Overall, "Force 2" is a treat for action film lovers. Sonakshi Sinha could not do justice to her part this. John Abraham does a fine job as rugged and tough officer. The actor is definitely talented but should do more variety of roles rather than doing the same stuff similar to "Mardani". Performance wise, it is Tahir Raj Bhasin who walks away being a hero of the film. I like the first-person camera fight in the climax. Few scenes will arise while watching "Force 2" - Why on earth a criminal be escorted to India from a foreign land only by 2 officers ? How come so many people start popping out every time Shiv is being taken away by India police? Despite, these shortcoming, I felt the thrills and punches are good enough to keep you at bay. The good part is that screenplay will keep you engaged though it has share of flaws. However, the second half loses the steam and few of the action scenes looks repetitive. Initial few reels does have nail-biting moments like car lifting scene, the chase scene between John Abraham and Tahir Raj Bhasin in Budapest and the twist before the interval. The movie does start with a bang with the introduction of each primary characters and takes it forward. Directed by Abhinay Deo, who previous laugh-a-thon "Delhi Belly" and suspense thriller "Game", "Force 2" is a complete out-an-out action film which is a treat for action film lovers. The cat-and-mouse game begins which leads to the mystery behind the killing of the Indian RAW agent. Yashwardhan (played by John Abraham) partners with RAW agent KK (played by Sonakshi Sinha) to track down the mastermind criminal, Shiv (played by Tahir Raj Bhasin), who is on the verge of swiping out every RAW agent India has produced. Will it do justice to that ? Let us find out. The sequel to 2011's hit, "Force", "Force 2" is yet another attempt to salute the RAW agent, the unsung heroes of our country. Salman Khan and Katrina Kaif starrer "Ek Tha Tiger" was a blockbuster while Saif Ali Khan's "Phantom" was turned down by the audience even though both the films were made by Kabir Khan. CAUTION.Action films based on Indian RAW agents have been fairly successful in Bollywood. Massive destruction of things/environment with people and animals running in fear in all directions can be equally "violent" or more so, as beings attacking each other. (The later violent scene includes chaos caused by appliances world-wide turning violent in retail stores, in addition to the "transformer" entity driven by the "master mind" mole.) Personally, I just think the intensity and such destructive display was ill-placed and unnecessary to make this movie entertaining and given the younger audience. When a nano-rigged coffee-makers turns violent and crashes through a store-window to attack on-lookers. There is one earlier scene that might be difficult for younger, sensitive types. My husband too was shocked by the intensity shift. It was TOTALLY unexpected after watching cuteness with moderate action for the majority of the film. Even I felt on pins and needles watching monster machines violently tearing up everything, and my boy had trouble falling asleep. My 9 year old is a bit sensitive to these types of scenes but I didn't not foresee how upsetting this would be to him. All was well until the last 30 minutes or so when the viewers are thrust into a drawn-out, intense, transformers-like scene where one of the animal characters (the mastermind) controls a Transformers-like entity, destroying the environment on all fronts- lots of crashing, striking and burning. The movie was all cute, a bit like Alvin and the Chipmunks meets Spy Kids.
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