A Flying Jatt

A Flying Jatt

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Remo D'Souza
Produced by
Written by Aakash Kaushik
Madhur Sharma
(Dialogue)
Screenplay by Tushar Hiranandani
Remo D'Souza
Additional screenplay:
Aakash Kaushik
Madhur Sharma
Story by Remo D'Souza
Starring Nathan Jones
Jacqueline Fernandez
Tiger Shroff
Music by Sachin-Jigar
Cinematography Vijay Kumar Arora
Edited by Nitin FCP
Production
company
Distributed by ALT Entertainment
Release date
  • 25 August 2016 (2016-08-25)[1]
Country India
Language Hindi
Budget 35 crore[2]
Box office 56 crore[3]

A Flying Jatt is a 2016 Bollywood superhero film co-written and directed by Remo D'Souza and produced under the banner of Balaji Motion Pictures. It features Nathan Jones, Jacqueline Fernandez and Tiger Shroff in the lead roles.[4][5] A Flying Jatt narrates the story of an ordinary man (Shroff) who gains superpowers. The film released worldwide on 25 August 2016 on Janmashtami weekend.[6]

Plot

The story begins with a strong influential businessman Mr. Malhotra (Kay Kay Menon) who has his factory on a land near a lake into which pollutants and toxins are leaked. He wants to build a bridge across it for faster transportation but cannot do so due to a sacred tree present on the other side of the lake on a piece of land which belongs to Mrs. Dhillon.

Mrs. Dhillon is a hard core Punjabi woman living with her two sons Aman Dhillon (Tiger Shroff) and Rohit Dhillon (Gaurav Pandey). Aman is a martial arts teacher in a school. He has a crush on Kirti (Jacqueline Fernandez).

Malhotra who wants to get rid of the tree brings in Raka (Nathan Jones), a mutant, to get the job done.

He reaches the spot but Aman is present there and tries to stop Raka. Raka sticks Aman against the tree and tries to kill him. He does not notice that Aman has got a certain glow emanating from his body after hitting the tree. Raka tries to insert the saw blade into his neck but as soon as it touches the skin, a sudden thunderstorm hits the tree. The impact throws back Raka and he lands in Malhotra's factory's garbage area.

The next morning, Aman finds himself on his bed alive with no sign of any injury and presumes all that happened to be a dream. He does not notice the khanda that has appeared on his back, which is also carved on the tree. That day, he and his brother notice a few unusual things such as easily catching fast balls from a bowling machine, learning new stuff quickly by just touching items, etc. Later his mother also confirms this by hitting Aman various times with a sharp knife and all wounds are healed within seconds, confirming he gained access to a rapidly advanced healing factor. She immediately declares him a super hero.

She then goes so far as to remove Aman's fear of heights by showing him several superhero films from both Marvel and DC, and even tells him the story of his father Sardar Kartar Singh Dhillon, a Sikh who went to Shaolin to learn martial arts and was named "Flying Jatt". She asks Aman to take up the legacy of his father and keep "Flying Jatt" as his superhero name to which he agrees. Initially various events takes place like flying low due to his fear of heights, misunderstandings due to his costume, but he is recognised when he saved hostages from a terrorist attack at an airport. He even proposes to Kirti in the process and reveals his identity.

Raka, who had been missing all this while, is found alive but is now stronger and more dangerous than before because he has more toxins deposited in his body and started growing stronger with increased pollution. Aman goes to battle him various times but is fatally injured. To save him from further pain, his brother Rohit goes in his place as Flying Jatt and gets killed. Not wanting to lose her other son, Mrs. Dhillon decides to leave the town.

Aman decides to stay, saying that he can leave the town, but the cries and sounds of pain of the people would never leave him. Aman's mother asks him to wear his father's turban, but he refuses. She then reminds him of a story of their town, in which all women were kidnapped. It was only the men of the town that had saved all of them while wearing their turbans. She said their turbans gave them power, and the power of his father would be with him if he would wear his turban. Aman then finally agrees to wear the turban and fight Raka.

On the other hand, the people who think Flying Jatt is dead decide to defeat Raka on their own and even Malhotra joins them, after his daughter is affected by the pollution. They decide to eliminate pollution by planting trees everywhere, but Raka comes to kill them once and for all, but Flying Jatt suddenly appears. Raka, in a fit of rage, drags Flying Jatt to the tree and tries to kill him when his mother comes in front and prays, giving more inspiration to Aman who gets up, and, while cutting through the clouds, takes Raka to an asteroid near Earth. He says that there is no place on Earth to defeat him, but he becomes vulnerable on the pollution free asteroid. After a long fight, Aman finally inserts his kara (steel bracelet) into Raka due to which Raka explodes.

Cast

Reception

The Times of India gave the film 0.05 and a half stars out of five.[10]

Firstpost said "The film's comedy, occasional inventiveness and aura of innocence are what make it effective in its own way, despite the lack of depth. D'souza had displayed his natural wit even in his first film F.A.L.T.U. in 2011. A Flying Jatt could have been so much better than what it is, if he had not kept one eye fixed Westward for inspiration. This one is perhaps best suited to the very very young."[11]

The Economic Times said "Overall, the director seems to have lost the plot after the second act, as the narrative meanders making the entire comic affair agonising."[12]

Anupama Chopra from the Hindustan Times gave the film 1.5 stars out of 5, and said "The first half of A Flying Jatt has moments of fun — I loved that despite being a superhero he has a fear of heights, so he flies very close to the ground. But post-interval, laughter takes a back seat."[13]

Soundtrack

A Flying Jatt
Soundtrack album
Released 3 August 2016
Genre Feature film soundtrack
Length 26:32
Label Zee Music
chronology
Hero
(2015)Hero2015
A Flying Jatt
(2016)
Wrong Side Raju
(2016)Wrong Side Raju2016

The songs are composed by Sachin-Jigar.

No.TitleLyricsMusicSinger(s)Length
1."A Flying Jatt"Vayu & RaftaarSachin-JigarMansheel Gujral, Raftaar, Tanishkaa4:48
2."Toota Jo Kabhi Tara"Priya SaraiyaSachin-JigarAtif Aslam, Sumedha Karmahe5:05
3."Beat Pe Booty"VayuSachin-JigarSachin Sanghvi, Jigar Saraiya, Kanika Kapoor, Vayu3:17
4."Bhangda Pa"Mayur PuriSachin-JigarVishal Dadlani, Divya Kumar, Asees Kaur3:58
5."Khair Mangda"Priya SaraiyaSachin-JigarAtif Aslam, Divya Kumar3:38
6."Raj Karega Khalsa"Priya SaraiyaSachin-JigarDaler Mehndi, Navraj Hans5:28

Graphic novel

A Flying Jatt has been made into a graphic novel by Thought Bubbles Studio Planet. The story continues where the film ends.[14]

References

  1. 1 2 "Shraddha Kapoor shoots for a cameo in A Flying Jatt". Bollywood Hungama. 9 January 2016. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  2. Sarkar, Prarthna (25 August 2016). "'A Flying Jatt' day 1 box office collection: Tiger Shroff-starrer to beat 'Mohenjo Daro' and 'Baaghi' opening day records". International Business Times, India Edition. Retrieved 2016-08-29.
  3. "Special Features: Box Office: Worldwide Collections and Day wise breakup of A Flying Jatt". Bollywood Hungama. 26 August 2016. Retrieved 2016-08-29.
  4. "Tiger Shroff is no longer the Flying Sikh – he is the Flying Jatt". Bollywood Hungama. Retrieved 22 May 2015.
  5. "Tiger Shroff to play flying jatt, not flying sikh". The Asian Age. 10 May 2015. Archived from the original on 22 May 2015. Retrieved 22 May 2015.
  6. "A Flying Jatt: Tiger Shroff is a superhero, Nathan Jones is the ultimate villain". The Times of India. Retrieved 27 October 2015.
  7. Sahadevan, Sonup (24 September 2015). "Kay Kay Menon to play creator of Frankenstein monster in ‘Flying Jat’". The Indian Express. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  8. "Amrita Singh to play Tiger Shroff's mother in A Flying Jatt". Bollywood Hungama. 15 July 2015. Retrieved 2016-05-31.
  9. Sarkar, Suparno (24 August 2016). "'A Flying Jatt' movie review: Tiger Shroff's superhero film is a treat for kids". International Business Times, India Edition. Retrieved 2016-08-29.
  10. "A Flying Jatt Movie Review". timesofindia.com. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  11. "A Flying Jatt review: Tiger Shroff is a Sikh superhero in this tacky yet funny film". firstpost.com. 25 August 2016. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  12. "'A Flying Jatt' review: The spirit of the film has been diluted with poor craftsmanship". The Economic Times. 26 August 2016. Retrieved 2016-09-06.
  13. "A Flying Jatt review by Anupama Chopra: A turbulent ride". Hindustantimes.com. 26 August 2016. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  14. http://indianexpress.com/article/lifestyle/books/as-flying-jatt-becomes-a-book-there-is-a-concentrated-effort-to-popularise-comics-again/
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