Aiyaary -2018- 【99% Working】

Where Aiyaary falters is its execution. The film runs close to 2 hours and 40 minutes, and you feel every minute of it. Pandey, usually a master of taut storytelling, indulges in unnecessary subplots (a romantic track with Rakul Preet Singh that goes nowhere, a flashback within a flashback featuring Naseeruddin Shah as a mentor to both leads) that bloat the runtime and dilute the tension.

Furthermore, the “big twist” about the corruption’s source is both predictable and underwhelming. After establishing a complex moral gray area, the film resolves its conflict with a simplistic, preachy courtroom-style climax that feels less like a thriller’s payoff and more like a civics lesson. aiyaary -2018-

The non-linear narrative, which flashes back and forth between the present chase and past training days, is meant to build emotional depth. Instead, it creates narrative whiplash. Just when the chase in London gains momentum, the film cuts to a prolonged, leisurely flashback in a military academy. The tonal inconsistency is jarring—shifting from a gritty cat-and-mouse thriller to a sentimental tribute to army tradition and back again. Where Aiyaary falters is its execution

At its heart, Aiyaary asks a timeless question: What happens when a soldier’s loyalty to the nation conflicts with his loyalty to a corrupt system? The film follows Colonel Abhay Singh (Bajpayee), a stoic, principled Army officer, and his protégé, Major Jai Bakshi (Malhotra). When Jai discovers a high-level deal involving a stolen military software and a corrupt senior officer (a chillingly calm Adil Hussain), he goes rogue, stealing a classified file and forcing Abhay to chase him across India and London. Instead, it creates narrative whiplash