Strangers
Director:
Aanand L Rai
Producer:
Uday Tiwari
Starring:
Kay Kay Menon, Jimmy shregill, Nandana Sen ,Sonali Kulkarni
Music:
Vinay Tiwari
Directed by a reputed television director Aanand L Rai,
Strangers starring
Jimmy Shergill, Nandana Sen, Kay Kay Menon and Sonali
Kulkarni in the lead is a thriller inspired by Alfred
Hitchcock's Strangers on A Train.
Two complete Strangers with different personality meet while traveling
overnight, in a business class compartment in England.
Sanjeev Rai (Menon), a successful businessman and Rahul (Sheirgill) a struggling
writer begin telling each other their problems.
While Rai's wife (Sonali) is close to madness after losing her only son in an
accident, thus making life for Rai difficult, Rahul's wife (Nandana) is the one
blamed for the breakdown of their marriage. Before the journey ends, they both
decide to kill each others' wives.
Director Anand L Rai has proved his excellence and competence. He succeeds in
keeping the viewers engrossed throughout the movie by his stylish narration. He
unveils the mystery layer by layer and with the use of black
and
white lights with close shots at appropriate scenes he manages to create the
necessary impact and at times takes us by surprise.
The movie has its share of negatives too. The story has some faults with certain
situations unexplained thereby we find little difficulty to bond with the
characters. The pace gets sluggish towards the end and the climax looks hasty.
Editing by Sanjay Sankla is first rate and is an added advantage. Manoj Gupta
captures the mood of the moment as well as the beauty of London by his
outstanding cinematography. Background score is top-notch going hand-in-hand
with the pulse of the movie.
Jimmy Shergil is a revelation and simply marvelous. Kay Kay Menon delivers a
knockout performance as a troubled husband. Although the women characters were
not given enough space to showcase their talents, Nandana Sen makes her presence
felt..
Her acting is first class. Sonali Kulkarni is equally competent and pulls her
act
well.
Overall, Stranger is a well made mystery narrated with style. Due to lack of
promotion it will find its audience constrained to the multiplexes.
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