Friday, 24 January 2020

Panga Movie Review: Analysis of Panga movie

Rating: 3/5 Stars (Three stars)
Star Cast: Kangana Ranaut, Jassie Gill, Yagya Bhasin, Richa Chadha, Neena Gupta
Director: Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari

Best Part: Yagya Bhasin, as big as a pint, offers a monumental show, presenting the drama, another identifiable character nailed by Kangana.
Worst Part: He fights a constant battle between sport and theater, and unfortunately only one of them wins.
Analysis:  The story revolves around the slogan of "every mother deserves a second chance!" We have Jaya Nigam (Kangana Ranaut) who once led the Indian women's team in Kabaddi and is now any other mother. He lives with the burden of what he could have done with his life and what he has chosen. He says to him: "Principal kya kar sakti thi aur principal kya kar rahi hoon?" To your understanding husband Prashant (Jassie Gill) and there you feel the pain.

Jaya meets her old friend Meenu (Richa Chadha), who used to play with Kabbadi and is still a successful coach. He decides to return (for a month) only to satisfy his son's desire but finds her lost and never returns. It is about his efforts to join the national team once again, years later.

Script Analysis: I love the way Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari treats aspects of life in its history, they are closer to reality. The first half is full of very intelligent and situational humor that catches your attention. Although I complained that I hadn't explored the "sports corner" much in the first half, the real problem started when they really did. When hockey stood out as a conventional sport in Chak from India! We liked it because I had emotions.
Here, Kabaddi is still too formulated and predictable. Ironically, as Street Dancer 3D, Panga also suffers from the problem of "do we know who will win, does it excite us?" Ashwiny loses the balance between sport and history in the second half, which extends the narrative.

Star Performance Analysis: Jaya is right in the alley of Kangana Ranaut. He effortlessly describes the character without any defect and shines as an actor. It is his way of underestimating the role that most relates to his character. Certainly one of his best performances. Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari takes advantage of Jassie Gill for her million-dollar smile. His smile illuminates dark cinema and is quite contagious. He's doing well, boy somewhere I wish I could see more of him.


Yagya Bhasin, as the son of Kangana and Jassie, is the true hero of the film. Interestingly, Ashwiny and Nikhil Mehrotra write some of the funniest dialogues for him and he offers with similar confidence. Richa Chadha is cute but simple. The enthusiasm of an athlete is missing and he simply does not find it. Neena Gupta is adorable! In just a couple of scenes, she demonstrates how she can shape any character to her liking.
Direction and Music Analysis: Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari has the right emotions again but fails in the other half of the film. In the genre of sports drama, he gets the punctual part of the "drama". Even during the games, the script by Nitesh Tiwari (director of Dangal) simply doesn't add any emotion, making it a predictable watch.
Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy has completely lost touch with this album. There is no single track that really works with history. Something like "Haanikarak Bapu" was lost during Jaya's rehearsal session. Mohan Kanan's Wahi Hai Raste sounds good for the first time but is ruined by his position in the film.
Final Analysis and Stars:
Said and done, Panga makes a bold comment on women's empowerment and how every mother deserves a second chance. Supported by some brilliant performances, it connects you to the drama with some inhibitions.
3 Stars!
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