Shaitaan Movie Review: Madhavan Shines As  An  ‘Arpan’ Cowboy In Chilling  Satanic Versus Pauranic

Shaitaan
Shaitaan

Rating: ****

Vikas Bahl’s Shaitaan is  not your  typical dreary eerie shiver giver with creaking doors  and shrieking  banshees. This is far scarier. The evil is  one of us. A  charming bloke named  Vanraj who can be just anyone: the friendly neighbourhood  fix-it guy, the  ever-smiling insurance agent or  the  benign  banker, anyone you don’t mind accessing your home.

 The  script allows Madhavan to penetrate a normal upwardly mobile  middleclass family(far  more posh than in the original Gujarati  film Vansh)with tha tever-grin countenance, and then create a hair-raising havoc.

Never before has Madhavan’s natural  effortless charms  been put to use  with such frightening alacrity. One minute he is the coolest Uncle  on  the block , playing the friendly confidante to a teenaged  girl.  The  next minute he is  growling menacing beast of  a  man ordering the young girl to slap her  father, stab her mother, kill her little brother ,dance until she drops, or  laugh until she drops dead…

The pinnacle of terror is  thus pyramided until breaking point.Most of the  terror and tension of occultism is restricted  to  a  swanky farmhouse where the  Dark Stranger walks in with the request for a  cup of tea(with honey,please) and then requests that  the family  hand over its daughter  to him.

The casual conceit  of  the satanic  demands  is calmly coolly conveyed by Madhavan who  combines a devilish blend of the ancient anarchist and  the modern homebreaking dude.

In a flash he changes  from Dark Stranger(“Tum ameer  log samajhte ho paise se kuch bhi khareed sakte ho”)   to the  Arpan Cowboy(“Apne beti ko Arpan kar do”) . It is a performance  that threatens to override the  film.

Luckily, director Vikas Bahl exercises  a rigid control over the narrative. The fear factor is augmented  as  the  narration progresses, bringing ta  maddening method to Maddy’s character’s  madness.

Devgan as  the  father  trying to protect his child from an  uncontrollable fiend  is  controlled even in  his  loudest moments of outburst. There is something over-structured  in his relationship with his children, something overly  ‘cool’, if you will. Jyotika is far more spontaneous  in her raging responses to the stranger in their midst.

Sudhakar Reddy Yakkanti’s camera prowls and pries into the family’s domesticity , as though  it knows exactly what Madhavan’s Satanic  character is thinking.Scary.

Shaitaan
Photo of Shaitaan
Director:Vikas Bahl
Actors:
Vanraaj Kashyap
Jyoti
Family at Dhabba
Family at Dhabba
Family at Dhabba
Rating: vote average (2'861 votes)
Genres:Horror, Thriller
Writers:
Aamil Keeyan Khan
(adapted screenplay)
Aamil Keeyan Khan
(dialogue)
Krishnadev Yagnik
(original story)
Plots:
A timeless tale of battle between good and evil with a family embodying the forces of righteousness while a man symbolizes malevolence.
Kabir and his family's fun weekend retreat takes a nightmarish turn when they let a friendly but mysterious stranger into their house. As the clock ticks, the family will be forced to confront their worst fears in this gripping, edge-of-the-seat supernatural-thriller that deals with the sinister elements of Indian Black Magic.
Trailers: Shaitaan, https://www.imdb.com/video/imdb/vi2864367129/imdb/embed, Shaitaan, https://www.imdb.com/video/imdb/vi3898001177/imdb/embed

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