"Inspector Zende" streaming on Netflix has been generally labelled as a comedy/thriller. The 112-minute long film features Manoj Bajpayee--a very intense actor who has played a cop many times during his remarkable career--in the titular role of inspector Madhukar Bapurao Zende of the Mumbai Police who had the rare distinction of catching the infamous serial killer, fraudster and thief Charles Sobhraj not once, but twice. Here Bajpayee appears in a lighthearted comic avatar. Jim Sarbh essays the role of Charles Sobhraj, who for some reason has been named Carl Bhojraj in the film.
As the hunt starts, visuals from Mumbai and Goa of the eighties do look delightful and refreshing. Zende, his teammates and their boss DGP Purandare (Sachin Khedekar), Zende's wife (Girija Oak), children and his mother, all of them look innocent straightforward people. It is endearing to see the policemen working without any modern security or surveillance equipment, and on a meagre budget. Jim Sarbh's Bhojraj does not appear menacing enough to be an international serial killer. His long hair, moustache, and laboured accent reduce him to being a caricature, far from being the charmer that he was in real life.
Chinmay Mandlekar, a well-known writer, director and actor mostly active in the Marathi entertainment industry has written and directed "Inspector Zende". Why he chose to make a film that focuses on the chase of a serial killer as a comedy is something beyond comprehension. The subject and its treatment are no match to each other.
While the film is mostly clean and suitable for family audiences, it is a pity to see an actor of Bajpayee's calibre being wasted in an average story and script. The jokes are weak, the direction is simplistic and the pace of the film is slow. This does not mean that Bajpayee is not suitable for comedy. It is just that a tame comedy is not enough to tap into his potential.
To name a few instances from the film, police teams from Delhi, Goa and Mumbai clashing over claiming the capture of Bhojraj is mindless and childish. The fight sequence between Zende and Bhojraj in the middle of couples dancing in a hotel is funny, but it dilutes the importance of the moment and reduces it to a farce. Bhalchandra Kadam, a prominent comedian from Marathi industry playing one of Zende's teammates fails to make an impact. After watching the film, one is left with the impression that sometimes even when you have all the right ingredients, a tasty dish eludes you.
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