Tintin's Top Ten
Worst Bollywood Films of 2013
Before I get into
listing the worst films of this year, I would like to put some light into the
films I haven't watched this year, obviously that could be quite a list…so let
me just put those that I was not interested in watching;
Movies didn't bother
wasting time on: ABCD (Any Body Can Dance), Murder 3, I Me aur Main, Boss,
Satya 2, Gori Tere Pyaar Mein and R…Rajkumar
I'd like to point
out that in the event of tied scores, I decided that the film that I like the
most among the tied ones was the one that goes one rank higher e.g..
Lets say I gave ABCD
and Murder 3 both 2/10 but I liked ABCD more, than it goes to spot number 1
where Murder 3 is 2 even if Murder 3 had better individual scores.
I've made my peace
with the fact that certain films will make tons of money, no matter how
undeserving they are. Such films are entertaining for the masses, heck even
sometimes for me.
So for someone who
only has the means to go to the theater with his family in a year is bound to
choose an entertaining escape from troubles of daily life that has the right
doses of action, comedy and romance in it.
Even then I also
have the voice to express my personal opinion on a movie which I did not like
or which I felt was a waste of my 300-400 Rs at the theater. Especially by the end where I turn into a
maniac on a hate rant.
This year unlike the
last I did my best to suffer through countless films…some which I actually
enjoyed (partially) and came with a list of ten films that were the worst of
the year. The good thing to take from this is that, so the first few films
may just be average compared to the worst ones I haven't watched.
Although the worst film that is listed below as number one, I can guarantee is the worst film of THE YEAR!
Films that just
missed the cut; (These are ones I watched)
Aatma-Nawazzudin
Siddiqui wastes his talent on the lamest horror I've seen in years
Phata Poster Nikla
Hero-Melodramatic nonsense where Rajkumar Santoshi tries to recapture the
fleeting genius of his cult classic Andaz Apna Apna and mega hit Ajab Prem Ki
Gazaab Kahani
John Day-Bleach
blond Naseeruddin Shah and a one expression Randeep Hooda. The quintessential
movie where talents waste their time for a paycheck
Onwards to the worst
of the year…
10. Shootout At Wadala
Cast: John Abraham as Manohar 'Manya' Arjun Surve, Anil Kapoor as ACP Afaaque Baaghran, Kangana Ranaut as Vidya Joshi, Tusshar Kapoor as Sheikh Munir, Manoj Bajpai as Zubeir Imtiaz Haksar, Sonu Sood as Dilawar Imtiaz Haksar, Ronit Roy as Inspector Raja Ambat, Mahesh Manjrekar as Inspector Bhinde, Siddhanth Kapoor as Gyancho with Sunny Leone as Laila and Jackie Shroff as Police Commisioner
Genre: Crime/Thriller
Best Scene: As Manya, his gang and outside associates ambush Zubeir at a petrol pump. They go on to murder him in cold blood. Bajpai is a genius when it comes to death scenes, and for a weird reason is one film death at a petrol station away from a hattrick after Gangs of Wasseypur and this.
Best Performance: Manoj Bajpai as Zubeir Imtiaz
Best Dialogue: 'Manohar sidha tha, ye Manya tera hai'-Manya Surve, ('Manohar was a naive man, Manya is a cunning one').
Basically stating what Manya has become through the film, clunky dialogue but good enough
Pros:-The narrative
style is quite cool and really gets the viewer invested in the film
-A few dialogues are crackling and
powerful
-Most of the supporting performances
are splendid especially those of Sood, Roy and Bajpayee
-Abraham has great dialogue delivery
and really brings out the animalistic nature of his character with his
expressions
Cons:-The pacing of
the film is pretty terrible, there is no connection between particular scenes
as the film becomes a mix of infuriating action pieces and one too many item
songs
-Overall the script is terrible, it
plays out as a bit too melodramatic at times and sexist
-The film sketches over realistic
points in favor of putting a notorious gangster in a better light
-Dialogue at times border on crass
while action supports this
-Gupta provides excessive use of
slow motion in many action scenes
-Where his expressions help,
Abraham's body language betrays him. He is too stiff where as his leading lady
and supporting friend clearly over act
Score: 3.8/10 (Story-2.1, Direction-2.1, Performances-7.8, Background score/soundtrack-3.3)
Manya Surve (Abraham) a ruthless gangster has finally been caught in the first ever recorded encounter in Mumbai Police History. As a dying Surve is being taken away in a Police van, he recalls his tale to ACP Afaaque Baaghran (Kapoor).
Manohar Surve was an honest studious man with a small time goon for a brother. Once during a confrontation in order to save his said brother, Manya mistakenly kills a man and is imprisoned even though he committed the crime in self defense. Manohar trains and decides to escape prison with his friend Sheikh (Kapoor), they make friends of big time gangster Zubeir (Bajpai). After a scuffle with Zubeir's younger brother Dilawar (Sood), Manya leaves over his pride and creates his own gang. Soon a gang war engulfs Mumbai, and the first ever encounter squad is assemble to take down Manya led by Baaghran. With the Police on one side and Zubeir and Dilawar on the other, Manya's journey is charted to the infamous Shootout at Wadala.
What it did right?
When Shootout was
announced, I was excited; after all it was a prequel to the exciting action
thriller that was Shootout at Lokhandwala.
Like with the first
film, the narrative style and storytelling method is very interesting and
engages the viewer beautifully. While in SaL it was intriguing to see the
Officers involved dictate the events to their wily lawyer, here it was
captivating to see both Cop Afaaque Baaghran and gangster Surve discuss the
inner workings of each of their actions leading to their final confrontation.
Manya Surve dying in
a Police van narrates his story while Afaaque regularly chimes in with his
investigations on the underworld. The flashback narrative is bolstered by some
great filmy styled dialogue mixed with the Mumbai slang that is fittingly adapted.
What the film does
the best however, is litter the supporting cast full of talented actors like
Anil Kapoor, Ronit Roy, Sonu Sood and most importantly Manoj Bajpai.
Bajpai just seems to
have perfected the art of dying (and that too being riddled by bullets at a
petrol station again!), he's is neither showy or over dramatic. Instead there's
that feel of realism (as much as there can be) to the way he dies and enacts the
final moments of death.
He portrays a suave
gangster impeccably but the screenplay thoroughly lets his character as well as
the whole film down. He stands quite tall in front of both Kapoor's tough as
nails cop and John's ambitious gangster. He leaves a mark even with the lesser
screen time.
Like with him, Ronit
Roy has a short screen time in which he aptly supports Kapoor as an officer.
He's wasted in the small role, I would like to see him in a lengthier role as a
no nonsense cop (although if Boss is to go by, then I'd rather see him do normal
HIndie films like Udaan).
Sonu Sood is by far,
one really underappreciated actor. He has the talent, but surprisingly the film
also showed that Sood has a raw charisma and flamboyance around him.
Considering who he's playing (Dilawar is the basis for notorious
gangster/terrorist Dawood Ibrahim) this is a vital pre-requisite, and Sood
fulfills all points thoroughly. He is however cut short towards the end of the
film, and with reason since the real life man would become a bigger threat
afterwards. Hopefully if a better script can come by, then Sood can get a
chance to shine in even a lead role. Of the four portrayals of Ibrahim this
year, Sood is second but also the closest to the notorious gangster of his
films era.
But the film really
belongs to only one man; John Abraham. Off all the things I didn't expect,
Sanjay Gupta actually brings out a spectacular performance from Abraham. When I
first watched the film, I was disappointed with Abraham's portrayal of Surve. I
still hold my ground that there are a lot of negatives to John's work however a
second viewing (forcefully watched because I needed to rate the film) made me
more lenient towards him.
While Abraham does
exude Manya's rage overtly with his expressions and dialogue delivery, he does
this in such a way that it perfectly suits the film. He's a raging beast
through the story which work brilliantly in context.
With the talent
involved, they easily elevate the film from its shoddy script and direction
although not taking it high enough to become a good picture.
What it did wrong?
That screenplay and
Gupta's own structuring of it on screen.
I'm going to
paraphrase this really great quote by Rahul Bose;
When
there is an item song in the film, you know that a director really doesn't have
anything else to say or anything else in his film.
When taking this
into context, Sanjay Gupta's Shootout is filled with three excruciatingly
painful Item numbers. So what does the director, really have to say?
Now that, that's out
of the way. Lets take a gander at the script.
The script annoys
me, in order to write out a certain macho flavor to the film it compromises the
female characters (however little they are). I get that this isn't the first
film to do so or the last, or the fact that in a way the treatment of a female characters
are semi realistic to the era.
First there's the
dialogues, constantly filmy but mostly inbred with misogynist ideals, when
Manya and his gang get together all we here is Tarantino styled banter about
female body parts, (the dialogue doesn't even do the Tarantino talking method
right).
Still the reaction
and development of the lead female character is absurd and highly sexist. A
scene depicts Manya forcefully entering his former girlfriends home and
virtually going through with forcing her into sex which eventually for the
woman goes from trying to fight it to liking it.
No matter if she
loved him at one point, no realistically developed female character would make
the decisions she does.
Considering the
issue of the Delhi Gang Rape incident, this scene is in terrible taste and
points out at the rampant sexism in Hindi cinema as well as India as a whole
whether it be back in the day or now. Sanjay Gupta's macho world view may be a
bit right, but it is stupid and disgusting. Bollywood's notion as a whole, that
things like Macho men showing force or stalker like persistence will get them
the girl is an outdated and frankly perverted imaginary thought of male writers
and directors.
Most people will
chalk this as a so what, and simply reply that it's a realistic situation of
the era in a realistic film. Maybe Manya did do that to his real ex-girlfriend,
even then the way the scene us filmed it paints the picture in a loving light
from Manya's view.
On the contrary the
whole screenplay tries to hard to paint Surve in a positive light. It sketches
over his past, and makes the initial character come of as a bit one dimensional
good and honest student.
The truth?
While Manya Surve
was quite smart and educated, he also had his own gang during his college years
and an arrogant demeanor due to his brother being a notorious gangster. In
fact, where in the film Surve goes to jail by being forced to kill a man so as
to save his brother. In reality he and one of his friends murdered a man over a
certain incident.
I get that the film
is meant to have its viewers sympathize the protagonist, but painting one in
such a great light and then on top of that highlighting the brilliance of a
life as a gangster seems to give a negative message.
What's worse is that
this kind of story has been done to death. Even with the protagonist lying dead
due to the path he chose (another trope), audiences seem to only carry the
positive image of a life as a criminal.
What's worse is
Gupta's method of storytelling. As a director he's expected to bring a certain
flow to proceedings, but scenes just come and go. There's no real thread
between each part of the film, everything seems so loosely connected. All Gupta
does to salvage this is inserting items songs, and by the third one roles
around you're eyes and ears start to hurt.
Also his and his
cinematographers choices of camera angles are questionable. A few frames feel
stretched, that it makes the film look outdated and coming from a bygone era.
Even the production design tries too hard in aping the retro look and comes off
cheap.
Lets not forget the
atrocious action choreography, the whole length of the film is stretched due to
the fact that every action scene is in Slow Motion! Heck, even the item song
'Laila' runs in slow motion for a short time! Its excessive use is furiously annoying.
On the acting front,
where in expressions and delivery Abraham is a revelation…the need for a proper
chiseled body affects his body language, he's is lumbering through the film.
Abraham is constantly stiff in the way he moves and reacts, it just takes you
out of his performance. Kangana his
leading lady fares worse, she's over the top and her delivery (her weakest
aspect) doesn't come across well. She's constantly either tearing up and thus
crying and quivering when saying anything. It's annoying.
Final Thoughts:
I hate how when one
great movie like a Kahaani or English Vinglish takes Bollywood forward in
giving gender equality, then you have a Wadala really highlight how sexualized
females are on celluloid and how sexist the writing comes off.
Of course we forget
to mention Gupta's adoration of Tarantino's style of work. While you can see
hints of homage even here, Quentin Tarantino still managed to give us a Jackie
Brown and The Bride, so that's where my hatred boils further at the script and
its director.
Gupta basically apes
Tarantino's style without giving it meaning, so in turn his homage just becomes
false copies.
Maybe I'm reading into
this too much though, that's why the film sits quite above in the worst list.
In fact my hatred directed here is just a tip of the effects due to the worst
film of this year (see below).
9. Chennai Express
Cast: Deepika Padukone as Meenalochni Azhagusundaram, Shahrukh Khan as Rahul Mithaiwala, Sathyaraj as Durgeshwara Azhagusundaram, Nikitin Dheer as Tangaballi, Kamini Kaushal as Rahul's Grandmother, Lekh Tandon as YY Mithaiwala with Mukesh Tiwari as Inspector Samsher and Priyamani as 1234 Item Girl
Genre: Masala (Multiple Mix)
Best Scene: Rahul pulls Meena and then the goons chasing her onto a train. A hilarious homage to SRK's iconic climax scene from Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge
Best Performance: Deepika Padukone as Meenalochni Azhagusundaram
Best Dialogue: 'Don't underestimate the power of a common man.'-Rahul
Pros:-It's
definitely a mass entertainer especially in its first half
-Shetty captures the more smaller and
contained romantic elements well
-The cinematography is picturesque
and highlights the beauty of the South
-Padukone gives a superb over the top
performance, excelling with her mannerisms and accent in the first half
-The music is really fun to sing
along to
Cons:-Even with some
nice romantic moments, the second half dips quite low especially with its
melodramatic and action-romance trope filled ending
-On a base level, the script is
highly unoriginal and generic
-Much of the comedy, especially
dialogue wise falls flat. The film never really gains the tempo Shetty gains
with full on comedy films
-Shetty uses his typical signature
elements bringing nothing really different or interesting to the film . Along
with that his script as usual is filled with illogical gaps
-He also tries too hard and fails to
mix this with the star (Khan's) own persona of soft romantic hero
-Surprisingly both the action
choreography and production design seems really cheap in the film. Green screen
usage is visible through out the film
-Shahrukh Khan is all over the
place, his over acting really affects the comedy badly in the film
Score: 3.6/10 (Story-2.3, Direction-1.9, Performances-4.9, Background score/soundtrack-5.1)
Rahul is a 40 year old bachelor looking to be set free from his mundane existence under his grandfather's watch. When his grandfather passes away, Rahul is tasked to send his Ashes into the Rameshwaram river. Instead Rahul uses this as an excuse to get out and head to Goa with a bunch of friends. Then Meena lands in Rahul's train and life and everything changes. Rahul lands up in a Madras village and in a comedy of errors runs away with Meena. They fall in love, now Rahul has to face Meena's father and his chosen man Tangaballi for Meena's hand and show them the true power of a common man.
What it did right?
As I mentioned
earlier, I am trying my best to understand and give leeway to films that are
nonsensical but make a lot of money at the box office. Express is such a film.
In truth the film is
an actual wholesome package of entertainment. It has all the typical great
flavors of a masala film, and the director works hard in juggling all these
aspects well.
What's better is
that unlike previous Rohit Shetty films, the director and his writers try hard
to add some depth to proceedings. He tries to address the social standing of
women in the country and their right to equality, this is parallel to Sharukh
Khan's own perfect idea of giving first billing in credits to his female
co-stars.
Another aspect where Shetty works on is the logic of his
films. While you still see cars crashing and burning like in a video game, the
characters in his film constantly speak Tamil and the film works in a bilingual
nature. While it may be a small and somewhat irrelevant point, like with many
unrefined mainstream directors he could have easily had everyone speaking
proper Hindi even if they are from the South of India where they have their own
language. The fact that he incorporates the language and has been incorporating
Southern film style means that Shetty really likes the South Indian flavor of
films and respectfully remakes/pays homage to them.
One of the major
turns of the film is that the role is being played by Khan, unlike his
contemporaries he doesn't exude the macho man masala film hero presence. As
such a major portion of the film incorporates a prototypical romance to the
film. Unlike normal masala films,
there's a lot of development and time spent on the two characters and their
budding necessity to be together turning into a romantic angle. Shetty also
excels here in handling this romantic elements well, no matter how generic they
are. The good thing is he doesn't and never has made them come off as
regressive as his contemporaries like Prabhudeva.
Also a mention of
the cinematography that captures the natural beauty of the south.
Onto the
performances, there's nobody whose had a better year in Bollywood than Deepika
Padukone. With 4 back to back 100 crore hits in 2013, the actor has raised her
stock. Of course four hits doesn't
necessarily tally up to good films or even performances. Padukone goes
against the grain, the script and a caricature of a character to give her most
funny if not competent performance. She's hilarious and amps up the accent to
the max, intentionally or unintentionally she milks all the laughs from the
audience she can get. Coming to the dramatic parts of the film, she really
holds her ground never faltering from being the quintessential leading man's
love interest. With all her prowess,
she sweeps the show away from right under her veteran co-star and is the only
reason to remotely watch the film.
While the soundtrack
was full of typical lip sync Bollywood songs, the interesting aspect is that
the songs didn't have bad placing and in fact gave soothing and much needed
rest stops for the OTT film. The music in the film is also quite catchy and in
fact one of the most oddball yet best soundtracks of 2013.
What it did
wrong?
Not Funny. Not funny
at all!
Even in a biased
mode I'm willing to admit that Rohit Shetty's Bol Bachchan was a laugh riot.
The same cannot be said about CE. All the dialogue and all the sketches just
fall flat on their face. Nothing comes close to hitting the high notes of any
of Shetty's full on comedy films.
You cannot even
chalk this up to the divided genres (unlike actual masala films where they're
mixed and blend properly), as Singham (an out and out action film) was quite
hilarious through out. What's worse is that, I'm not just talking about the
melodramatic and lagging second half but also what should have been a hilarious
first.
On top of this,
Shetty adds his usual and this time unusual (what the hell was the point of
taking Rahul into a Pirate ship?!) illogical plot points. These bits seriously
derail the thin plot and convolute the film
unnecessarily.
Character wise the
film has to fit the mold and image of the actor. This kind of practice in
mainstream films just shows how serious writing is actually taken, instead of
casting an actor to play a character the character is written for the specific
'actor' or should I say star.
So in this case
instead of you usual buff and tough Masala film hero, you have a silent sort of
cowardly man with the characteristics of a romantic. As such Shahrukh is
perfect casting for Rahul sorry Rahul is perfect casting for Shahrukh Khan.
The thing still is,
this is an action movie and it's not your typical SRK style action film where
after being beaten in the climax he can get up on sheer willpower and fight off
the villain (although that also happens here, with the customary Shahrukh breathes
blowing dust when on the ground and gets up heroically). Here SRK has to give
some small but slick action stunts to entice the audience, such things burden
the character who goes from simpering and foolish to heroic in seconds.
So instead of at
least trying too give us a one note character through out or compelling arc, we
get a full package masala hero but in SRK's everyman romantic hero packaging.
SRK gets to play underdog and super-hero, he gets to have his cake and eat it too.
Could it get any
worse? Yes.
The one thing
directors/writers need to learn, is never cast SRK in a comedy film. For any
zany, crass, or maybe even subtle comedy; Khan hams it up to the max and
delivers the dialogues with a sense of cheesiness. As a lead actor for such a
film, he's expected to hold the fort with a burst of charisma but when he's
outshone by Padukone he's unable to do that.
Khan like his character seems out of his
element, and not even in the right manner that the screenplay wants him to be.
In the romantic shtick he fares much better, but is bogged down by the plot and
the fact that we've seen him pull off this act before and much better than
here. As such when a Masala film lead is bad, then the score goes low as well.
Final thoughts:
Overall I can
clearly state that this could have been close to becoming Shetty's worst film
if it weren't for the scenic locations, the much needed but small depth to the
script but most importantly Deepika Padukone.
If there's anything
worth remembering, it's her scene stealing highlight of a performance. In fact because of her, of all ten of the films on this list it's Chennai Express that I wouldn't mind re-watching.
8. Chashme Badoor
Director: David Dhawan
Cast: Ali Zafar as Siddharth Kashyap, Taapsee Panu as Seema Ranjan, Siddharth Narayan as Jai 'Jomo' Lakhanpal, Divyendu Sharma as Omakar 'Omi' Sharma, Rishi Kapoor as Mr Joseph Furtado, Lillete Dubey as Miss Josephine with Anupam Kher as ? and Bharati Achrekar as Seema's Grandmother
Genre: Romantic/Comedy
Best Scene: While not as hilarious as the original, the flashback scenes where Omi and Jai lie about their conquest of Seema
Best Performance: Divyendu Sharma as Omkar 'Omi' Sharma
Best Dialogue: 'Kashmir na koi le sakta hai, Na koi de sakta hai. Kashmir na koi le sakta hai, Na koi de sakta hai. Kashmir me sirf teen din aur do raat ka honeymoon ka package ho sakta hai!'-Omi, (
Pros:-The dialogue
clicks well at rare moments
-Ali Zafar has effortless understated
charm, Sid and Divyendu are firecrackers. Their chemistry is well crafted
Cons:-Its crass and
in your face comedy gets annoying
-The films narrative has no
structure or flow, these are just half baked comedy strung together
-An example of lazy writing, with no
character development and a tacked on message including a logic less climax
-The Dubey-Kapoor sub plot is a
waste of time and extends the film unnecessarily
-Even for a David Dhawan this is low
class and disappointing
-Scenes for the orignal are aped
without any depth to them
-Panu makes a horrendous debut.
Veterans Kher, Achrekar, Kapoor and Dubey are a disappointment
-Most of the songs fail to entertain
and appear distractingly in narrative
Score: 2.5/10 (Story-0.8, Direction-0.7, Performances-5.4, Background score/soundtrack-3.1)
Sid (Zafar), Omi (Sharma) and Jomo (Siddharth) are three bachelors living together in a room they never pay for and eating food at Mr. Furtado's (Kapoor) hotel which they never pay for. When Seema (Panu) arrives in the neighbourhood, having run away from her Military obsessed father (Kher) and a Military man to be husband everything changes. The vagabonds Sid and Omi try and fail to woo her but when Sid lands the girl, the two friends can't let go and a comedic scheme ensues to first break Sid and Seema up and then patch them together. A remake of the 1981 classic Chashme Buddoor
(So the plot sounds quite generic, especially when handled by David Dhawan, the original 1981 film by Sai Paranjpye is much better due to its elements of subtle comedy and innocent romance not to mention sub-textual commentary on mainstream Bollywood...watch the old version instead)
Before I head to the meat of the review, if it were up to me this would be the worst film of the year. No its definetly much better than most of the other movies on the list, and my score may be a little incorrect but at the end of the day...
...YOU DO NOT MESS WITH A CLASSIC!!!
and yes I would also like to apologize that I thought this would be one of my most anticipated movies of 2013. I had only seen the cast list and was excited to see Divyendu Sharma back in action alongside the ever hilarious Ali Zafar. When I saw David Dhawan's name as director close to the release I was like 'meh' then when I saw the film I thought...
...YOU DO NOT MESS WITH A CLASSIC!!!
Next time I promise to do my research...(but I will still watch a remade movie, because sometimes you mess with the classic and it still comes out good AKA Agneepath 2012)
What it did right?
I'll be the first to
admit that I found Dhawan's remake mildly funny, the thing is his comedic tone
works best with an out and out wacky actor like a Govinda or a Salman Khan.
Here it tries and lands the right notes in dialogue a few times.
In that case none of
his actors live up, which is ironic considering Dhawan and his re-made script
don't do justice to the effort the actors put in. A lot of people seem to be
giving flak to Ali Zafar for his work in the film, but I feel the role of Siddharth
requires the kind of bland understated charm that Zafar brings to the role. The
thing is you cannot avoid comparing him to the far (and I mean really far)
better portrayal by Farooq Sheikh in the original.
That makes things
even worse for his co-stars as their inevitably going to be compared with the
supremely talented Rakesh Bedi and Ravi Baswani. Still I took into
consideration that the misguided slapstick script meant they had to perform the
way they did, and as such Siddharth and Divyendu Sharma give a competent
showing.
What it did wrong?
If it were up to me
to review from a subjective point, than Chashme would be the worst film of the
year.
From this film it
proves that no matter how entertaining his old comedies are, David Dhawan is a
useless fucking director. Opting to steal (I know he bought it legally and
credited the former writer/director) the iconic comedies script and then
turning into his crass and borderline in your face film, Dhawan just pissed me
off.
He takes a large
dump on Sai Paranjpye's subtle and charming 1981 classic, with a film that
barely resemble the old one and therefore didn't need to even coast on its
name. His film is a sign of how lazy Bollywood film making is getting at times
and a dishonor to Sai's hard work.
Scenes pasted from
the old classic are the only funny ones, but they don't even have the same
heart and soul. The original had sub textual spoofing and parodying of the
stupidity yet sweet tradition of Mainstream Bollywood films…here Dhawan aped
those scenes without understanding their context.
He makes it worse by
keeping no real storytelling flow through the run time, it's just lame
joke/sketch after another. Characters are sketchily written with very low grade
motives, one such instance is that of Jai who believes in method acting and
uses this as an excuse to nearly rape a woman in an audition scene. Making fun
of such an issue just seems a bit too low grade even for Dhawan and his
screenplay writers sensibilities.
Plus Tapsee Panu,
aagghhh!!! Every freaking time she has to chime in with her 'Dum hai boss!'
routine, she tries to hard to be bubbly and comes of annoying as hell!!! For
some reason I just cannot come to believe that this is the same actor from the
National Award winning Tamil film Aadukalam. Where she gave a good showing.
Alongside her the
veterans were a sheer disappointment, hamming it up to the max. Rishi Kapoor,
Anupam Kher and Lillete 'Covered up Malika Sherawat' Dubey are all an
annoyance, and the sub plot between Kapoor and Dubey is unnecessary.
Plus they make a
botch job of the endearingly sweet Ms Chamko scene from the original (which was
portrayed in the original by the characters of Siddharth and Neha (Seema in
this version)
And for god sakes
what was the meaning behind that common man/army man message, it was so stupid
and in the climax really put down the Indian army. Seriously shouldn't people
have burned the film posters (or did they?).
Finally that music,
loud, illogical and really not well placed making the film worse than it
already is. How sweet were 'Kahan se aaye badra' and 'Pyaar Lagavat' from the
original and how tacky were 'Dishkyaoon' and 'Har ek friend' from the new
version.
Final Thoughts:
I beg these idiotic
hack of directors to leave the classics alone, last years Bol Bachchan (albeit
quite funny) pissed me off after it copied Hrishida's Gol Maal. This year
Dhawan's Chashme Budoor falls into the list of crap remakes of stellar works of
art. 2014's Humshakals helmed by mega hack Sajid Khan is being touted as an
Angoor remake.
Seriously why the
fuck can't originality be a motto among such people, then again considering how
bad they are at their jobs; why can't they such retire. Yet these movies make
tons of money, seriously go to hell today's stupid film audience
7. Race 2
Cast: Saif Ali Khan as Ranveer Singh, Anil Kapoor as Robert D'Costa, Deepika Padukone as Alina Malik, John Abraham as Armaan Malik, Jacqueline Fernandez as Omisha/'Fake' Tania Martin, Ameesha Patel as Cherry with Bipasha Basu as Sonia Martin Singh and Aditya Pancholi as Godfather Anza
Genre: Action/Thriller
Best Scene: The starting car blast scene, cause if you pause it at the right time you notice that they replace the expensive Lamborghini (sorry don't know which model it is) with a cheaper model (that's what the internet says, and it makes sense) to save money on a film that was going to make huge profits anyway.
Saif Ali Khan: Wow! I believe I can fly...Yipppeee! Wow!
Best Performance: The above car, since it actually changed itself unlike any of the actors expressions
Best Dialogue: I'm lucky I don't remember this movie at all so I don't remember the dialogues
Pros:-There's slick
action that entertains quite a bit
Cons:-The film is
all style no substance
-The film's crux emotional point
just seems like a stepping stone to explain continuity errors and necessitate
for a sequel, but it doesn't seem to have the depth to it
-Thus this forms a by the book
revenge film
-Characters fall into one category;
brooding, dark, steely eyed, sexy and with grey shades. After the previous
film, this becomes a one-trick pony
-Some fairly sub standard
performances
-Ameesha Patel is neither funny nor
bubbly, while Kapoor's narration is annoying and his performance over the top
-The film is just set piece after
set piece with unbelievable character traits and decisions in between and no
development which causes plot discrepancies
-The soundtrack is used to just fill out a incoherent story and film, the original score from the previous feature is updated and sound horrendous in comparison
Score: 2.7/10 (Story-0.4, Direction-1.1, Performances-2.0, Background score/Soundtrack-5.5)
After the initial Race, Ranveer (Khan) and Sonia (Basu) are living a happily married life. Things take a darker turn when Sonia is killed mistakenly, a hit meant for Ranveer. Ranveer discovers that the hit was put out by a big buisness mogul Armaan Malik (Abraham).
Ranveer uses his connections with RD (Kapoor) to make friends with Malik and his sister Alina (Padukone) to help them rob big shot casino owner Vikram Thapar. Ranveer needs funds for this from Malik who agrees, getting a loan from the Godfather (Pancholi). Ranveer meets Omisha (Fernandez), Armaan's girlfriend and supposedly Sonia's sister out for revenge.
Another plan pops up to steal the Shroud of Turin, through which Ranveer will play his game to destroy Armaan for what he took from him. With twists and turns and betrayals afoot, Ranveer will have to reach the finish line to get his revenge and win the Race against Armaan.
What it did right?
It still gets that
slick action right down to the tee…like with the first film
The soundtrack is as
superb as the first one, while obviously distracting the music really is
entertaining enough to watch and better worth paying the ticket price for than
the film itself
What it did wrong?
At the end of the
day, the second film seems like a poor rehash of the original. Ahmed (the
writer) tries to hide behind a revenge motive in the film to add depth, when
actually the plot is hollow and wafer thin. In truth the revenge concept moving
past the point that it's so cliché, is just a reason to get the films action
started (since the real reason for its existence is Bipasha Basu's non casting
in the second film).
With any compelling
plot out of the way, the slick features of the film seem empty. There's no
denying that the Abbas-Mastan duo are spectacular in their sense of style as
filmmakers, but when a film really doesn't have substance it doesn't really
help the style, but hinders it. Their form of storytelling here seems lazy,
since considering how they turned a typical plot (neglected brother out for
revenge) into a total package of a feature for the first Race.
Some of the basic beats of this screenplay
also mirror those of the first race, the constant betrayals and twists simply
not having that magnetic feel to it anymore.
The same can be said about characters who are all full of grey shades
with ulterior motives to benefit themselves, this time round the film had a
chance to make its lead protagonist remotely likable and identifiable to the
viewer unlike the previous Race. This should have been a leg up for the second
film, however the writers squander this opportunity by barely even giving
mention to the revenge scenario in between the opening scene and the ending
one.
Race was an average
film but with something vaguely unique about it, directors Abbas-Mastan go with
the old adage 'If it's not broke, don't fix it' and repeat the formula here
without any of the new zing to it.
A shoddy script
however can be saved by exceptional performances, and when you have talented
actors like Anil Kapoor and Saif Ali Khan then it's definitely possible.
Unfortunately this is not the case, you could see with the first film that the
director duo had an issue restraining Kapoor from going fully over the top,
here they simply let him loose and Kapoor hams to the max on screen. He's also
supported poorly by Patel who does the blond act too much in your face, simply
just shining her off screen personality into her on screen one.
Saif and John might
be on two different sides, but they share the same thing; only one expression
through the picture. It also doesn't help that their body language is off,
particularly Abraham's who has bulked up so much that he comes off stiff on
screen.
Their leading ladies
and juniors in the acting world decide to learn something from two macho men
and surprisingly give us;
ONE EXPRESSION!
Music tends to
appear at the right moments but you know a soundtrack as good as this is just
placed so as to fill seats in a theater, where the film itself is pathetic.
I love and respect
that song and dance are a tradition of Bollywood films, but they cannot be
allowed to be used as a crutch for directors with no real artistic credibility.
Final Thoughts:
Speaking of artistic
check out this REAL Trailer for Race 2 by The Viral Fever: Qtiyapa:
6. Once Upon ay Time In Mumbai Dobara
Director: Milan Luthria
Cast: Akshay Kumar as Shoaib Khan, Imran Khan as Aslam, Sonakshi Sinha as Jasmine Sheikh, Mahesh Manjrekar as Rawal, Abhimanyu Singh as ACP Ashish Sawant, Pitobash Tripathi as Dedh Tang, Chetan Hansraj as Jimmy, Sophie Chaudary as ? with Sonali Bendre as Mumtaz and Vidya Balan as Tayyab Ali's Lover
Genre: Crime/Romantic/Thriller
Best Scene: Notorious terrorist/gangster Shoaib Khan walks into a Police Station, mutters how ignorant and stupid the police is and walks out without being apprehended.
Best Performance: Sonali Bendre as Mumtaz, only because of nostalgia
Best Dialogue: None
Pros:-The romantic
elements are written with a filmy style but also a certain deeper emotiveness
-Luthria tries his best to salvage a
shoddy script, by highlighting the mentally wounded man Shoaib has become
-Pitobash, Abhimanyu and Bendre are
the only highlights among an uninterested cast but have small parts to really
come across
-Music is sufi stylized and soothing,
the original films score was perfect and is wisely left untouched
Cons:-The script is
nonsensical, there's no particular narrative structure in place
-New characters are written without
any depth or endearing quality, older characters are not highlighted well
enough (which is vital, since the casting changed)
-The films half baked romantic plot
bears heavily on the action, there's no real allusion to the crime element that
made the first film exquisite.
-Neither writers nor directors
establish setting or proper character background and motivation
-Luthria fails to understand the era
or the characters continuity from the previous film, he puts in too much style
thinking it will cover up the hollow plot without fixing it himself
-Even with a poor structure, it
doesn't help that the editing makes things worse by having no connective tissue
between scenes
-Sonakshi Sinha is at her most
annoying, Imran Khan just feels oddly out of place and the romantic bits don't
help him either
-Kumar neither brings the stylish
sexiness of Ajay Devgan or the restrained steely eyed menace of Hashmi. Instead
he opts to make Shoaib to overt and in your face, he spoils what sub textual
broken monster that Luthria tries to salvage from the script
Score: 2.2/10 (Story-1.1, Direction-1.7, Performances-2.4, Background score/soundtrack-3.7)
After the bombing from the previous film, Shoaib Khan (Kumar) has gone into hiding in the Middle-East. He hasn't sat idle though, he's extended his empire there and has a firm grip on Mumbai. He decides to return home after his attempt to fully take over Mumbai is objected by rival gangster Rawal (Manjrekar).
Here he meets Jasmine (Sinha), who instantly wins his heart. Khan showers her with gifts and everything, unaware that his right hand man Aslam (Khan) has been wooing Jasmine through mutual friends. Shoaib is eventually rejected by Jasmine.
Once this occurs, Shoaib raises hell against Jasmine and soon Aslam in order to prove to them that he is the true King of their lives and Mumbai.
What it did right?
Milan Luthria fails, yes.
But he definetly tries (a bit too late into the film) to highlight his
lead protagonist/antagonist's metaphorically wounded character. With that,
although a bit cheesy he also understands the concept of old school filmy
romance very well adapting into the period setting.
The supporting cast
is poorly utilized. But even with a miniscule role and shoddy character
writing, the best of actors can do something worthy.
The underrated Abhimanyu
Singh is a highlight in the few scenes he is in where as the unknown Pitobash
is at his funny man best. The surprise though is a much more restrained and
focused Sonali Bendre, who does her best to salvage the over the top scenes
with Kumar and highlight his character better than the dialogues she had does.
Even though a bit
unoriginal, it was a wise move to leave the perfect score of the previous film
untouched. It blares with the same style and sensation as it did with the
prequel. The other songs are spectacular and have a sufi feel to them, they
appear pretty much at the right moments although I do wish 'Tayab Ali' wasn't
so in your face
What it did wrong?
That stinking
writing and the casting.
Where the original
OUATIM was a slick, stylish yet very gritty and dramatic gangster film the
second is turned into a cheesy, atrocious romantic triangle of a saga.
From the
onset the screenplay seems odd, there's no particular structure as scenes just
come and go with no real semblance. What's worse is that each scene is
highlighted by the most nonsensical dialogue and practically static motion of
characters and the camera.
An example of the stupidity would be Shoaib's
dialogue 'Doodh mein nimbu jisne daala, Panner usika'
('Whoever puts milk
in the lemon, the cheese is theirs').
Most of the time you'd think this has
some deeper metaphorical meaning, but the absurdity of the words just makes
this and the film as a whole sound idiotic.
Unlike its
predecessor, there's no real highlighting of the crime element and the script
relies on a romantic angle. Unfortunately the romance in the film feels so half
baked (surprising considering, it's all the film focuses on) and the actors
have such terrible chemistry that the whole picture sinks.
The reason I think
it feels half baked is mostly because of the characters and the performers.
There's miniscule early character focus given to new boy Aslam, and beyond that
there's no deeper sense given to his motivations specifically regarding his loyalty
and camaraderie with Shoaib.
There's also a gap
in Shoaib's development, we know from the last film that he bombed a part of
India and had established his empire into the Middle East. What
we don't know is why we should care for his one sided and very dominating
romance with Jasmine and why by the end he is to be pitied, in truth the film
neither earns the viewers sympathy nor gives a compelling arc for Shoaib to
play out. This is depressing considering how superbly crafted his character was
in the original.
Finally the girl in
the equation; Jasmine. The stupidity of the character is what makes the film
unintentionally hilarious. She is fine being made a top actor and getting gifts
from a man she has known…
(well it's hard to
know how long she's known him since the film has no concept of time, I mean
we're told she's just arrived to the city and apparently it seems like a few
days later she wins an acting award or is it a year later?! Plus what era is
the film from, cause theirs an 80's styled sufi song and then we also get a
modern filmy club song?!)
…for let's say not
so long, yet is surprised when he wants something from her in return.
Apart from that, as
mentioned in brackets; the director and writer have no grasp on setting. My
guess would be that the film is set in the 80's (maybe that's why it sucks),
which when couple with how realistic the prequel tried to be doesn't make sense
since we know that Shoaib is partially based on notorious gangster Dawood
Ibrahim. Dawood Ibrahim or in this case
Shoaib post the bombing would never arrive back to Mumbai in such an overt
fashion like his does in the film.
Which gets me to my
next point; why do crime films in Bollywood feel it necessary to highlight the
luxuries and sensational aura of being a gangster. Shoaib is presented in such
a filmy hero way, being completely invincible and unbeatable and painted in such
a positive picture till the end. This film does it worse than previous gangster
flicks, because here we don't even get to see any of the two leads pay the
price for their actions. Where Aslam becomes the sympathetic hero and gets the
girl, Shoaib supposedly has stolen our hearts and sympathy if the viewer
fell for the melodrama nonsense.
Then the
performances. BY GOD!
Sonakshi Sinha
disappoints, a few weeks before OUATIMD we saw her in Lootera (where she was
mind blowing). Here she's at her annoying worst, and I'm willing not to blame
that on her character.
On another note, I
hate when an actor only gets work because of their connections in the industry.
This truly applies to Imran Khan (nephew to Aamir Khan), the man holds no basic
element of acting whether it be dialogue delivery or expression. He seems an
odd fit in a gangster movie even considering that the script is actually a
romantic film (his forte) in disguise, plus he looks to fresh to
be involved in such a murky world.
Then there's Akshay
Kumar. He has messed up what was a stellar showing in the prequel by Emraan
Hashmi. Now every time I'll watch Hashmi's portrayal of Shoaib in the prequel,
I'll see the crap-fest work done by Kumar. He hits all the worng notes, unlike Hashmi
he delivers the typical Shoaib dialogues with an idiotic snarl rather than
steely cool, he is too overt and in your face in both body language and
expression where Hashmi oozed a raw charisma.
Final Thoughts:
There was an
opportunity here to build a stunning world and characters for a franchise,
after stellar work in Once Upon A Time In Mumbai. The team fails to light the
screen once again with this dumbed down and very incoherently crafted sequel.
5. Besharam
Cast: Ranbir Kapoor as Babli, Pallavi Sharda as Tara Sharma, Amitosh Nagpal as Titu, Javed Jaffrey as Bheem Singh with Rishi Kapoor as Inspector Chulbul Chautala and Neetu Singh Kapoor as Head Constable Bulbul Chautala
Genre: Masala (Multiple)
Best Scene: When Babli tricks Chulbul and ties him up calling him fat and useless. Funny since the scene involves real life father and son.
Best Performance: Neetu Singh Kapoor as Bulbul Chautala
Best Dialogue: 'Kaun ho aap log?'-Babli ('Who are you people?')
'Tera baap, Chulbul Chautala aur yo teri aama Bulbul Chautala'-Chulbul ('Your father, Chulbul Chautala and this is your mother Bulbul Chautala')
Meta as hell!
Pros:-Ranbir gives a
good showing in the comedic and romantic portions while the Kapoor couple are
hilarious. The three Kapoors have a sizzling chemistry
Cons:-Dialogue is
rife with exposition
-Characters are written flat and one
note.
-The script follows typical but also
out of date narrative beats
-Action is flawed where as the
juvenile comedy is a pathetic attempt on laughter
-Kashyap visually seams together a
hollow picture, he tries to evoke dramatic emotion that neither he or the film
have earned
-He also in a Besharam ('Shameless'
pun intended) manner keeps on sticking the films name into the picture
-The film tries hard to elevate Ranbir as a mass star, but he doesn't have that in your face charismatic appeal. His leading lady is as stiff as a board
Score: 2.0/10 (Story-0.4, Direction-0.4, Performances-4.9, Background score/soundtrack-2.1)
Babli (Kapoor) and his friend Titu (Nagpal) are car thieves, they do this so as they can sell cars and earn money for their orphanage and its children. One such evening Babli meets Tara (Sharda) and is smitten by her. He decides to pursue and woo her in his annoying fashion eventually being rejected.
When big time goon Bheem Singh (Jaffery) needs a car he hires Babli who mistakenly jacks Tara's new Mercedez. In order to appease the girl of his dreams, he takes her to get her car back from Singh. Trouble between Babli and Bheem ensues and to top it off corrupt officer Chulbul and Bulbul (Kapoor and Kapoor) are on his case. Babli must save his skin in his shameless style and that too soon.
What it did right?
The only reason I
believe the film was made…The Kapoors.
It seems the idea
behind the script/screenplay and picture as a whole was to get the
father-son-mother trio of Rishi, Ranbir and Neetu Kapoor together on screen for
the first time together. It's a novel idea, and the trio play their parts well
chewing scenery to the hilt.
But at the end of
the day…
What it did wrong?
…a film requires a
script/a plot/ a story, and this film has none. This is of course in its base
form.
The film does have a
screenplay, that just plods along with a clear and generic path in front of it.
Simply the story can be told as;
Guy is a crook, he's
charismatic yet arrogant, slick yet a buffon. Introduced in a song to
accentuate his heroism and his thin character. Guy meets girl, guy falls in
love with her while girl is always pissed off and not interested in him. A few
songs. Guy stalks girl in a creepy fashion that audience should feel is
romantic. Girl humiliates guy, but he has to be all self righteous and try woo
her again. Guy makes a mistake, tries to make it up to girl. Guy also reveals
his negative attributes, girl forgives him and falls in love. More song and
dance. Guy gets into trouble with bad guy.
Guy has some other
minor obstacle AKA cops, guy then takes on the big bad. Melodramatic nonsense
powers up guy and he beats bad guy. Another bout of melodrama and guy changes
his ways lives happily ever after with girl. A final song. The End.
Oh and to top that
off, the film aims to explain every single thing through dialogue and fails to
make the audiences laugh with its juvenile potty humor.
Sample this;
Chulbul sits on the
toilet with a constipation problem once his wife Bulbul shouts everything comes
rushing out (yes we see this, obviously in the least graphical way but still we
see this) and he exclaims at how his hatred for her gives his ass some relief. Really?!
To think I was
highly anticipating this film.
Why?
Because I actually
thought that post the entertaining Dabbang and its atrocious sequel, director
Abhinav Kashyap (the director for the first one) was actually the difference
between the quality of the two Dabbang films. I thought he would give us
another interesting masala film, but it seems he needs Salman Khan's star power
more than Khan needs him.
The film is so down
trodden, that when it comes to really getting to care for the character the
writing cannot even make the most sappy person fall for the daily soap like
melodrama.
The film doesn't
earn our attention, the film doesn't deserve our attention.
Then onto the
casting, yes the Kapoors do well but not as sensational as was expected of them
but expected hype cannot be considered so harshly.
What can be
considered is this, Ranbir has shown to be a far talented actor and one of the
first celebrity sons to actually be deserving of the tag of superstar. Even
then this is only because he sinks himself into his characters, no matter how
harshly he's mocked method acting in the past.
The one thing is not
even a great actor can essay a role that requires boat loads of overt charisma
and a larger than life presence. Its where Ranbir fails, he doesn't have that
kind of raw presence to be accepted doing stupid things on screen like a Salman
Khan.
Its worse when he's
actually paired with a mannequin for a leading lady, she looks frustrated when
she's simply flaring and surprise! Surprise! Frustrated when she's happily in
love with Babli.
Final Thoughts:
All I can scream at
the top of my head for this film and people involved, and I know this sounds
cliché (though not as cliché as the film) but BESHARAM! (Shameless!)
4. Krrish 3
Cast: Hrithik Roshan as Krrish/Krishna Mehra/Rohit Mehra, Vivek Oberoi as Kaal, Priyanka Chopra as Priya Mehra, Kangana Ranaut as Kaya with Naseeruddin Shah as Dr. Siddhant Arya and Monish Behl as Kaal's Adoptive Father
Genre: Sci-Fi/Action/Comedy
Best Scene: Every scene where I was able to note which film it was copied from
Best Performance: Kangana Ranaut as Kaya
Best Dialogue: None
Pros:-Hrithik brings
out the heroic presence of his character brilliantly through his body language.
He's aided well by Ranaut who outshines him and her whole cast
Cons:-The pacing off
the film is ragged, it goes from slow and not tension to fast with no real flow
-Characterization for most parts is
inherently poor, there is no character dynamics or greater interaction
especially between hero and villain in place
-Dialogues are not as hard hitting
as should be for such a genre, there is a sense of too much spoon
feeding/exposition for the audience
-The writers utilize multiple tropes
constantly especially that of deux ex machina for the finale twice within a
space of few minutes
-A lot of themes are brought into
the film but are as quickly dropped in order to just feed the audience the
action required
-In conclusion; there are 5 writers,
making this a case of too many cooks spoiling the food
-While it doesn't purely copy the
deeper themes of Hollywood comic heroes such as identity, it does copy multiple
plot lines and visual elements
-Other performances especially those
of the supporting actors is pathetic and doesn't convey the plot dangers,
Priyanka Chopra is too melodramatic where as Hrithik as Rohit is annoying as
hell.
-Costume design is pathetic for all
the villains
-The VFX is really cheap and easy to
spot as fake
-The music compared to its
predecessor was pathetic
Score: 1.9/10 (Story-0.4, Direction-0.3, Performances-6.2, Music-1.1, VFX-1.5)
What it did right?
Even Hrithik Roshan
can't save a downright crap film, but he tries giving the film a heroic
presence it doesn't deserve.
Kangana does her
best to aid him bringing a mystique (pun fucking intended) to her
performance. She's the bright beacon
that tries to salvage the shoddy film.
Let's take a side
route, if Kangana can catch a grasp on her voice and fix her dialogue delivery,
I personally believe she could become a stellar actor from an ok one. Oh! And
she needs to choose the right films of course…but most importantly it's her voice
that lets her down.
What it did wrong?
Fool me once, fine
that's on me but try to fool me twice; and I'll kick your ass.
I like Koi Mil Gaya,
even though it was an outright copy of Spielberg classic ET. I was hesitantly at ease when Rakesh Roshan
was called an innovator.
When Krrish came
along, I tried finding which film it was a copy of, it seemed not many and not
so obviously but it has to be. Still the film was a bit empty and hollow for a
superhero film but entertaining for a romantic sci-fi. It was the first superhero
film for India, so good enough even though it had none of the pathos Superhero
works do.
Then the trailer for
Krrish 3 hit. In one instant it was easy for me to notice which film each of
the trailers frames had copied from. And on top of that?
My god those
pathetic visual effects.
Even then the biased
stupid industry and its fans shout; Rakesh Roshan is an innovator, a genius. It
earns a 100 crores and eventually becomes one of the highest grossing films. To
this I say Fuck You!
I don't even
understand why I wasted my money on this derivative piece of shit.
Now onto a serious
review. First of all the script is credited to five writers, it's why the film
has such an incoherent structure with no basic flow rather complicating to the
max, the film is slow then gets fast paced and then slow and then derails to god
knows where.
Indeed there were too many cooks in the
kitchen.
Still those cooks
could barely come up with a plot that didn't have a scene copied from far
superior superhero films.
Character work was really bad, there's no
deeper exploration of Krishna, I get that he's an Indian superhero so he can't
be gritty but even then a healthier arc and better depth is possible (just see
the lighter films like Captain America or Sam Raimi's Spiderman series).
There's no
established dynamic between the hero and villain, a vital aspect of superhero
films. This is worse considering the climatic revelation that villain and hero
are brothers. Something that should have been profound but falls flat because
of the shoddy development. Plus the
funny thing; How is it that Krrish looks exactly like his father even though he
should have got some of his mothers looks, yet Kaal who is a pure clone of his
father looks nothing like him.
(Oh and let's just
not talk about that trash can of a suit)
The first thing I
thought when Kaal's powers were revealed that in a sick way Jadoo (the ET of
Koi Mil Gaya) had slept around prior to leaving Earth.
First lets take
Krrish for example, scientist Rohit Mehra is ecstatic to leave Singapore for
India cause he hasn't met his family in two years yet his wife is currently
giving birth to their son (so what they consummated through telephone?) no it
was Jadoo with his magic hmmhmm from space.
Then we have Kaal
all the way across the world, so he's a clone my theory goes in the dumps. But
it is a better theory than this films incoherent script.
Apart from that,
there's the stock mutants all the way from the X-Men world. Kaya being the most
important, a woman fused with a chameleon who can change her shape to anything
she wants (ring a bell?!), she's a tough mystique presence surely and too quickly
smoldering under Hrithik's presence. What could have been a huge boost (a
independent and powerful female character) becomes an idiotic trope.
Along with the
characters there's the case of dialogues, none of them are really power packed
or memorable. Most of it is just annoying exposition right from the Amitabh
Bachchan infested start.
On top of that the writers constantly use deux
ex machina to save its hero. In just a space of two scenes, the sun is used to
power up Krrish, a very scientifically illogical plot point. Coupled with the
half hearted attempts at adding some pathos to the feature, we can clearly say
Krrish 3 is out to and succeeds at proving the lower IQ of Indian children and
Indians as a whole.
Then there's the
usual Superhero film thing selling superhero related goods like Krrish
bands…Wait what?!
No other superhero
film sells their superheroes products on film,
OMG an original
idea!
And it had to be one that simply casts the
whole film as the most expensive and longest advertise in History. An advert we
paid for, just to be sold more crap.
You know what the
word for Rakesh Roshan should be;
LAZY!
Now onto the
performances. Roshan while great as Krrish is horrendously over the top as
Rohit Mehra, he is so bloody annoying its hard to not laugh and clap when he
finally dies in the most melodramatic way when he tries to channel his inner
Marlon Brando as Jor-El from Superman.
Priyanka Chopra is even dumber than Lois Lane
and a real pain to watch on screen. Oberoi tries to give us his best Robert
Pattison merged with Kristen Stewart performance, and he succeeds
exceptionally.
Now onto the music.
As soon as 'God, Allah aur Bhagwan' blared on the screen, I turned to my friend
and shouted;
ARE WE BACK IN THE
FREAKING 90's?!
For a man who gave
us a stellar soundtrack with both Koi Mil Gaya and the original Krrish (that do
hold up till today), this was an utter disappointment.
Finally the VFX.
Either it's me or Indian critics are blind (I'll go with them being bought
instead) cause this was the worst VFX job I have ever seen. I know Bollywood
doesn't have the resources like Hollywood, but for a country that has had a
boom in animation a decade ago, this kind of work is too low on the totem pole.
Hiding behind the low resources veil, is just an excuse to hide the greediness
in making more profits from a cheaper looking film (than making regular but
good enough profits from a film that could have had great vfx). Cheating the
audience is the worst sin and filmmaker can commit.
Final Thoughts:
Instead of summing
the film up, lets have a look at some stills of scenes and characters side by
side with the films it copies, enjoy;
I might be nitpicking, I know its Kaal behind Krrish and Hulk behind well Hulk (as Banner) still you can see the similarities.
Krrish 3 and its trailer open with this smoke effect vaguely similar to the smoke effect that comes up at the opening of Dark Knight. Coincidence?
When Kaal is introduced, first a top view tracking shot is taken of his mountain based villains lair the same is done in Batman Begins to track The temple of The League of Shadows
There's more than enough scenes including one where metal comes flying to Kaal forming a suit like Iron Man in Iron Man 3 and Krrish and Kaal fighting into a building like Man of Steel. But since the films came out in 2013, it's hard to say if these were direct copies or not.
3. Zanjeer
Cast: Ram Charan Teja as ACP Vijay Khanna, Priyanka Chopra as Mala, Sanjay Dutt as Sher Khan, Prakash Raj as Teja, Mahie Gill as Mona Darling with Ankur Bhatia as Bosco and Atul Kulkarni as Jaydev
Genre: Action/Thriller
Best Scene: No Idea
Best Performance: Mahie Gill as Mona Darling
Best Dialogue: None
Pros: -Small doses of comedy are hilarious
Genre: Action/Thriller
Best Scene: No Idea
Best Performance: Mahie Gill as Mona Darling
Best Dialogue: None
Pros: -Small doses of comedy are hilarious
-Mahie Gill churns out a special
seductive turn in character, even against a bad film
Cons:-The narrative
pacing is shaky, the film lags pointlessly and then rushes its climax
-The psychological revenge element
disappears quite fast and re-appears again, it then ends up preventing the
climax from resonating apart from this other plot points are half baked and
oddly developed
-Dialogue is redundant and flat, its
delivery doesn't help either
-Lakhia adapts the better scenes
from the original film terribly
-The action choreography is a bit
too showy and depends on too much slow motion
-Dutt fails to impress where as
Prakash Raj and Priyanka are annoyingly Over the top
-The worst crime is that of Ram
Charan, he moves through the film with a one note expression
-Illogical song placing causes a
start-stop first act, the music itself is cheap and the background score is
generic and in your face
Score: 1.7/10 (Story-0.7, Direction-0.5, Performances-3.1, Background score/soundtrack-2.6)
ACP Vijay Khanna (Ram) is an honest and stern cop, after another scuffle against corruption he is transferred again and is the first cop to be done so to Out of State. He is put in charge of case where eye witness Mala (Chopra) has seen a murder. With her help, he gets to the bottom of the murder linking directly to Buisnessman and Oil Mafia Kingpin Teja (Raj). Falling in love with Mala, making friends with Sher Khan (Dutt) and taking down Teja is not all that Vijay does, he is also haunted by his past. What Vijay doesn't know is that this case ties back to what made him who he is and brings his collision with Teja to a personal level.
(This amateur summary sounds even better than the film itself)
Score: 1.7/10 (Story-0.7, Direction-0.5, Performances-3.1, Background score/soundtrack-2.6)
ACP Vijay Khanna (Ram) is an honest and stern cop, after another scuffle against corruption he is transferred again and is the first cop to be done so to Out of State. He is put in charge of case where eye witness Mala (Chopra) has seen a murder. With her help, he gets to the bottom of the murder linking directly to Buisnessman and Oil Mafia Kingpin Teja (Raj). Falling in love with Mala, making friends with Sher Khan (Dutt) and taking down Teja is not all that Vijay does, he is also haunted by his past. What Vijay doesn't know is that this case ties back to what made him who he is and brings his collision with Teja to a personal level.
(This amateur summary sounds even better than the film itself)
What it did right?
Cheesy but the
comedy scenes between villain Teja and Mona are the only entertainment in a
bland film.
Mahie Gill, girl you
are better than these roles stop doing them. Seriously if there's any one to
watch its her, her rendition of Mona (a character immortalized by Bindu in the
original) is pitch perfect. The 3.1 score is all hers.
What it did wrong?
In the immortal
words of Daniel Bryan; No! No! No!
You do not dare make
a remake of an Amitabh Bachchan film, I know Don and Agneepath were great but
still as good as they are they don't negate the bad aftertaste of Aag (a remake
of the iconic Sholay). Now you can add Zanjeer (2013) to that tasteless list.
I don't know why it
was (most likely cause of its confused tone), but the plot was so static being
forced to move around by its director. It didn't help then when the film needed
to end and did so with a rushed pace and unfortunately weak pay off to the revenge
element.
A revenge element
that just lingers in the beginning and conveniently is tied up in the end,
unlike the original which had added depth with its psychological element
affecting its lead protagonist through out.
We see Vijay
struggling with the nightmares of his past as a child early on, but only after
an unnecessary item song sequence highlighting the same issue in a misguided
and comical manner. The plot and full
flashback revelation is brought back towards the end, a point where the
audience has stopped caring.
So if Vijay can't
get any intricate and smart character development than how can we expect
anything for the others. There's no real depth to anybody else and what's worse
is that unlike the original the performances don't hide this well enough.
The screenplay also
wastes unnecessary time while having sheer illogical scenes fleeting through.
Why was it necessary
for us to see Vijay and Khan playing video games?
And I get that Vijay
was attacking criminals in the slum district, but he actually just caused more
chaos by riding his Jeep through the place and blasting the slum area to
oblivion where there were possibly hundreds of poor people including children.
While, why did the
script have to decide that Mala came for a Facebook (and only Facebook) friends
wedding (rather it could have been an old friends wedding, making more sense).
Than to top it off, she has to be stupid and ends up falling for a cop she's
known for only a few days.
Plot holes FTW!
Then there's that
dialogue especially those from the mouth of Teja. Crass to the core and
seriously not funny. 'Chicks and chicken are the two meows of my life', 'Mona
apna mu sirf ek cheez ke liye kholo' ('Mona just open for one thing' and we
know its not to talk).
Not only crass
though. It's also redundant to a point, lazily written and delivered. Like this
one;
'Mai Vijay ke saath
nahi uske aage kara hu.'-Sher ('I'm not standing side by side with Vijay, I'm
standing in front of him'). Not only does it not spark any reaction but Dutt's
delivery of it is dull to the core.
But before we get there, let's talk about what
Lakhia brings to the table. Even Dhawan was able to adapt some of the scenes
from the original Chashme Badoor and make them remotely funny in his own way
(the flashback scenes), Lakhia doesn't even do this properly worse he instills
a meta reference that comes off insulting rather than a homage. A scene where
villains Teja and Mona are watching the original Zanjeer.
Then of course the
performances. This is Priyanka Chopra's third venture into an Amitabh Bachchan
film remake, here she just seems to high to even function. Chirpy to the max,
she's loud and more annoying than a screaming banshee.
Sanjay Dutt doesn't
have the fluency or efficiency of the late great Pran. Prakash Raj has been
typecast in such a role so many times, that he thinks he can play it by
sleepwalking through the whole film.
Then the oddest
thing, along with Sanjay Dutt even every cast members dialogue delivery is at
its lowest point.
Finally of course we
come to Ram Charan Teja. A sensation down south, the actor has big shoes to
fill in the role that made Bachchan a legend. It just seems he picked the wrong
shoes.
I don't know what
Telegu cinema fans see in him but I'm hoping they don't like him because of his
consistency.
Yes.
Ram Chran Teja is
consistent…consistent in keeping one expression on his face as if it's been
plastered by the editors of his film, he does this even through a tender
romantic scene with his leading lady.
Finally the music.
Thank god we don't get a rehash of the original films music, I hate to see how
down they would drag the classic 'Yaari Me Imaan' with the way this music
already is.
Final Thoughts:
One of the worst
films of the year and possibly in Hindi film history, half way through this I
was wishing that I was actually sitting through RGV's Aag; that’s how bad this
one is.
Oh and I know that a
remake has to do something different from the original, but just getting the
hero beaten by chains (Zanjeer) does not justify your title. In fact Thoofan
(whirlwind, the telegu version of the film) sounds like a better title, although
not apt either.
2. Himmatwala
Cast: Ajay Devgan as Ravi, Tammanah Bhatia as Rekha, Paresh Rawal as Narayandas, Mahesh Manjrekar as Sher Singh, Adhayayan Suman, Zarina Wahab as Savitri, Leena Jumani as Padma with Chunky Pandey as Michael JaiKishen and Ritesh Deshmukh as Real Ravi
Genre: Masala (Multiple Mix)
Best Scene: Ritesh Deshmukh's cameo and death scene cause it was unintentionally hilarious
Best Performance: The Audience for bearing the brunt of this film
Best Dialogue: Not from the film but before its release and I quote (in English)
'In its first three days of release, I guarantee you that you wont be able to get a ticket cause it'll be housefull.'-Sajid Khan
Pros:-The film is
mildly amusing...
Cons:-…but for all
the wrong reasons.
-The film's dialogue is in your face
and seems to explain everything happening rather than letting the viewer
visually enjoy it
-Some absurd action mixed with campy
comedy
-The "plot" is full of
over the top melodrama
-If Sajid Khan is purposely trying
to make 'a very bad film that its so good'; then he fails to bring that message
across
-A second act unnecessary twist
evaporates the little emotional resonance the film had and destroys the lead
character protagonist
-Khan and his unit seem to forget at
times that the film is in a period setting
-The films high budget production
and set design really come off as tacky and ape the original Himmatwala
-Rekha comes across as an unlikable
character whose development doesn't really resonate well
-The performances range from over
the top to crap as hell
-The music suits the period setting
but never reaches the good heights of the original
Score: 0.1/10 (Story-0.7, Direction-0.5, Performances-1.0, Background score/soundtrack-2.2)
I'm not even bothered to burn your eyes, ears and minds by telling you the films so called 'STORY'. Oh and the above scores are just me being too kind.
What it did right?
Absolutely
nothing…except I'd like to thank cinema goers for not catching this, making it
a flop and deflating Sajid Khan's huge ego.
Personally I
illegally downloaded it and watched it, this is the first time I'm proud of
saying that. The only reason I was
compelled to watch this was to laugh at Sajid Khan's above mentioned claims
which I read about months after the films release.
Housefull for three
days…hahaha…still makes me chuckle
What it did wrong?
I'd like an applause
and a consideration as a Himmatwala (Brave man) for standing this film for it's
two hour plus runtime. Got what a bunch of crap did I go through.
Oh Sajid Khan, Sajid
Khan. I'd pity you if you weren't such an arrogant douche. The man claimed that
this film would be an all time blockbuster. Thank god he was brought down from
his pedestal.
You make a remake of
a classic film, your obviously going to be hated even if its good.
You make a remake of
a bad film, your simply delusional. Indeed taking what is the epitome of bad
cinema from the worst decade for commercial Bollywood films (80's, where HIndie
cinema thrived), there's no way your going to succeed unless you lose the essence
of the original in the first place. Then its not a remake of course.
In Khan's case its
hard to understand whether he's truly making a remake as a homage to the
original or is he spoofing it cause of how bad it is. I go with the former
knowing that he has an affinity with 80's Hindi cinema.
Like with anything
that's steeped in 80's cinema there's a high dose of annoying melodrama and a
script chock full of stock characters. From the unwed going to be raped sister,
to the coughing mother, the villagers, the comedic side villain, his incompetent
son that has a thing for the said sister, the main idiotic villain and most
importantly the shrill and mean leading lady who needs to be tamed (a highlight
of old misogynist views) to be turned into a marriageable loving and pleasing
love interest/wife. Oh and lets not forget the no can do no wrong and can't be
beaten superhero I mean Bollywood hero.
Then how can Sajid
Khan make it worse, adding in a nonsensical twist that just whips apart
everything and fixes it in a second through misguided melodrama and the
necessary rape attempt sequence.
Of course with Khan
you cannot also just have cheesy comedy and action, you have to have some
absurd humor especially some idiotic meta references that clearly diminish the
concept of the period setting and time. Just to try and make a funny film
funnier, although it becomes lamer than lame in reality.
On top of that,
there's the 'acting'. A word I use a bit broadly in this case, I get that the
plot is melodramatic but the over the top performances just take the viewer out of the film completely. It's
hilarious how an accomplished performer like Ajay Devgan has two movies (both
remakes, this and Aag) on the worst of Bollywood of all time list. Like with
talented thespian Anupam Kher (from Chashme), Paresh Rawal is also a pitiful
disgrace. Debutante Tamannah is another thing altogether, she doesn't even have
a modicum of the charisma or dancing skills that Sridevi had to save the
atrocious character she plays.
Which brings me too
the music. If you can give me the award of Himmatwala for standing this movie,
then I beg you for a 'Bum pe Laath'* for being stupid to watch this pile of
horseshit. Even the classic 'Naino Me Sapna' is copied without any of that old kitsch
that makes it likable.
*For those not in
the know, Bum pe Laath is a stupid song from the film
Final Thoughts:
After three
undeserving super hits, Sajid Khan makes a dud yet he has the fucking audacity
to try and now remake a comedic classic like Angoor for his film Humshakals.
Somebody stop giving this bloody hack money to make films.
1. Grand Masti
Watched the film a quarter way and left it.
Gave it a...
Why?
The plot.
It's old school regressive, degrading, misogynist sex joke after sex joke. Mainstream Bollywood directors and 'writers' just don't have a modicum of respect or understanding of women.
There's proof that an R-Rated film can be made without attacking women like wolves. Look at The Bridesmaids for an example Indra Kumar (Director for schlock 90's cinema and new age sexist comedies with no meaning AKA Grand Masti)...or don't look at it, cause you'll copy the plot like you did for American Pie with this film.
I wont go into a full length review/rant instead I'll quote this far better critic who sums it up perfectly;
"I'm going with zero out of five stars for Grand Masti because there is no way you can enjoy this movie and still claim you respect women."-Abhishek Mande, rediff.com
Read his review, it's more insightful than I can write worth understanding the idoticy and sexism abundant in this film.
Oh and did I forget to mention that the film became a blockbuster, how shocking!!! Fuck You Hindi Cinema viewers!!!
PS: I know I promised to be a bit fair, but by the time I started writing about Chashme Badoor, I got so pissed that I had to go on a biased tirade. Even then, my review for Grand Masti is not biased. Please don't ever pay to watch that film in your life. If you enjoyed it then whatever just go to hell.
Those were the worst films I watched last year. Agree? Disagree? Comment below.
Next: Democracy, A murder case, some dissapointments, the best soundtrack of 2013 and a Dhoom to end 2013! The films that just didn't cut the Top 30 best. Tintin's Top Ten Honorable/Dishonorable Films of 2013.
'Nuff Said
Aneesh Raikundalia
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