
Risk
- Director
- Vishram Sawant
- Studio
- Soundtrack| genre =
- Release Date
- 18 January 2007
- Running Time
- 155 min
- Language
- Hindi
- Country
- India
- Budget
- ₹6.00 Cr
- Box Office
- ₹3.98 Cr
Review
Deepak Tijori's "Risk" attempts the familiar dance of cop-versus-criminal that Bollywood has perfected a hundred times over, but stumbles badly in execution. The premise—an honest inspector taking down a Bangkok-based crime lord—has potential, yet the film gets lost in its own convoluted plotting. The narrative meanders between police procedural and political conspiracy without committing fully to either, resulting in a muddled screenplay that asks audiences to swallow increasingly implausible turns. The performances feel uninspired; our protagonist lacks the charisma needed to anchor what should be a gripping cat-and-mouse game, and the antagonist never transcends the one-dimensional crime boss archetype. Tijori's direction is competent but uninspired, hitting predictable beats without adding texture or urgency to what could have been compelling cinema.
What truly tanks "Risk" is its failure to build tension or make us care about the stakes. The political manipulation subplot—involving a corrupt minister and manufactured corruption charges against the hero—feels grafted on rather than organic to the story. The action sequences lack originality, the dialogue doesn't sparkle, and there's a complete absence of the wit or moral ambiguity that might have elevated this material. For a film about a crime empire crumbling, there's surprisingly little sense of consequence or danger. Even the technical aspects feel lazy; cinematography and editing do nothing to compensate for weak wr
Storyline
So there's this major crime boss named Khalid Bin Jamal who's been running the entire Mumbai underworld from his hideout in Bangkok for years. He's got people everywhere keeping his empire strong, and he's absolutely ruthless—doesn't care about anyone who gets in his way. The police have been trying to nail him for ages, but he's always managed to stay out of reach from India's justice system.
Enter Inspector Suryakant, a determined cop who's tired of watching Khalid operate without consequences. He decides it's time to take action and starts going after Khalid's crew members with raids and encounters, with help from his superior DCP Uttam Bhandari. Things get rough for Khalid's organization pretty quickly as his people start getting eliminated, and our cop is making real progress in dismantling everything the crime boss has built.
But Khalid's not someone who goes down easily—he's actually pretty clever and decides to flip the script. He comes up with a devious plan involving a politician who works for him and manages to manipulate the Home Minister into doing his dirty work. This creates a situation that makes Suryakant look like the bad guy, and suddenly our hero cop finds himself facing serious corruption charges that threaten to derail his entire mission against Khalid.



