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Director Shimit Amin, PG, 160 mins, Subtitles
Stars: Shah Rukh Khan, Vidya Malvade

The ‘King Khan’ is back on the big screen and this time he has sixteen women under his wings.
Shah Rukh Khan is Kabir, a former disgraced captain of the Indian hockey team, who decides to coach India’s national female hockey team. Will the obdurate professional be able to instil into his diverse bunch of feisty females the merits of team spirit, take them to the World Cup finals in Australia and regain public adoration in the process?
This rare sporting film is a timely attempt to revive interest in India’s national sport – Indians invented the game – which lost its popularity to cricket and football in India. Whether or not this happens remains to be seen, but as a film, it’s a successful attempt to push the boundaries of the Bollywood envelope.
At one level, this is not groundbreaking. The theme of underdogs emerging triumphant, achieving self respect and fanfare through success is familiar. This has been previously explored in the Rocky series, Cool Runnings, and Bollywood’s own Oscar nominated Lagaan, and the recent Iqbal.
Yet first time director Shimit Amin has fashioned a gripping film: we keep rooting for our girls even though it is fairly obvious what the final result will be. This is achieved via a script which eliminates most of the usual trappings of the formula, and focuses on the game. Romance is absent, parents are sidelined and no one breaks out into song and dance, Lagaan-style whilst training.
Khan’s omnipresence dominates. He is impressive, adding a sixth facial expression to his trademark five: a steely grimace. The real heroes of the film are the sixteen laddettes making their film debut. Some of their characters are sidelined and lapse into Indian regional stereotype: the pushy Punjabi, a Chandigarh beauty, junglees from Jharkhand. However, the ones we encounter are credible, modern Indian women.
Amidst the light proceedings, are jibes at the Indian government’s inertia to fund sport adequately, and at sexist male dominated sporting bodies’ refusal to treat female players seriously as “Indian women are born to cook and clean”. It is also refreshing to see a Muslim Indian as the main protagonist in a Bollywood film which does not deal with Kashmiri terrorism or communal marriage.
Although predictable and with a preachy patriotic ‘United India’ message, this is a heartfelt, heady, homage to hockey.
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I think Surj Langi is thinking some other movie here. By all accounts its one of the best movies I've seen all year and in fact in a long long time, and that includes Hollywood, Bollywood, Kollywood and any other woods you wanna quote. Great screenplay, there's probably two weak lines in the story.
Ryan, Glasgow,
I thought it was a very good film, predictable yes but totally enjoyable. The absence of the traditional songs and dance routines made this film a success and should set the standard for other 'realistic' themed bolywood movies in the future.
Vinod, Couva, Trinidad
hi, i m not fen of shahrukh but i can just say about srk after i shawd movie of chakh de india! NO ANY BOLLYWOOD ACTORE CAN PERFORME THIS KIND OF ROLE? NO ANYBODY FILL BOURING WHILE THEY WATCHING MOVIE OF CHAK DE INDIA
AKII, bolton, u.k.
This movie is a poor man's "Bend It Like Beckham" only with a sub-standard soundtrack, and even poorer performances. it is cinema by the numbers, with Shah Rukh seming to phone-in his role in all but a few sequences.
There is no question this wil make money, and good on the actor for making a departure from his more formulaic roles. But i can't help but feel it is more of a sidestep than a true leap for an actor who can be much more than we get to see.
All of the new artistes seem sincere enough, hampered by poor characterisation and typical 'filmi' regional stereotypes.
Chak De is sadly an oportunity missed, a sporting movie that is more Barnsley than Brasil...
Surj Langi, Birmingham, England
A tribut hockey and a social comment on women' s status it may be but it is above all a Shah Rukh film and therefore a world wide hit. As one commentator said 'no one wants to see hockey but everyone wants to see Shah Rukh'
Actually the film is good because it is well written, very well directed, has an unusual storyline but mostly mostly it has Shah Rukh and therefore you notice all its other good points too. He deserves all the award the film industry can give!
Sassui Kazi, London, U.K/
Must see movie (especially for those who enjoyed the likes of Lagaan)..attended the world premiere at Somerset House and saw SRK in flesh n blood...great experience.!!!
Eram, London,
Excellent with gripping moments and wonderful team spirit: liked the overall deglamorisation, cameos and the acknowledgement that men must respect womens advent
into sport and society.
rani, Nottingham, england
Don't think Mr. Sinanan knows what he's talking about. Shimit Amin is NOT a first time director. He made the brilliant Ab Tak Chappan starring Nana Patekar a few years ago...
Savyna, London, UK