A silly, ludicrous plot, tacky filmmaking and yet a movie can turn out to be great fun at times. Ghayal Once Again is a B/C grade paisa vasool entertainer with Sunny Deol trying to be a mix of Rambo, North ka Rajnikanth and his own vigilante self. Successfully at that.
The film starts off rather weirdly, like a bunch of random scenes strung together just as haphazardly. There’s Ajay (Sunny), a social activist, with a traumatic past, a device which helps take us back to flashes of Ghayal and establishing a link with the prequel. The film channels the collective angst and anger of the masses about all that is wrong with this country.
So Ajay is the messiah who will redeem us. He is the force behind the ‘Satyakam’ (a nod to his dad’s best film) movement which has corruption and sundry crimes as its target.
Then there’s the rich industrialist Raj Bansal who has his own Sea Link-facing Antilia-like home, a conscience-keeper mom and every VIP of Mumbai eating out of his hands — from the Chief Minister to the police chief. We needn’t tell you where the inspiration comes from.
It’s a world of corporate espionage, with cyber cells and an army of hackers and foreign henchmen in toe, one of whom goes by the delectable name Troy. Things come to a head when Ajay’s ex-cop friend Om Puri gets killed in an accident. A group of four youngsters unintentionally capture his moment of death on camera, and it’s actually turns out to be a murder.
Then on, it’s a fight to nab the incriminating evidence — the recording on a hard disk. Suffice to say that there is action galore, innumerable hand to hand, even head to head combats and interminably long but thrilling chases.
Ghayal Once Again is very old fashioned, rough hewn and klunky. Everything — right from acting to action — is high strung. But it remains curiously engaging till the end.
Namrata Joshi
Ghayal Once Again
Director: Sunny Deol
Cast: Sunny Deol, Soha Ali Khan, Om Puri, Tisca Chopra, Manoj Joshi, Narendra Jha
Plot: The film channels the collective angst and anger of the masses about all that is wrong with this country.
Run time: 126 minutes