Maidaan : A Classic turner
Ajay Devgan plays Syed Abdul Rahim with a patent sincerity and only a hint of the slow motion swagger. His tough team has the kind of composition so sincere that it makes you embrace it with nostalgia.
It takes a village to raise a child. And it takes a country to create a cracking team capable of beating the best in the world. The inspiring real-life story of Syed Abdul Rahim, pioneering football coach and manager under whose watch India won two gold medals, one each in the Asian Games of 1951 and 1962, is at the heart of Maidaan.
Just for bringing to life a now sadly-forgotten figure who galvanized a young team to do its best against such formidable Asian foes as Indonesia and S Korea, the ‘Maidaan’ team deserves major props there. It is football, in which India hasn’t been able to make an international dent after Rahim bowed out, following a hard struggle with lung cancer, and not cricket, the go-to sport for Bollywood sporting dramas.
It matters a great deal that the man was Muslim, a brave choice in today’s India. The real-life Rahim, called Rahim Sa’ab, was born in Hyderabad, but most of his battles were fought and won in Calcutta, the bastion of Indian football.
Maidaan : A Pride
It is a regional pride that becomes the thorn between Rahim and his chief foe (Rudranil Ghosh) in the Football Federation of India, backed by a powerful sports journalist (Gajraj Rao): in the games people play behind the scenes, pulling strings of who gets to be in the team, and who gets to go on the coveted ‘foreign’ tours, it’s more a question of Bengal vs Hyderabad, rather than Hindu vs Muslim. Remove a voluble Bengali from his espousal of his favorite teams, and you will get thunderous silence, and in this case, straight-up enmity.
The three hour long film feels like a stretch in places where the drama amped-up-just-for-effect and the blaring background music threatens to overpower the action. Not all the musical stretches are terrible, though: the one which accompanies the discovery of a player in an unexpected quarter early in the film, for example, is lovely. But after a point, it becomes too loud, too much, and you feel like clapping your hands over your ears.
‘Maidaan’ also tends to get into an explanatory tell-don’t-show mode often. And the templates of a sporting drama stay templated: an encouraging-speech-by-coach-just-before-a-crucial-match comes off more a colorless long dialogue on the ‘power of one’. What makes up for it is the great action on the field: even a novice like me understood the ‘strategy’ sketched out by the coach which helped India beat S Korea 2-1, a historic win that’s never been bested.
Watch the review, Credits to Komal Nahta, an ace film critic :
Link : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A1SzwEQtjuU
The performances are all effective. Gajraj Rao, sporting a terrible wig and permanent smirk, is terrific as the spiteful sports journalist with an axe to grind. As is Ghosh, as the unctuous, shingara-loving babu who revels in his power and has zero affection for the sport. These tend to become one-note sometimes, but work for the kind of film it is, in which nuance is sacrificed for statement.
Ajay Devgan’s Eid 2024 release ‘Maidaan’ is making all the right noises ahead of its release.
Calling it “POWER-PACKED”, trade analyst Taran Adarsh said the Ajay Devgan’ starrer “is, without doubt, one of the finest sports-based films made” in India.
“Captivating second half, brilliant finale and an award-worthy act” by the ace Bollywood actor, he posted on X (formerly Twitter). According to him, it’s a “fitting tribute” to Team India and Coach Syed Abdul Rahim, the architect of modern Indian football, who coached the national men’s team between 1952 and 1962.
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