

New York opens around 7 years after the 9/11 attacks with
Omar (Neil Mukesh) being wrongly held captive by the FBI. Investigating officer
Roshan (Irrfan Khan) offers to go easy on Omar if he agrees to spy on old-time
friend Sameer (John Abraham) who the FBI suspects to be a terrorist. With a
maneuvered reunion, Omar gets entry into Sameer's house and tries hard to unveil
his activist identity but fails every time, much to his relief.
In
contrast, Sameer himself narrates his distressing past to Omar of how he was
illegally detained and brutally tortured by the FBI for 9 months, immediately
after 9/11 and victimized for being a Muslim suspect in New York.
New York opens on an intriguing note with Omar's attempts to
infiltrate into Sameer's life. The ensuing chemistry between the characters
keeps you riveted till the movie takes an interesting (though palpable) twist at
the interval point. The terrorism theme comes into picture predominantly in the
second half. The physical and mental abuse on innocent Muslims, imprisoned
merely on suspicion and their consequent repercussions are effectively
portrayed.
But beyond that Aditya Chopra's story doesn't work
towards the rehabilitation of the disturbed mind that has taken to the wrong
path. In a way, the film turns the villain into more of an antihero imparting
him no character change. Above that the commonplace climax where the FBI
headquarters is held as the terrorist target doesn't go beyond Fanaa frontiers.
The terrorist is terminated but the topic of terrorism it tackles keeps long
lingering. The message doesn't come across compellingly and perhaps that's why
the director preaches with an extended epilogue.
All the three lead
protagonists of New York are Muslims affected by the 9/11 episode in varied ways
and to different degrees. Sameer turns a scapegoat of the situation; Omar's
identity gets him in trouble, while Roshan's character (a Muslim investigating
on terrorism) offers that ray of hope prevailing amidst discriminating
humankind. Unfortunately the scope it had to represent the contrast of the
characters isn't used as distinctly and effectively like in the Pakistani film
Khuda Kay Liye with similar concerns.
The issue of global terrorism
somewhere goes for a toss with the film turning into a human emotion drama. As
the victim is released from prison and his atrocities are still fresh in your
mind, the intensity of his trauma is diluted with a love song stuffed in. The
couple further goes on to make love and start a family. More mush comes into
picture as Omar confesses his campus feelings to the married Maya (Katrina Kaif)
amidst the pre-climax mayhem. Thankfully the traditional Yash Raj triangle is
averted. The side-track of a frustrated Muslim driver (Nawazuddin) committing
suicide doesn't contribute to the plot and could have been avoided.

Hindi Movie Videos View the Coolest Scenes & Trailers, Register for Free Now!www.Bigadda.comPriyanka Chopra in Bikini Get The Latest News, Music, Videos Of Priyanka. Free Fast Streaming!www.In.com/Priyanka-ChopraHot Movie Actresses Hottest Gossips, Photo gallery Reviews. Exclusively on Mayanagarwww.mayanagar.com

