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Acid Factory

Acid Factory is a paranoid thriller directed by Suparn Verma under the banner of White Feather Films. The film released on 9 October 2009.


Cast

*Fardeen Khan... Romeo *Irrfan Khan...Kaiser *Manoj Bajpai...Sultan *Dino Morea...J.D *Aftab Shivdasani...Sarthak *Danny Denzongpa...Om *Gulshan Grover...ACP Ranbir Singh *Diya Mirza...Max


Music

The album has 9 tracks, composed by various composers such as Bappa Lahiri, Mansi Scott and Shamir Tandon. It is a rather an intelligently put together album. An album which does its task admirably.


Synopsis

Acid Factory is about a group of characters whose sense of past has vanished in a haze of coma like sleep they have woken up from only to discover that reality could be a figment of their imagination. Their sense of right or wrong is heightened by this state of complete distrust and self righteousness. As the story reveals through the hazy mist of confusion confounded by loss off memory, the audience is just shown the tip of the iceberg. Five men wake up inside the stolid confines of a factory to find themselves locked in this claustrophobic nowhere land. As the plot unfolds we gradually learn that two of the people who are trapped have been kidnapped and held hostage by the rest of the three for a heist. But the irony is they themselves do not know who the hostages are and who the kidnappers are. The plot is like a Rubik cube that acquires the contours of solid colours on each side as the narrative unfolds. Their fears are heightened by a phone call from the leader of the gang of goons who informs them that he is on his way with the heist and plans to knock off the two hostages as soon as he arrives. Every one fears for their lives as they are unaware about the fact which two of them are the hostages. They plan escape, fail and end lunging at each other in despair as the clock ticks away. Individual foibles and shortcomings surface in this final hour of despair. Like caged animals they alternately bicker among themselves and then jointly plan means of escape but to no avail. The Big Boss eventually arrives.


Critical reception

Upon release, the film has met with mixed reviews. Taran Adarsh [indiafm] and rediff.com gave it 3/5 stars while PlanetBollywood and Glamsham.com give it 9/10 and 4/5 stars respectively. However at the box office the film came to be a super flop one due to a lot of similar action scence as in the movie "Ek Khiladi Ek Hassina" which was directed by the same director. Omar Qureshi on Zoom TV rated the movie 2/5.


Source : Acid Factory Wiki Page

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Beyhan
02 May 2012, 19:40
Great review, Rob. I rebemmer watching it when it first aired on syndication and enjoying it for the most part. This is because I wasn't buying Joes as frequently, plus it seemed then like the line would go on forever. Turned out to be just four more years, and this was the last cartoon to feature the RAH universe for quite some time. I was glad to see DIC continue the Sunbow continuity in the initial Dragonfire mini, especially by wrapping up the whole CC/Serpentor mess much like the comic had done years earlier. Can't help wondering how Sunbow would have treated it, but the animation at DIC was okay. It's the music and most of the voice acting that I can't stand, except for the late and lamented great, Chris Latta.
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