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Saturday, 27 August 2016

Flying Jatt Movie Review

A Flying Jatt Movie Review 


Average Ratings:2.35/5 
Score: 20% Positive
Reviews Counted: 10
Positive:2
Neutral:5
Negative:3





Ratings:1.5/5 Review By:Rajeev Masand  Site:News18
 When all’s done and dusted, there’s little to recommend in A Flying Jatt. Remo D’souza fails to infuse the film with a consistent lightheartedness, and as a result the fun dries up too soon. Tiger Shroff is both agile in the action scenes and flexible in the dance numbers, but no if no but, this Jatt is stuck in a rut.I’m going with one and a half out five.
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Ratings:1.5/5 Review By:Anupama Chopra  Site:Film Companion
 Of course, A Flying Jatt doesn’t aim to be anything more than an entertaining cartoon. That’s not a problem. But even cartoons need to be compelling and have a basic coherence. Here the narrative alternates between elaborate fights with tacky digitized backdrops and randomly tacked on sermons about pollution and even the Sikh faith. At one point Raka growls and declares: I have a black soul, rooh meri kali hai. I wanted to say: Frankly my dear, I don’t give a damn. I’m going with one and a half stars.
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Ratings:3.5/5 Review By:Srijana Das  Site:Times Of India
 And there lies the trouble with A Flying Jatt - the full, stark shebang of a superhero versus super-dark powers never comes through. The villains remain cardboard cut-outs and the clash grows predictable. These thrills don't chill. On the upside, for children, A Flying Jatt provides clean entertainment - with its innocence, it evokes more Haathi Mere Saathi and less cool-cat Krrish. The film takes off only because of its simplicity - a flying jatt who's afraid of heights, a rarity in dark times of Udta Punjabs.
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Ratings:2.5/5 Review By:Shubhra Gupta  Site:Indian Express
 The first half of A Flying Jatt is not afraid to be silly and is very enjoyable. The second half goes south. The film starts getting preachy and heavy. This could have been such a rollicking film, especially for kids —it had all the ingredients, and an engaging start, fronted by a hero who is light on his feet. Too bad it ends up being a promo for Swachch Bharat.
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Ratings:2.5/5 Review By:Rohit Vats  Site:Hindustan Times
 A Flying Jatt begins on a good note, picks up the pace, throws some light-hearted moments, and then faces the curse of the second half. It drags its feet from becoming the smart film just when it’s needed and goes for the all-explaining commentary. Without the spoon-feeding, it would have become a much more entertaining film.
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Ratings:1.5/5 Review By:Saibal  Site:NDTV
 A Flying Jatt is so whimsically infantile in its conception of a homegrown Superman-like crime-buster that it never gains any height.Even for those that are suckers for superhero actioners, the film lacks the punch required to pass muster. When will Bollywood stop foisting such glossily-packaged garbage bags upon us? Yes, A Flying Jatt, anchored by a glassy Tiger Shroff whose acting skills are still pretty rudimentary, delivers a truckload of trash that inevitably stinks to high heaven.
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Ratings:2.5/5 Review By:Devarsi Ghosh Site:India Today
 However, the film is also exceptionally and embarrassingly unoriginal at places. Believe it or not, Remo picks up the Spidey sense (A Flying Jatt can hear people in distress praying to Wahe Guru), the burning-house-saving-child scene from Tobey Maguire's Spiderman films, and the worst of all, the fantastic Quicksilver scene from Days of Future Past. A Flying Jatt is meant for kids. If grown-ups don't mind doing the fabled "leave the brain outside the home and enjoy" routine before stepping into the theatre, they will not mind A Flying Jatt.
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Ratings:2.5/5 Review By:Surabhi Site:Koimoi
 dragged second half, copied elements of Hollywood superheroes and Remo D’Souza’s ambition to ‘preach’ through this film make up for a huge let down. This is a massy affair but strictly for kids. For adults, it may be too silly to learn about pollution from a superhero drama! A Flying Jatt is too silly for adults but could promise enough fun for kids. So I’d recommend this film for ‘Adults accompanied with kids’ only! A 2.5/5 for this!
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Ratings:3/5 Review By:Hungama Site:Bollywood Hungama
 On the whole, A FLYING JATT has the ingredients that make an interesting superhero film. A section of the audience might find the film's proceedings to be corny; however, the mass audiences and kids might take a liking for the film. At the Box-Office, the film has the potential to fly, though, not to great heights. The extended weekend will help the film reap dividends at the Box-Office.
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Ratings:2.5/5 Review By:Tushar Joshi Site:Bollywood Life
 The first half is light and the portions where Tiger struggles to adapt to his new life are hilarious. Remo puts together some slick action scenes, the best ones are the hand combat scenes which don’t have an overdose of VFX. The film goes downhill from its second half taking a mighty tumble. There is a sudden change in Tiger’s demeanour and once Jatt starts taking himself too seriously, there is very little fun left in the film. Also the climax is a royal mess. A Flying Jatt would have soared had it not compromised its second half and become a preachy documentary on global warming.
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Flying Jatt Story:  

A Jatt superhero (Tiger Shroff) who's afraid of heights has to save the world.

Flying Jatt Release Date:

Aug 25 2016

 Director:  Remo D'Souza

 Producer:   Ekkta Kapoor, Shobha Kapoor, Sameer Nair, Aman Gill

Cast:
Tiger Shroff as Flying Jatt
Jacqueline Fernandez as Kirti
Nathan Jones as Raka
Kay Kay Menon
Amrita Singh
Shraddha Kapoor in a Cameo appearance

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