Maidaan review: read an honest review of maidaan movie. Maidaan review: India commemorated its football “golden era.” It was also called the “Brazil of Asia” in the 1950s. There were some golden players like Chuni Goswami, P K Banerjee, Peter Thangaraj, Tulsidas Balaram, Jarnail Singh, and Pradyut Barman in the team. They won gold in the Asian Games in 1951 and 1962. They finished in fourth place at the 1956 Olympics.
Maidaan review
This team was built and coached by Syed Abdul Rahim. He also made them play hard on the field. Ajay Devgn’s “Maidaan” masterfully captures “Rahim saab’s” love and devotion for the game. This movie shows how he helped to place India on the map. The movie emphasizes the difficulties he encountered while serving. It’s about how he overcame prejudice from the local media, politicians, and community to assemble a team capable of competing with the best. In “Maidaan,” a family supports their intense love for football. Family begs him to select it over spending his final months with them. It talks about how all you need to defeat the most formidable opponents in any field is “jazbaa,” or excitement. And one day you do overcome your doubters when you are “that” good at what you do. ‘Maidaan’ offers director Amit Ravindernath Sharma. He accustomed to directing 30-second ads, the opportunity to direct something over 300 times longer. Throughout the first hour of the 180-minute movie, he did falter as the plodding pace tried your patience. But he really hits the nail on the head in the second half, thanks to a captivating narrative and some excellent camera work. Special thanks to Tassaduq Hussain, Christopher Reed, and Fyodor Lyass, the sports directors of photography. Since football is a movement-based sport, this is perhaps the first feature film to incorporate go-pro cameras. It heightens the suspense. The bouts are compelling. It makes you want to cheer on the players and even cry when they lose.