MUZAFFAR NAGAR FULL MOVIE REVIEW
Muzaffar nagar movie
full review:-
Range shooter Dev Malik reaches his
home town, Muzaffarnagar, to spend some time with his family. Once there, he
locks horns with Jodha Singh, a land mafia who creates trouble for the entire
village. Dev falls for Sara, an IPS aspirant from a liberal Muslim family.
Problems arise when a communal riot threatens to destroy Dev and Sara's life.
Meanwhile, Jodha Singh is doing everything in his power to destroy Dev.
Dev
(Dev Sharma) is a shooter who has come home to relax with his family in his
village before he enters another competition. One day, as he is being a peeping
tom with his binoculars, his eyes fall on Sara (Aishwarya Devan). In typical
stalker fashion, he starts to follow her. She doesn't appreciate that and it is
not love at first sight, because the stalker and the stalked don't necessarily
share a very loving relationship. Still, Dev gets to know that she is preparing
to be an IPS officer. One song later, without any explanation, Dev starts to
take on the local goon Jodha Singh (Anil George) who has a taste for usurping
the poor villagers' and. At the same time, in typical 90s B movie fashion
(think, Kanti Shah's Gundaa), local politicos want to incite a riot in town and
approach Jodha Singh enables it for them.
The fact that 'Muzaffarnagar-The Burning Love' is a cringe worthy
formulaic action film is not the worst part about it. What is lamentable is
that it uses the 2013 UP riots, which were described as "the worst
violence in Uttar Pradesh in recent history", as a crutch.
An ace shooter returns to his village to spend time with his family.
While his love life soars, with him falling for a girl preparing for IPS exams,
he takes on local goons who are harassing the villagers. In the midst of all
this, riots break out and now the young man has to fight to protect the ones he
loves.
The only good thing about the
movie are the visuals and Muzaffarnagar is captured well. In the acting
department, almost everyone gives an over the top performance. There is hardly
a semblance of screenplay and the music is generic. At 120-minutes-plus of
runtime, the only thing afire in Muzaffarnagar-The Burning Love is your
patience!
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