Gangs of Wasseypur Part 2 Movie Review

 Gangs of Wasseypur Part 2 WallpapersCrime thriller “Gangs of Wasseypur” (GOW), based on real life story, wowed the audiences despite a high dose of gore and violence. Now part part two of the movie is releasing Wednesday and it is said to be taking violence and bloodshed to a new level.

According to NDTV, the sequel gets to the point infinitely quicker than Gangs Of Wasseypur did – it is free from the information overload that weighed down the initial 30 minutes of the first part.

The storyline surges forth much faster as the new generation of gangsters, now armed with mobile phones and automatic rifles, gun for each other with greater viciousness and less ceremony than ever before.

The blood-letting is far more insistent in Gangs Of Wasseypur II The narrative acquires a momentum that is often breathless and the warring men drop dead quicker than you can count.

But the multiple strands of the drama come together cohesively to deliver a convincing glimpse of the larger socio-political implications of Wasseypur’s lawlessness and rampant violence.

If there is anything missing in Gangs Of Wasseypur II, it is the infectious musical buoyancy of the first part. The soundtrack of GOW was one of the brightest embellishments of the film.

Not that the music of Gangs Of Wasseypur II is sans merit – it is delightfully quirky. It, however, pales a touch because it delivers more of the same, unmindful of the fact that the transformation of Wasseypur may have been more than just physical.

The first part opened June 22 amid critical and commercial acclaim.

Centered around power, politics and rivalry among three families, the film explores revenge through the socio-political dynamic in Wasseypur, Jharkhand, also known for coal and scrap trade mafia.

While GOW-1 spans the 1940s to the 1990s, GOW-2 will be the culminating factor that will take the story forward from the 1990s till 2009.

“Gangs of Wasseypur 2” is said to be a fitting conclusion to the vengeance story.

Written by Zeishan Quadri, who hails from Wasseypur, the film is co-produced by Anurag Kashyap and Sunil Bohra. Powerful performers like Manoj Bajpayee, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Tigmanshu Dhulia, Richa Chadda and Huma Qureshi form the cast of the movie.

More than 90 percent of the film has been shot in Uttar Pradesh to bring the right mood and feel to the story.

Both the parts were screened at the 65th Cannes International Film Festival and the just-concluded Osian film fest in the capital.