Saala Khadoos Movie Review

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At the centre of Saala Khadoos are two down-and-out individuals. One is a disgraced ex-boxer whose life has been a story of missed opportunities.

The other is a feisty young girl from a Chennai slum who has nothing to lose.
The duo forges an unlikely and uneasy alliance and throws punches at a world in which the odds are stacked heavily against them.

The pair’s shaky pursuit of an impossible dream in the face seemingly insurmountable obstacles propels Sudha Kongara’s scrappy and wholly predictable narrative.

In one bout, the film’s female protagonist is pitted against a Russian pugilist from a higher weight category. The former is knocked out in nine seconds flat.

In another sequence, the girl – she idolizes Muhammad Ali and aspires to “float like a butterfly and sting like a bee” – fights with a broken right fist. She ends up losing.
Needless to say, the spirited lass keeps bouncing back from the blows she is repeatedly subjected to. After all she has the support of a coach who is willing to go the distance with her.

Despite being packed with all the classic ingredients of a sports drama, Saala Khadoos can only manage to be sporadically watchable.

The drama revolves around Adi Tomar (R Madhavan), a pugilist who has lost his chance of a shot at sporting glory because of the perfidy of his own coach.

He has other reasons to be peeved with life, not the least among which is the fact that his wife has left him for another man.

To make matters worse for him, Adi is falsely accused in a sexual harassment case and banished from the boxing hub of Hisar and transferred to Chennai.

There he chances upon a rambunctious fisherwoman, Madhi (debutante Ritika Singh) who accompanies her struggling elder sister Laxmi (Mumtaz Sorcar) to boxing bouts when she isn’t hawking her day’s catch.

Adi spots the spark in Madhi and takes her under his wings. He resolves to hone her inborn skills to the point from where she can make a bid for the world championship.

The rookie boxer’s story of the quintessential underdog chasing greatness is inevitably strewn with the expected complement of setbacks.

The biggest hurdle in her and her mentor’s way is the national women’s boxing head coach Dev Khatri (Zakir Hussain), a creepy official who will stop at nothing in throwing his weight around.

Madhi also encounters some less daunting but equally deleterious challenges.

These include Madhi’s own emotional frailties and the envy that her rapid progress under Adi’s tutelage arouses in her elder sister, a girl who hopes to escape poverty by landing a sporting quota job in the police force.

There can be no denying that the boxing scenes in Saala Khadoos are infinitely more realistic than the ones we saw in 2014’s messily melodramatic Mary Kom.

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