The queen aptly
demonstrates the situation of a dogmatic Indian bride, unable to digest the
rejection of a long awaited sensible love marriage, by his ‘beloved’
partner. It’s a thought provoking flick
about a girl fighting her life to transform into a matured open minded woman
through a lone journey, rather a lone honeymoon trip to discover similar catastrophes
of human life. This encounter has almost everything in it, if some petty Kafkaesque
situations are ignored. It cracks a joke and does not let you laugh. It brings
the irony out of a tragedy, just to make you control your laughter and entice
you to think. Its one such film that rarely grabs attention of the banal action
and romance loving audience, but it’s the blend of wit and humor with sarcasm of
situations that made it successful in achieving so. If you want to explain
about it to your friends, you get lured to talk about the Queen’s character
that acts as the centre of attraction as all the other characters gets revolved
around hers. As Kangana Ranaut is the heart and soul of the film, the plot of Indian
perception of a rejected woman is exceptionally exhibited by her talent.
This flick is for
those who laugh and who don’t. It is for those who shrug when asked to empower
women in India. It is for those who don’t really have enough time to think
about our surroundings and about our restricted paradoxical thinking. It is for
u, me and us to transform women empowerment from myth into reality.
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