Rahul Dholakia’s ‘Lamhaa’ is an ambitious attempt, trying to bring to  fore the multifaceted conundrum that the Kashmir crisis is. For the  most part it is quite a realistic depiction of the various issues that  plague Kashmir. The film, probably deliberately, is more like a  documentary than a cohesive narrative that unfolds to tell a compelling  story.
Kashmiriyat, the catalytic role that ISI plays in the valley, the  vested interests of the Indian and Pakistani governments in keeping the  issue alive, the plight of Kashmiri pandits, the atrocities by the  security personnel, the trials suffered by the widows and orphans caught  in the midst of all this and foremost, the systematic brainwashing of  young and vulnerable minds to join the ‘holy’ Jehad – Dholakia attempts  to address all these issues in this film. Given that Kashmir cannot be  understood from a limited perspective and any portrayal of this  contentious issue needs a holistic approach, Dholakia fails to provide a  comprehensive narrative.
It’s a persuasive tale, how the issue of Kashmir has become more of a  business proposition and a story of political one-upmanship for those  in power. Caught in the crossfire of political rhetoric and unabated  militancy are ordinary lives struggling to come out of the shadow of  terror. But somewhere it falls short of becoming that one defining film  on Kashmir that tells a complete untold story.
The cast doesn’t disappoint with Sanjay Dutt, Bipasha Basu and Anupam  Kher delivering their parts with conviction. Kunal Kapoor is decent  except his attempted fiery and provocative speeches that fall flat and  sound totally unconvincing and filmy. Some characters with their  frightening beards seem like lame stereotypes that we could have done  without.
The songs are just thrown in without any attempt to weave it into the  narrative. The experimentation with the camera movements and editing  didn’t quite seem to have the desired effect; in fact, I found it quite  disconcerting initially.
To give him his due, it’s a commendable effort but the climax doesn’t  quite pay off. Like I said, in his attempt to address varied issues at  the same time, the plot doesn’t quite tie in everything with together at  the end. I was left wanting for more and looking for some kind of  closure while I watched the end credits on screen.
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