Animal Movie Review || Ranbir Kapoor plays one of the vilest protagonists in cinema history

Animal Movie Review || Ranbir Kapoor plays one of the vilest protagonists in cinema history

Director: Sandeep Reddy Vanga

Cast: Ranbir Kapoor, Anil Kapoor, Bobby Deol, Rashmika Mandanna, Tripti Dimri, Babloo Prithiveeraj

Run-time: 203 minutes

Animal Movie Storyline

Ranvijay, a troubled man, dispenses violent retribution after his beloved father is attacked

Violence reaches its zenith. Gore takes centerstage. It's a bloodbath all over. It's wild and wicked. Sandeep Reddy Vanga's much-awaited Animal has been unleashed sending Ranbir Kapoor in a devilish, menacing, and unhinged avatar. Do we love him? Yes, of course! Do we resent him, hell yes! Animal's problematic premise has already been discussed since its teaser and trailer were unveiled. What the full film offers is a series of events, emotions, and sequences leading up to a rather underwhelming climax, which is so rushed that you keep waiting if something more is yet to come post the end credits.

Animal Movie is wild and wicked

Animal takes you on a bloody, noisy, gory, and violent journey, and for a large part of it, you don't complain. It just immerses you in its gripping tale and scale, but often leaves you in bewilderment each time the hero in is action. Glorified as an anti-hero, Ranvijay Singh (Ranbir Kapoor) idolises and worships his father Balbir Singh (Anil Kapoor), and spends most of his childhood seeking his love and attention but all in vain. So, daddy issues start pretty young in his life and have obvious repercussions on most of his formative years.

Animal Movie premise and main characters

Cut to high school (through a flashback sequence), he had entered his sister's college with a gun to teach a lesson to those, who ragged her. As a punishment, he not only gets a series of tight slaps across his face from his dad but is soon sent to a boarding school in the US. He returns for his father's 60th birthday but ends up in a scuffle with his brother-in-law Varun (Siddharth Karnick). Soon after, a love angle is introduced and he again flees to the US with his lady love Geetanjali (Rashmika Mandanna), as the families don't accept their inter-caste marriage.

He returns, once again, after eight years, following a shooting attack on his father, and he is no longer the same Ranvijay. The hair has grown (thankfully nothing odd about the wig here), the bearded look is making him look even more dashing and he has become far more ferocious, deadly, and ruthless. Waging a war to kill Abrar Haque (Bobby Deol), who is after his father's life, Ranvijay is on a mission that nobody can stop him from achieving.

Animal Movie: Ranbir Kapoor is the epitome of misogyny

If filmmaker Sandeep Reddy Vanga's Arjun Reddy and Kabir Singh bothered you, wait till you watch Animal which presents Ranbir as an epitome of misogyny, and he has no qualms about it. Whether it's telling his younger sister to drink wine and not whiskey, or taking a jibe at the elder one, a Harvard graduate, for just saying, 'Chup raho, bas karo (Keep quiet)' in her marriage; he's loved, hated and misunderstood all at once. As the entitled, rich spoilt brat, Ranvijay considers himself the man in charge after his father, so if the ladies of the houses are in any trouble, he would take the law into his own hands to serve people right.

Animal Movie: Ranbir makes you fall for him

That being said, Ranbir is in top form and becomes Sandeep Reddy Vanga Vanga's Animal in its truest sense. He is a fine blend of vulnerability and villainous traits. He instantly makes you fall for him, and even when he is getting shot or being punched in the face, you feel bad for him and never wish for him to be dead.

In a scene, when Ranbir operates a high-tech fancy shooting machine killing over 300 heavily armed men, Sandeep aptly places a Kabir doha (bura jo dekhan main chala) making Ranbir's entry even more heroic. Nuances such as these uplift Animal in quite a few places. Oh, there's a subtle plug of 'Made in India' and Atmanirbhar Bharat too.

Animal Movie: What does not work

At 3 hours 22 minutes, one of the longest films in a very long time, Animal is determined to give you a headache as the high-pitched dialogues are certain to pierce through your ears causing discomfort. Then, there are portions you wish were underplayed – visually and verbally.

For instance, multiple references to male's pubic hair as a symbol of manhood aren't too pleasant. Or when Ranbir is discussing his sex life with a psychologist post his accident. The screenplay that Sandeep has co-written with Pranay Reddy Vanga and Saurabh Gupta takes care of all gripping elements and ensures that each frame offers a cinematically visual treat. But, amid all this logic takes a backseat, and the story is continuously being dragged, especially in the second half.

One thing Bollywood has seamlessly normalised from DDLJ to Animal is the hero breaking into the girl's house and luring her into calling off her wedding. In Animal, slightly differently though, Ranvijay makes Geetanjali fall for him through a lesson on 'alpha males'. Quite cliched, but she's sold in no time, so much so that even if he comments, 'You have got a big pelvis', she doesn't shut him up. Later, while eloping in a chartered plane, the two indulge in steamy lovemaking sessions, and once married, when Geetanjali asks how was it, Rannvijay doesn't flinch an eyelid while discussing that it was him who had a lot to manage as they were having sex against gravity and since the man was on top, she has nothing much to do.

Animal Movie: What works

The on-screen chemistry between Ranbir and Rashmika is definitely sizzling, but soon, Sandeep gets in his element showing his hero turn into a chauvinist and misogynist with so much ease, and then putting the idea of a toxic marriage on a pedestal. Whether it's him pulling her bra string multiple times and leaving her with bruises only to later calm her down, or him cheating on her with another woman but her coming back to kiss and caress him - this is taking the Kabir Singh legacy forward, and multiplying it many times over. Maybe, our audiences no longer want to see such men being shown as heroes.

Among other parts, Anil Kapoor delivers an earnest performance, and he feeds off Ranbir's energy on screen. You'd find their scenes together relatable whether it's violent ones or the emotional bits. Among others, Charu Shankar as Ranvijay's mum, and Anshul Chauhan and Saloni Batra as his sisters play their parts well. Prem Chopra and Shakti Kapoor in cameos make their presence felt, while Tripti Dimri in a special appearance is a treat to watch out for. Last but not least, you will feel cheated watching Bobby Deol's screen time. Firstly, he comes into the film only after 2.5 hours, and with barely two full-fledged scenes and no line to speak, it will be felt that he was wasted in what actually could have been the best opportunity to cash in. But, even in the two to three scenes we see Bobby in, he leaves you startled.

Animal Movie Conclusion

What I truly enjoyed throughout the film was the BGM and the songs being played in the background, especially during the action sequences. Watch out for the 10-minute-long fight between Ranbir and Bobby during the climax and the track Saari Duniya Jalaa Denge in B Praak's voice just makes it worth it. Papa Meri Jaan is another track you would instantly fall in love with and it is all heart.

Animal is an absolutely massive, entertaining, and extremely violent thriller that doesn't believe in conforming to the norms. The bloodshed isn't for the weak-hearted to watch, so practice caution if you decide to watch it because there's a lot of it, and you might not be able to take that much.

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