And it sticks out like a sore thumb in a film that is otherwise so rooted in its milieu. This is the dubbed Hindi version!Įven if one isn’t acutely aware of the actors’ original voices (to be fair, the dubbing artists do their job competently), the inevitable lack of harmony between the lines and lip movements give it away. They aren’t speaking in Bundelkhandi, as the trailer and the pre-release interviews had promised. Neither is Ranvir Shorey, who plays Vakil Singh. They look at each other, exchange a few words, and it becomes clear that Bajpayee and Rajput aren’t speaking in their voices. Soon, Lakhna ( Sushant Singh Rajput) – while washing his face in the river – sees an apparition of a girl. Is it Man Singh’s voice? I toss it aside, just like Man Singh, and move on. Man Singh casually disregards, and keeps walking. They are about to make another loot when Singh’s men warn that it’s a bad omen. It lies on the way of Man Singh ( Manoj Bajpayee) and his men, a band of fictitious dacoits living in seventies India. A close up of the rotten carcass of a dead snake, flies swarming over it, with the ravines of Chambal in the background. Abhishek Chaubey’s Sonchiriya opens with a premonition.
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