Friday, November 20, 2020

                                                                 ACT 1978

 

Rating✪✪✪✪

 As a Cinema Buff, the scene, where in the midst of a famous bank robbery in 1972, in Brooklyn, Sonny Wotzik comes out to take the Pizza and also pays the delivery boy with tips. Played by Al Pacino in neo-noir crime drama Dog day Afternoon (1975)

 

How much have we yearned for similar plot and execution in sandalwood all these years! There is a scene in Act 1978 where Yagna Shetty tells her negotiator to pay the BESCOM bill and Paint Zebra Stripes on a Road hump. Well, if you think this is a silly demand, then aren't we all victims of such civic apathy and remained mute spectators for way too long?

 

ACT 1978, the movie, deals with serious anomalies in government departments. After losing her father, husband and hope, victim Geetha, pregnant and in pain, decides to take the entire department staff as hostages with strapping a live bomb with the help of Sharanappa, a wise old man. As the drama unfolds, the story deftly deals with the dilemma that government agencies face following the demand by Geetha that has many legal hurdles. With a sharp but factual presentation on how society and media behaves under the circumstances.  

 

Monsore and team have delivered an engaging saga and achieved what many directors and production houses failed even with hero worship, songs and stunts that are so unreal. Though there are certain shortcomings here or there, the focus here is the engagement from the beginning to the end which scores the most. With good background score and cinematography. 

 

In fact, there is a clear question to each one of us on how you deal with an issue? With violence, or the Gandhian way ? Visualizing with of the contradicting characters. As the final countdown begins with the ticking time bomb about to explode, the audience will be left shattered at the end for sure. Not to be missed, B Suresha's silence that is so deafening. 

 

ACT 1978 is an excellent watch for the family and a lesson or two in self introspection for all.

 

Anantha Subramanyam K

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