Salman Khan in a still from ‘Sikandar’
| Photo Credit: NadiadwalaGrandson/YouTube
Subversion is not something we expect from a Salman Khan film. Kabir Khan channelled the child in him in a political environment in Bajrangi Bhaijaan. In Sikandar, writer-director AR Murugadoss seeks to repurpose the star to out-punch his detractors but fails to find layers in Salman’s what-you-see-is-what-you-get persona on screen. Perhaps taking a cue from Shah Rukh Khan’s recent spectacular success with self-referencing in Pathaanand Jawan, the star has headlined the Eid gift for his fans. However, the present has not been packaged well, as it reads like a PR riposte to the recent events, in and around his personal life.
Salman plays Sanjay Rajkot, a.k.a Sikandar, a Gujarati royal with a heart of gold. A do-gooder, we don’t get to know his business, but his doting wife (Rashmika Mandanna) feels a tad ignored. One day, he beats up a lascivious boy in a moving plane to protect a woman. The boy turns out to be the son of the home minister, resulting in a war of attrition. A personal loss triggers a wave of emotions that pushes Sikandar into violence.
Salman Khan in a still from ‘Sikandar’
| Photo Credit:
NadiadwalaGrandson/YouTube
These days, it seems, there are so many dos and don’ts in Salman’s image-building or image-saving exercise that the character he plays becomes colourless. He can’t be seen pursuing the gun or the girl. This overt urge to be flawless makes the experience facile, as he invariably ends up like a Santa without a beard.
The writer bleeds his pen to make us understand the syncretic origin of the character’s multiple names. The story begins with an Eid-type song and ends with a Holi number with ludicrous lyrics where Shambhu rhymes with tambu (pole). Salman is seen in saffron and also guarding an old man in a skull cap. In short, boxes are mechanically ticked off to be politically correct. A home minister (Sathyaraj) with a bald pate protecting an unscrupulous son (Prateik Patil) sends our imagination into overdrive for a while, but the result is pretty ordinary.
Sikandar (Hindi)
Director: AR Murugadoss
Cast: Salman Khan, Rashmika Mandanna, Sathyaraj, Sharman Joshi, Kajal Agarwal, Prateik Patil
Runtime: 150 minutes
Storyline: A royal whose heart beats for the common man, a personal loss pushes Sikandar to take on the corrupt system.
Thematic subversion works when the top layer is as fertile as the one beneath. Here, there is hardly anything to skim. The trick is that the audience doesn’t get to know when Salman Khan ends and Sikandar begins. But as it turns out, we find Salman sitting on the shoulders of Sikandar to spell out his good work and grievances. Call it lazy or a case of overwriting, the narrative either works like a surrogate advertisement for his charity work, or sounds like a threat that if Salman is targeted further he will enter the political arena by repeatedly flaunting his fan following. When he roars, “Qayde main rahoge toh fayde main rahoge (If you behave yourself, you will be safe),” it sounds like a reply to the recent attacks on him.
Pritam’s music is just a note above pedestrian. Known for creating a layer of intrigue between the action sequences, Murugadoss’s storytelling is pretty flat here. Filled with bumper sticker messaging, the lessons on organ donation and environmental and moral pollution feel contrived. There is a comment against the alpha male as well, but all of it is delivered in a heavy-handed manner with little cohesion, making it increasingly difficult to engage with the plight of the performers.
Salman Khan in a still from ‘Sikandar’
| Photo Credit:
NadiadwalaGrandson/YouTube
Salman’s stiff presence and stilted dialogue delivery add to the woes. The action choreography has little novelty. In the absence of effective camerawork, it seems people queue up to be beaten by a star whose intent is intact but agility waning. Saddled with stock dialogues, Rashmika adds one more film to her filmography where her job is to boost the star’s ego. Sharman Joshi and Kajal Agarwal have little to do to justify their presence. Sathyaraj keeps gritting his teeth as if he knows what could have been done with this material.
With Empuraan, which has its own Bajrangi, running in theatres, Bollywood can draw inspiration from the South to make a political statement in style.
Sikandar is currently running in theatres
Published – March 30, 2025 06:08 pm IST
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