Movie Name: The Diplomat
Directed by: Shivam Nair
Starring: Kumud Mishra, Sharib Hashmi, Amitoj Mann, John Abraham, Benjamin Gilani, Sadia Khateeb, Ashwath Bhatt, Ram Gopal Bajaj
Genre: Thriller, Drama
Running Time: 130 Minutes
Release Date: 14 March, 2025
Language: Hindi
Rating:
Production Companies: T-Series Films, JA Entertainment, Optimystix Films, Fortune Pictures
Based on the true story of an Indian diplomat (John Abraham) who tries to repatriate an Indian girl from Pakistan, where she was allegedly forced and tricked into getting married against her will.
The Diplomat: Movie Overview
The highly anticipated trailer for ‘The Diplomat,’ starring John Abraham, has been unveiled, promising a high-stakes political thriller rooted in real-life events. Featuring a stellar cast including Sadia Khateeb, Sharib Hashmi, Revathy, and Kumud Mishra, the film sheds light on the power of diplomacy over warfare.
Released on the birth anniversary of the late Sushma Swaraj, the trailer pays homage to her crucial role in 2017, supporting Indian diplomat J.P. Singh in a daring mission to bring India’s daughter back home. John Abraham takes on the role of Singh, portraying his resilience and strategic prowess in the face of international challenges.
Speaking about the film, John Abraham remarked in a statement, “Diplomacy is a battlefield where words carry more weight than weapons. Playing J.P. Singh allowed me to explore a world where power is defined by intellect, resilience, and quiet heroism.”
Director Shivam Nair emphasized the film’s core theme by stating that ‘The Diplomat’ is a tribute to the unsung heroes who wield strategy and patience to protect their nation.
‘The Diplomat’ showcases a different side of John Abraham, shifting from action-packed roles to a character driven by intellect and negotiation. The film is set to release in theaters on March 7, 2025.
On the other hand, John Abraham’s previous blockbuster was SRK’s ‘Pathaan,’ which received a 3.5-star rating from ETimes with an official review from us that read, “Director Siddharth Anand gives an over-the-top treatment to his spy thriller. He presents it more like a superhero film that needs a massive suspension of disbelief. His fascination and fanboy worship of mainstream Hollywood blockbusters like Marvel films or Tom Cruise’s Mission Impossible series, to name a few, is evident here. Expect Falcon-like wingsuits, exaggerated action & chase sequences, death and gravity-defying stunts on cars, bikes, ice, and helicopters, immortal heroes and villains mouthing punchy dialogues, a femme fatale, and all of this seeped in the idea of patriotism.”
Movie Trailer:
Movie Review:
Diplomacy for Dummies
Despite strong performances by John Abraham and Sadia Khateeb, sketchy characterisation and lack of detail derail this ‘true’ story
In 2017, Uzma Ahmed made headlines when she was rescued from her abusive Pakistani husband by the Indian High Commission officials under the supervision of the then Minister of External Affairs, Sushma Swaraj. Director Shivam Nair joins forces with actor-producer John Abraham to recreate the diplomatic maneuver from the point of view of diplomat JP Singh, who led the rescue mission to bring the Delhi girl home.
However, as it turns out, it is yet another addition to the trend where filmmakers flaunt the placard of ‘based on a true story’ but develop cold feet in digging the truth of the story. It thanks the top of the ministry for support, but it is hard to take a film on diplomacy seriously that can’t differentiate between an embassy and a high commission. It is difficult to root for a nationalist narrative when the makers don’t get the designation of a former foreign minister right.
Recreating the sarkari version of the events, The Diplomat sounds contrived and simplistic. It reminds one of John’s last production, Vedaa, where masala diluted the integrity of the story. The makers seem to have spent more time designing the disclaimer than crafting the screenplay. The elaborate disclaimer is more intricate than the storyline. It tries to bind our viewing experience into a series of dos and don’ts, but what one eventually experiences is not in sync with the disclaimer’s logic. It says that the film is based on information available in the public domain but then conjures up an attack on Indian diplomats on Pakistani soil. Ironically, the last line of the disclaimer suggests that the film doesn’t seek to spoil relations with neighbouring countries.
A single mother, Uzma (Sadia Khateeb), meets a taxi driver, Tahir (Jagjeet Sandhu), in Kuala Lampur. The two fall in love, and the next thing we know is that Uzma lands in Buner in the hills of the geo-politically sensitive Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan because she thinks the sparsely developed place known for mining is ideal for the naturopathy treatment of her daughter. Her bubble bursts when the much-married Tahir turns out to be a beast. She tricks him into knocking at the doors of the Indian High Commission, and then John takes charge.
Even with creative license, Uzma’s backstory doesn’t sound plausible. It is hard to buy the gaps in her statement as just a huge error of judgment. The film is conspicuously silent on her parents and her first husband, and it feels strange that even the conservative Pakistani characters don’t question her marital status vis-a-vis Tahir’s.
Moreover, the commentary and tone reduce the complexity of the situation to answer a popular social media question: the difference between India and Pakistan. The good thing is Nair keeps it moving, papering over the cracks with some style. To his credit, screenwriter Ritesh Shah attempts different shades of Pakistani characters, however, they remain swimming between hysterical and stereotypical. A helpful lawyer (Kumud Mishra), a law-upholding judge, and a slimy ISI officer (Ashwath Bhatt) all behave like stock characters with predictable lines. Bollywood has reduced the versatile Ashwath into a single-note specimen of vile from across the border whose motives can be seen from a distance.
It goes without saying that Pakistan is a difficult terrain for foreign service officers, but one is not sure whether our officers keep stating the obvious. Talking of diplomatic language, in his conversations, Singh twice emphasises that Uzma is a Muslim girl. Ritesh tries to create variety in the Indian diplomatic set-up by pitching a Pakistan-fearing Tiwari (Sharib Hashmi), but the character’s potential remains unrealized.
Known for keeping a straight face even in the most evocative of scenarios, John is a great choice to play a diplomat, and he does a decent job in a role that limits his muscle power to forcefully punching the table. He channels his inherent swag to make his way through a sketchy script. Jagjeet blends into the atavistic ways of patriarchy. In a short appearance as Swaraj, Revathy captures the grace and charm of the politician who earned respect across the political divide. In its tense moments, the film, however, belongs to Sadia Khateeb, who creates a poignant portrait of a woman suffering for believing a stranger. Except for the sloppy courtroom sequence, she remains a picture of poise and tenderness amidst suspecting men. Unfortunately, the nuance of her performance, like much else, gets lost in the sanitised screenplay.
The Diplomat Movie Songs:
Song Title: Bharat
Lyrics: Manoj Muntashir
Music: Manan Bhardwaj
Singer(s): Hariharan
Song Title: Naina
Lyrics: Kausar Munir
Music: Anurag Saikia
Singer(s): Varun Jain, Romy, Anurag Saikia