in the market at the age of 17. The Empire, which takes creative liberties for cinematic enhancing stands on the basis of this very tale and decides to take you inside the palace more than the wars he fought.

In the supremely able hands of writer Bhavani Iyer, who adapts Alex Rutherford’s fictionalized account of Babur’s life, The Empire becomes more than a costume drama. This is not the first time someone is trying to replicate Mughal history on screen and investing hoards of cash. But the majority of them except the Sanjay Leela Bhansali universe, end up becoming just costume dramas. Also, add to that the new age obsession of demonizing Mughals to show how peace was never a word taught to them.

This is where Bhavani Iyer’s talent contributes the most. These are people who have led normal lives and have had humane sides to them. Neither one of them is barbaric & nor all of them continuously talk in high-pitched voices. Enmity is never the fodder Iyer gives priority to. The writing that introduces multiple characters makes sure it gives everyone layers to justify their presence on screen.

Not to reveal much, a lot of The Empire is the inner catharsis that Babur went through. Of course, he was great at war, but a war lurked in his family and that was the toughest he ever fought. The writing looks at his life through the perspective of his sister Khanzada (Drashti Dhami). Of course, Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s shadow can be seen throughout (in a good way). The fact that Mitakshara Kumar seems to be inspired by his work is evident in her frames. I am living for the wide-angle shots envisioned by her and captured by Nigam Bomzan and Yiannis Manolopoulos.

Also, this is a sort of the Avengers assembling from the Bhansali universe. Mitakshara has been an AD on Padmaavat and Bajirao Mastani. Bhavani Iyer has penned Black and Guzaarish with the filmmaker, AM Turaz credited for dialogues and lyrics in The Empire, has closely worked with SLB. And composer-singer Shail Hada is a long-time confidant of the maverick filmmaker. So you see why the vibe feels too familiar.

I can’t stop without crediting the art department that does a pristinely beautiful job at creating this universe to create a separate piece of art. The set pieces don’t look like they were made for a day. Some are even built-in and out completely. Clothes don’t make the actors look like they are having an out-of-body experience. Everything is era-appropriate and made sure to fit the cinematic language that every frame is busy speaking.

The Empire Review Out!
The Empire Review Starring Kunal Kapoor, Shabana Azmi, Dino Morea & Drashti Dhami(Photo Credit: Still From Movie)

The Empire Review: Star Performance

Of course, there is Shabana Azmi, Kunal Kapoor, Dino Morea, who have all done fabulous jobs, but I would want to talk about the one that surprised me the most. Drashti Dhami, an actor who can speak with her wide eyes, is a rare trait only found in some. She becomes Khanzada, the clever girl, who has to face the hardship life puts her through. She isn’t a damsel but a saviour he gives Babur his purpose and motivation.

Shabana Azmi becomes Esan Da Walat, who technically is the reason why all of it happens. My experience is not enough to judge an actor of Azmi’s stature and she only leaves me asking for more in every frame. Her attitude, the command over every frame she is in remains the same as I saw in Mandi (a film that made me fall in love with her craft)

Kunal Kapoor as Babur is a safe choice. His demeanour does half the job and the actor manages to fill the rest half with his performance. He manages to bring the pain on his face gradually, but in the opening, it seems like he is still warming up. Dino Morea gets one of his best characters so far. Of course, there are imprints of Ranveer Singh’s Allaudin Khilji throughout. The way he conducts himself, his walk, to him clapping like a maniac. But Morea manages to somehow not make it look caricatured to an extent cringe kicks in.

Imaad Shah is Imaad Shah and he somehow plays his characters with the same ease but makes them look different. Aditya Seal in his brief role gets a part where he finally gets to show he knows something about the business he is in. The finale seems to be hinting at a season 2 and Seal becoming the lead. Well, a huge responsibility is on its way.

The Empire Review Out!
The Empire Review Starring Kunal Kapoor, Shabana Azmi, Dino Morea & Drashti Dhami(Photo Credit: Still From Movie)

The Empire Review: What Doesn’t Work:

The pacing definitely. What begins like a slowly boiling broth, suddenly sees a concentration in flames and the broth begins to spill. Years pass by so fast that at a point I had to rewind to check that we are now 18 years ahead. Also, while we are on that, why is Dino Morea not aging? He was the same when Babur was 14, and even edgier and hotter when Babur was around 30.

In a brief period, Babur is taken away from his purpose and he finds solace in alcohol. The period is his real downfall, but the show acknowledges it abruptly. Not enough to absorb how much he was affected thus resulting in diluting the effect of his rise.

While the Bhansali vibe has come alive outside his universe for the first time, the poetry stays intact with him. There is everything in the frame in The Empire but not enough poetry all the time. The only scene that turned out to be the most poetic was when Khanzada makes a shocking revelation to Shaibani Khan in his last moments, chills! You will see.

There is even a scene similar to Padmaavat’s Raghav Chaitanya and Padmaavati’s first meeting. That becomes a bit too much.

The Empire Review Out!
The Empire Review Starring Kunal Kapoor, Shabana Azmi, Dino Morea & Drashti Dhami(Photo Credit: Still From Movie)

The Empire Review: The Last Word

The Empire is a huge step in creating extravagant shows for the India OTT. There is everything a period drama lover (it’s me) craves for. Go in and get to witness the saga that talks about love, war and betrayal. But as I always say about shows/films with creative liberties taken, watch it with the word ‘fiction’ in your mind. It doesn’t intend to educate you.

Must Read: When Salman Khan’s First Director Said He Would Leave Bollywood If ‘Bhai’ Became A Superstar & That’s What He Did!

Follow Us: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Youtube

The post The Empire Review: A Visually Scintillating Tale With Moving Performances That Breathes Under Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Shadow appeared first on Koimoi.


August 27, 2021 at 09:30AM

Post a Comment

0 Comments