
Cast: Salman Khan, Sunny Deol, Sohail Khan, Vatsal Seth, Bobby Deol, Preity Zinta, Mithun Chakraborty, Dino Morea, Amrita Arora, Riya Sen
Director: Samir Karnik
Two city slickers set out to deliver letters from dead servicemen to their far-flung families, and in the process, discover themselves.
The premise of Heroes is interesting. And in parts Samir Karnik8217;s film does manage to say what it set out to: that pride the Hindi 8216;garv8217; is a better word keeps the families of the deceased soldiers going, that we civilians sleep peacefully only because someone has given up his life for us, and that we have a country only because we have a brave 8216;fauji8217; guarding our borders. But the director falls for the easiest trick in the book: he wrings tears out of so many situations that everything 8212; even the supreme sacrifice that the soldiers make 8212; turns trite.
Heroes needed a radical change in treatment, but it falls through halfway between keeping things low-key and going full-tilt at melodrama. What can you do if pretty Preity is a war-widow, speaking flawless Punjabi, keeping it together for her old in-laws and a young son? And Salman her bluff Jat hearthrob who says : 8220;Teri liye lakh jawani, par yeh jawani desh ke naam8221;, or words to that effect. Sunny plays a rum-swilling disabled airman who loses younger brother Bobby, who carried a torch for the Army. Mithun is an embittered father who hasn8217;t forgiven son Dino for dying. And the two boys-who-turn-into-men on their road journey, armed with a camera and alarming naivete, are Sohail and Vatsal.
The subject deserved a better film.
shubhra.guptagmail.com