The Shakti Power Review

Shakti, The Power
A happily married couple is caught up in a vicious circle of feudal families and bloodthirsty villagers who are a law unto themselves.

by William Thomas |
Published on
Release Date:

01 Nov 2002

Running Time:

190 minutes

Certificate:

15

Original Title:

Shakti, The Power

Award-winning director Krishna Vamsi’s latest effort is perhaps the most unsettling and insidious slow-burn drama to come out of Bollywood this year.

Shakti — The Power tells the tale of a happily married couple caught up in a vicious circle of feudal families and bloodthirsty villagers who are a law unto themselves. Vamsi’s script crackles with intelligence, subverting most of the Bollywood action-movie clichés.

Nana Patekar’s mean depiction of a lecherous tribe leader is supremely crafted and subtly handled.

The pace is so measured and some post-interval sequences so bold, that audiences accustomed to the usual candyfloss romance formula might feel aggrieved. But surely that’s better than reducing the story to the predictable pulp we’ve come to expect from Indian cinema in recent times?

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