The movie claims that all whites love to hate all browns. So, all browns hate all whites right back! First the claim is not true. Don’t tell me whites and browns don’t befriend each other at all. Second, given that racism does exist, does it need any more fodder?

Way too many characters have been inserted just for the sake of representing a stereotype, including the Bangladeshi who takes the beating or is ignored all the time. Mere perfunctory. The motivation behind each characters metamorphosis is just a supposedly powerful, however clichéd, dialogue. Barring a 2-3 funny the rest are either lame, preachy, boring or all of the above.

The story is the run-of-the-mill underdog story. No surprises there, the promos said it all. Also, it as it says in so many words serves an “us vs. them” agenda, than a story of the underdogs. I am also open to being aware of injustice done to people elsewhere, but I couldn’t sympathize with the characters here. The screenplay consciously follows a pattern. Comic scene followed by emotional scene followed by a lighter one and repeat. The pattern doesn’t have rhythm. They do not flow into each other, they chop into each other.

Was there any editing at all, I mean other than that necessary to join one scene to the other? I can recall at least 3 scenes that only served the purpose of giving John Abraham more screen time. A few more such scenes for Boman Irani and almost all of Bipasha Basu’s scenes.

John seems to have added to his range of expressions, I enjoyed his attitude in the first few sacenes that had him. But later, it weared off. Boman was made to yell and overact on occasion. Anyways his character was not strong enough to make me care. Bipasha - well she had no character at all. Oops…that was not how I meant it to come out, but you know what I mean. A non-male is needed in a story for it to sell, so we spend on her make-up and clothes. Who has extra money or time to spend on her characterisation, etc? Let’s just make her giggle and smile it out.

A sports movie has tremendous scope for the cameraman. Especially a game with fast movements, like football. But the opportunity is not utilized to the fullest. We get nothing spectacular. Not to mention that the football action scenes are unsuccessful at deception. It is all too plain that there were stunt doubles. And the non-football field scenes are shabbily shot.

The music and lyrics are below average too. In fact, realizing that Javed Akhtar wrote, “Hey dude, don’t mess with me” for a team that doesn’t believe in itself is sad. However, Choreography of “billo” is nice.

But, these are only means to the end. The movie cannot sit on their laurels, even if they were done well. Sports movies in India are generally made around invoking some kind of patriotism. I am not saying they should stop doing that. But, why would I care about some county league in England for goodness sake!? My patriotism is not nudged by the woes of “browns” settled abroad for their personal progress. Don’t get me wrong, I most certainly have nothing against people migrating. In fact, there is no learning better than exposure to a different way of living. But, the immigrants are living there for a purpose and the positives do outweigh the negatives.

A huge percentage of South Asians staying abroad will identify with the movie. And my view of the world is not so romantic that I would deny the existence of racism. But, the world portrayed here is the imagery that lives in closed minds. By the minds that enjoy nurturing “oooh-look-at-me-I-am-marginalised.” Do people from this section who are doing well in their lives complain about racism? I didn’t miss an ad featuring Shah Rukh Khan on a UK street. How many of the people who are not doing well would do well if they were in their countries?

Is the aim to reduce the racism or to fan it further? Sports many-a-time borders war in real life. Do we need movies to do that too?

Rating: Switch channels if it’s on cable!

Rating Scale (best to worst):
• Must see - on the big screen
• Watch for sure, preferably in theatre
• Wait for video release
• Watch if you have nothing better to do
• Switch channels if it’s on cable!

Click on next page to read the details meetu scribbled while watching the movie - this may include spoilers. This review was also published on meetu’s website.