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Irrfan Khan’s The Killer Turns  19

“The Killer” borrows heavily from Collateral, with little originality of its own. Only Irrfan Khan and Emraan Hashmi’s chemistry keeps the remake from collapsing entirely.

Hollywood remakes are at best of times only an occasion for the adapted version to be ridiculed. This one just about escapes ridicule by the scruff of the neck. If you haven’t seen Michael Mann’s Collateral, you wouldn’t know that nearly every moment in co-directors Raksha Mistry, Hasnain Hyderabadwala The Killer is inspired by the original. And what isn’t derived isn’t worth the script’s while.

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Thankfully, the two unlikely partners in the confused collaboration between a callow cabbie and his criminal passenger are played by actors who seem oblivious of what Jamie Foxx and Tom Cruise did in the original.

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There are some interesting moments of shared camaraderie between Irrfan Khan and Emran Hashmi. They are given some crisp lines to mouth. The words allow them to cross the line of morality and explore with delicious audacity the chasm between crime and morality.

Darkish in tone, the interface between the two actors is often broken by songs featuring the exuberant romantic lead (Nisha Kothari) who walks in with a confident swagger that could have damaged the film’s taut equilibrium.

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She manages to intrude without disrupting the main drama which involves just two characters and a series of brutal murders. The cops on the killer’s trail are so caricatural, crime gets glorified by osmosis.

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A lot of what transpires is true to ‘tripe’. But the narration has a certain momentum that the co-directors don’t allow to be lost till the feverish finale when in a mall-climax, the inexperienced cabbie finally takes on the ruthless assassin.

The incidental characters are kept at a hand’s distance from the revved-up plot. But finally, you aren’t really interested in the body count. You just want to know why a section of Bollywood chooses to remake American flicks that have no cultural roots in Hindi cinema.

Realizing this, the location is shifted to Dubai. The urgently-loaded airport, over-loaded highways and the sleek malls lend themselves well to the sense of impending doom.

For the rest, the film is largely a pointless take on what constitutes the anatomy of crime.

As the simple-hearted cabbie interacts with the crime-lord we don’t really get to know why criminals behave in a particular way.

All we see are two differently-profiled actors holding up the film for all it’s worth.

Also Read: 7 Years Of Karan Johar’s Dhadak

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Subhash K Jha

Subhash K Jha

Subhash K Jha is a lifelong fan of Lata Mangeshkar, Hindi cinema and world cinema--in  that order. He has, over the years, contributed  to nearly every major English-language publication from the Illustrated Weekly Of India to E24. His search for writing opportunities  continues. His biography on his idol is work in progress.

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First published on: Jul 21, 2025 09:48 AM IST


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