Black Friday, Anurag Kashyap's controversial depiction of the 1993
Hindu-Muslim riots and bombings in Mumbai, has won good reviews
from mainstream American movie critics.
In a rave review to the film, The New York Times describes it as
"an exhaustive, exhausting, often moving thriller - a work
of angry humanism that spreads both condemnation and empathy around
democratically."
"Epic and raw, 'Black Friday' is cut from the same bloody
cloth as 'Salvador ' and 'Munich'," said Matt Zoller Seitz
in a review titled 'Madness in Mumbai'.
"Although it's a period piece set in 1993, its subject matter
couldn't be more urgent: how religious hatred (in this case, between
India's Hindu majority and Muslim minority) manifested itself in
institutionalised discrimination, race rioting and ultimately a
series of terrorist bombings by Muslim guerrillas that killed 257
people in Mumbai, the nation's financial and filmmaking capital."
"...While "Black Friday" is propulsive and passionate
throughout its 143-minute running time, it's never irresponsible,"
the influential American daily said.
"Its sophisticated structure mixes shocking, agitprop-inflected
imagery (disfigured bombing victims, police torture of suspects);
cool-headed police procedural details; and documentary devices (including
numbered, white-on-black chapter titles and a nonlinear structure
that spends the entire second half explaining the origins of the
bombers' alienation), it added.
A little less upbeat, The Los Angeles Times suggests the film goes
over the heads of non-Indian viewers noting, "The thriller/police
procedural/political movie undoubtedly has resonance for its intended
Indian audience that others will strain to detect."
"It's possible that the invocation of the name 'Tiger Memon'
may inspire 'Osama bin Laden'-like revulsion in those familiar with
the story, but for those out of the loop, it's hard to track characters
and events, especially with the film's jumbled chronology,"
it says.
"TV Guide" is a little more understanding noting, "The
film assumes knowledge of the bombings (which took place shortly
after the first attack on the WTC) and familiarity with various
Indian and Pakistani law-enforcement organisations that few Americans
have at their fingertips. But in the aftermath of 9/11, its assertion
that religious terrorism is about more than simply faith is food
for thought," says critic Maitland McDonagh.
"Filmiholic" gives a long summary of the movie with a
positive review describing it as "a powerful, tightly made
film. It doesn't indulge in any flashy grandstanding, but it doesn't
need."
"The three lead actors all excel, deftly, in their roles.
Kay Kay is especially striking as the no-frills man who is genuinely
pained by the measures he and the other cops go through to get suspects
to talk."
"Pawan Malhotra as Tiger is alternatively smooth and seething
as he manipulates the various people who serve him and play parts
of his plan. As Badshah Khan, Aditya Srivastava is actually able
to make his character sympathetic as a man who has been used and
discarded and left holding the bag," it added.
Drawing a parallel with US, "Murphy's Movie Reviews"
says, "Much as a certain Saudi named Osama bin-Laden would
issue a jihad against American interests (recall that the first
attacks on the World Trade Center also occurred in 1993), a cadre
of Muslims led by Dawood Ibrahim - and who reputedly has ties to
bin Laden and Al Qaeda - and Tiger Memon among others, crafted and
executed a plan to set off numerous bombs around the city which
form the core of the story for the film."
"There's a lot of material covered in the film and its structure
of flashbacks and flashbacks within flashbacks requires an audience
to pay careful and close attention. But Kashyap keeps the action
moving and the overall movie turns out to be engrossing and detailed,
" it said.
"For Indian audiences this film is akin to the various American-made
movies about the attacks on the World Trade Center, whether they
be the TV movies 'Path To Power' or 'Flight 93' or the feature films
'United 93' or 'World Trade Center'," Murphy's noted.