Sunday, December 18, 2011

Pappu Can't Dance Saala Release Date : 16,Dec 2011

Producer    Ravindra Singh, Sameer Nair
 Director    Saurabh Shukla
 Music    Malhar
 Lyrics    Amitabh Bhattacharya, Saurabh Shukla
 Release Date    16-Dec-2011

About Story: It is a romantic comedy of two people who are from two different worlds. Vidyadhar Acharya (Vinay Pathak) has just shifted from Banaras to Mumbai. A man with old world values who finds it difficult to adjust in the city of professional attitude. He finds Mumbai heartless. Vidya is a medical representative in a private firm, with a bare survival salary. He manages to find a flat in sales tax colony, where legally no tenant can be kept. Mehak Malavde (Neha Dhupia) is a chorus dancer in Bollywood. She has learned the tricks of surviving in this fast paced city. She is loud and jazzy. The film is about both of them how they meet, fight and then fall in love. It’s about the ups and downs in their lives.
Shooting Locations
Mumbai, Banaras (India)   


Movie Review:-  The story revolves around Vidyadhar Acharya (Vinay Pathak), who has just shifted from Benares to Mumbai and Mehak Malavde (Neha Dhupia), who is a chorus dancer and knows how to survive in the city of dreams. Mahek and Vidyadhar are neighbours and later due to unavoidable circumstances, they turn roommates. Pappu Can’t Dance Saala is all about how two people who can’t stand each other, manage to deal with the situation and how their journey begins to unfold in a rather interesting fashion.
Saurabh Shukla’s direction is mature and definitely better than the script which loses steam after a point. However, the whole angle of space crunch in Bombay and illegal occupation of flats would be comprehended and appreciated more by the audience in Bombay and other big cities but the viewers in small towns may not identify with the housing crisis. Both Vinay Pathak and Neha Dhupia looks comfortable in their parts and do a decent job but could've given pleasant or rather entertaining performances had the storyline aided their characters. Rajjat Kapoor makes a customary entry in the film and doesn't quite contribute to the plot in any manner. Gets completely wasted. Naseeruddin Shah is forcefully added to the cast and much to the annoyance is horribly wasted with a small inconsequential role.
Over all, Pappu doesn't quite work saala…Fails to entertain or leave any impact on the audience.

Jo Hum Chahe Release Date : 16,Dec 2011

Producer    Aman Gill
 Director    Pawan Gill
 Music    Sachin Gupta
 Writer    Pawan Gill
 Lyrics    Kumaar
 Release Date    16-Dec-2011

About Movie:-Jo Hum Chaheromance thriller upconing bollywood hindi movie will release in December 16, 2011. This movie cast inclued Sunny Gill, Simran Kaur Mundi. The Movie Jo Hum Chahe is Directed  and written by Pawan Gil and produced by Aman Gill. This film music director Sachin Gupta.Jo Hum Chahe movie is a modern coming of age romance that reflects the current urban landscape of contemporary India, focusing on the aspirations of the youth and what they do to achieve their desires.
Sunny Gill is a Model and has shared screen space with Indian Cricket captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni in one of the commercials. Simran Mundi is Miss India Universe. Both the actors are very young and are also very attractive at the very same time. The attractive pairing and storyline of this film assures me that this film will turn out to be great attempt at the box office.
The film has been shot in Mumbai, Goa, Pune, Ladakh.
Music Review:-  In music album most of the song are melodious famous singer like K K, Shreya Ghoshal, Jaspreet Singh, Mona Thakur, Sasha Tirupati, Neeraj Shridhar and  Sunidhi Chauhan.


Movie Review:- The story is predictable and stretches like a long ending love saga. Director Pawan Gill doesn't impress much in terms of storytelling, he ensures that the film is a technically sound product and extracts notable performances from the cast.The story is clumsy to the core. The only performance of note is that of Aly Khan who brings in that intensity to his character that makes it very real. Cool, calm and calculated.  The romance is cheesy, the writing is verbose and the emotions are so soap-opera that it seems like watching a TV serial. A multitude of songs only add to your tedium. And the second half almost seems like an endless saga with the hero trying to mend his ways. Sunny Gill and Simran Kaur Mundi make an ordinary debut. The direction and other technical aspects are average
About Dialogues,Cinematography and Music:- Dialogues are extremely cheesy and lack punches. Music is quite peppy and suits the mood of the film. In Whole Jo Hum Chahein certainly doesn't have what we wish from a film – entertainment.

Faraar Release Date : 16,Dec 2011

Producer    Asmita Nahar
 Director    Santosh Gupta
 Music    Vaishnav Deva
 Release Date    16-Dec-2011

Movie Review:- Farrar is a murder mistery movie. Arjun had killed a man accidentally when he was a teenager. That memory still haunts him like a nightmare. The Managing Director of the company Mr. Balraj Singhania, favors Arjun very much and treats him as his blue-eyed boy. Arjun often has to face the ire of his girlfriend, Rashmi, as he is also very devoted to his employer. Rashmi works as a receptionist at the same company.  Singhania’s wife Nisha, is much younger than him and is a hot and sexy female, Arjun starts fantasizing about this unseen mystery woman. He start meeting her every night. The plot then thickens with some unusual twists. Wilson, Rashmi’s drug-addict brother-in-law and Inspector Pandey’ fiancee Jennifer also gets killed in mysterious circumstance, the needle of suspicion towards Arjun.  Arjun goes and surrenders himself to the police. Sub-Inspector reaches at the crime spot, along with Arjun, finds heartbroken Singhnia is sitting over there. When Arjun looks at the dead body, he finds that it is not Nisha but Jennifer. He shouts but to no avail as Sighania declares that it is Nisha his beloved wife. Before Arjun is put into lock up Manohar reaches to the police station with anticipatory bail papers.
 The story is predictable and Movie is on an average. Not much entertaing. Music is ok.

Ladies vs Ricky Behl Release Date : 09,Dec 2011

Producer    Aditya Chopra
 Director    Maneesh Sharma
 Music    Salim Merchant,Sulaiman Merchant
 Writer    Aditya Chopra
 Lyrics    Salim Merchant,Sulaiman Merchant
 Release Date    09-Dec-2011

About Story:-Ladies VS Ricky Bahl is upcoming movie of Yash Raj Films. Last year’s Superhit Jodi of Band Baja Baraat Ranveer Singh-Anushka Sharma will return with Ladies vs Ricky Behl. It is a romantic comedy flick and revolves around Ranveer Singh (Ricky Bahl) who cons girls for living but finally ends up meeting his match which will be played by Anushka Sharma. This movie is a fun-filled romantic comedy starring Ranveer Singh, who has won everyone's heart with his endearing and scintillating performance, as well as the Best Actor (Debut) at all the award shows this year, and the accomplished and charismatic Anushka Sharma.
Special Attraction:-This movie plans to be in theatres worldwide on 9th Dec 2011, the same weekend Band Baaja Baaraat released previous year. The film is produced by Aditya Chopra and is based on a story developed by him. Habib Faisal has written the dialogues, the screenplay is by Devika Bhagat. The music will be composed by Salim-Sulaiman, and the film will be shot by Aseem Mishra (DOP), all of whom have been a part of Band Baaja Baaraat.



Movie Review:- In Vickay vs Ladies Ricky Bahl (Ranveer) is a con man. With his charming nature, he makes women fall at his feet. he wins their admiration wherever he goes.He woos rich women and exploits them financially too. His basic idea is to make quick money while woman get fooled with his  He wants to become rich at their expense without getting caught.One fine day he meets Ishika Desai ( Anushka Sharma), who is a similar type to him. Two share almost same characteristics. As for Anushka she is a fearless actress, not afraid to let her emotions overrule her makeup. Ranveer and Anushka's chemistry is intact. Ranveer is subdued and pretty impressive but knowing his potential, could have been far better.
Ladies vs Ricky Bahl isn’t a boring film. It’s kept breezy throughout, with enough going on to keep the audience distracted. However, it definitely misses the charm of Band Baaja Baraat, the complexity ofemotions. Story of the movie is predictable. The songs aren’t that great (except for Aadat se majboor) and the dialogues aren’t memorable.Overall, a decent entertaining moive.

Ye Stupid Pyar Release Date : 09,Dec 2011

Producer    Rakesh Jain
 Director    Rakesh Jain
 Music    Vipin Patwa, Reeky Dev
 Writer    Rakesh Jain
 Lyrics    Sanjay Mishra , Arafat, Yusuf Ali Khan, Rakesh Ja
 Release Date    09-Dec-2011

About Movie :-Abhishek Khurana, the only son of a rich business man - handsome and hardworking is well settled in USA dreams of marrying an INDIAN GIRL.On his visit to India he meets, NEHA DALVI who takes classes for salsa and yoga and lives with her father.
Abhishek joins the Salsa classes leaving no opportunities to be closer to her and cherish every moment that they spend together as friends. Abhishek expresses his concern and as a gesture of true love, decides to join his Bangkok office instead and offers Neha to celebrate their first wedding night at their new destination - THAILAND - to be flown the next day. Life becomes so sweet and adorable, everything gets going smoothly as Abhishek reaches home from his first day of office and gets a very passionate first night gift from Neha. Destiny plays its part and things take a turn when the life of Abhishek and Neha is disturbed under circumstances beyond their control. Abhishek meets Simran and his friend multiplex who gets involved in bringing them out of the situation. Though Simran always had feelings for Abhishek, since their college days of which Abhishek was always unawre. while she helps him in all the possible ways she could. Simran seeks help of her dear friend Multiplex and their extensive search for Neha begins.

What goes through the lives of Abhishek, Neha and Simran is the explanation to their confusion about love.
Shooting Locations : Thailand
About Music:-
There are eleven track in the album including three remix and one Instrumental. K.K,  Shreya Ghoshaland Shaan gave good music to this film.



Movie Review:- The storyline which start with NRI Abhishek (Jatin Khurana) meets salsa teacher cum gym trainer Neha (Noopur Patwardhan) and falls in love with her. They get married and move to Bangkok – on her insistence – but she disappears the first day itself. Enter Abhishek’s college best friend Simran (Akansha Shivhare) who helps Abhishek in finding Neha and the reason behind her leaving Abhishek.
Rakesh Jain’s story is quite childish. Even the screenplay (credited to no one) is immature. Newcommer Jatin is no hero material. His looks and his performance are very ordinary. Noopur also makes a dull debut. She is average as far as her looks are concerned. Akansha Shivhare (as Simran) acts with sincerity. Music (Vipin Patwa and Reeky) is okay although the songs haven’t been popularised.

LANKA Release Date : 09,Dec 2011

Producer    Vikram Bhatt
 Director    Maqbool Khan
 Music    Toshi Sabri, Sharib Shabri
 Lyrics    Rishabh Srivastava, A. M. Turaz, Kumaar, Juanid Wasi, Seema Saini
 Release Date    09-Dec-2011
Movie Review:- The story revolves around the misery of an independent doctor by day and a helpless keep of Sisodiya( Manoj Bajpayee)  by night, Anshu (Tia Bajpai). Sisodiya wouldn't marry her but visit her every night, and wouldn't let her escape with her equally miserable parents.The film works essentially as a no-holds-barred indictment of the lawlessness that prevails in the small, neglected towns which have somehow fallen off the map of India in terms of infrastructure, law and order and development. LANKA belongs to Manoj Bajpayee, who delivers a commanding performance. He handles the toughest moments and carries the smart lines without any hiccups. Arjan doesn't get many lines to deliver, but he conveys through his eyes and expressions. He's earnest. Tia gets a few moments to shine. Yashpal Sharma is bankable. Yatin Karyekar leaves a mark. A capable actor like Manish Chaudhary is wasted this time. Shweta Salve sizzles in the item number. On the whole, LANKA has some shining moments, but they are few and far between.

Chai Garam Release Date : 09,Dec 2011

Producer    Bhushan Kumar
 Director    Aditya Datt
 Music    Anand Raj Anand, Sanjay Pathak
 Release Date    09-Dec-2011

About Movie:-Chai Garam (earlier titled as Bengali Babu) is an upcoming Hindi Romantic comedy film directed by Aditya Datt. Sanjana (Esha Deol)is a nurse, who works at the Capital Indian Hospital. A patient, Bengali Suresh (Govinda) befriends Sanjana, and Sanjana going along with the new friendship since she believes Suresh has turned disabled after his accident.
One day, Sanjana decides to bring him tea. When she offers it to him, he gets scared and throws it across the room. A doctor later tells her that Suresh has a phobia of hot tea. Sanjana is confused by this, and asks Suresh about it. He tells her about strange flashbacks he has experienced; in these, he sees someone drowning in hot tea in a place called Gulatdad. Curious, Sanjana later goes and looks this up. She finds out that Gulatdad is an abandoned tea factory. She tells this to Suresh the next day, and he gets curious too. Together, they try to unravel this mystery.


Movie Review :- The movie starts off in a hospital. It is an ordinary day, and a nurse named Sanjana (Esha Deol) is running errands. She goes into a room where a patient, Suresh, is in a coma. She discovers that he has awakened, but that he doesn't remember anything. She tells him his name and about his accident; later, she starts visiting him every day to check his progress. The two soon become friends.

The Dirty Picture Release Date : 02,Dec 2011

Producer    Ekta Kapoor, Shobha Kapoor
 Director    Milan Luthria
 Music    Vishal-Shekhar
 Writer    Rajat Aroraa
 Lyrics    Rajat Arora
 Release Date    02-Dec-2011

About Movie:-It’s a movie of a make-up girl who became an extra and then the most wanted heroine of the early 80s. Chronicling the meteoric rise and steep fall of the erstwhile screen sensation - Silk Smitha, The Dirty Picture is set against the colorful and entertaining backdrop of the South film industry of the 80’s. The quintessential siren, Silk, knew her audiences, and it didn't seem like anything would stop the fiercely ambitious starlet, till it did, in the shape of unrequited love.
To the world, she was the queen of sensuality. But at heart, Silk was just another woman craving true love. An unfortunate encounter with deceit and infidelity led to dire consequences!
Balajiand Milan Luthria team up again after their smash hit, Once Upon A Time In Mumbaai, to create a dazzling and spectacular musical entertainer that is already in the news for being the most keenly anticipated drama of the year.
About Music:-There is total six track in this movie. Sunidhi Chauhan and Shreya Ghoshal sang two songs.  The song reveals a 1980's feel to it. Bappi Lahiri, the singer of the song, has recently commented on the release of it, stating that "Ooh La La has already become a craze. It will rock the nation.



Movie Review:-It’s Vidya Balan all the way who keeps you glued with her sizzling and daring performance and rarely an actress of her class would have opted to play such a role. Whatsoever, her bold act and involvement in the character is commendable. Among the male actors Emraan is effectual and plays his role well. Naseeruddin Shah is better at times but looks too old for certain shots. Tusshar Kapoor doesn’t have much to do. Anju Mahendroo as journalist is impressive.With a highly entertaining first half, and a mediocre second, The Dirty Picture falls short of being truly remarkable. Vidya Balan (one star solely for her), and entertaining dialogue, the film is worth the ticket price.The Dirty Picture succeeds because of Vidya Balan in the finest acting performance of the year out of India. She is able to overcome the clumsy writing to make her character sympathetic and the film incredibly engaging. The melodrama drags down the second half, but Balan's charisma keeps the audience from drifting in a way that requires a true and powerful talent.  This film offers big laughs, fantastic spectacle, big emotions, and a powerhouse performance from a brave and exciting actress. The Dirty Picture is a winner, and with the help of a good editor, could probably even make the art house rounds if it wanted to. However, I'll take Bollywood with all of its faults and excesses any day, and this is quality Bollywood. With a highly entertaining first half, and a mediocre second, The Dirty Picture falls short of being truly remarkable.
Vishal-Shekhar’smusic is mediocre except for Bappi Lahiri's Oh La La, which, along with South chartbuster Nakka Mukka are skillfully integrated in the background to add effect.

I Am Singh Release Date : 02,Dec 2011

Producer    Sardar Peshaura Singh Thind
 Director    Puneet Issar
 Music    Tulip Joshi, Puneet Issar, Mika Singh, Monty Sharma, Daler Mehndi, Sukhwinder Si
 Writer    Puneet Issar
 Lyrics    Gurbani, Raj Hans, Sandeep Nath, Sudhakar Dutt Sharma, Sameer, Deepali Issar
 Release Date    02-Dec-2011


About Story: This film is about a young Sikh named Ranveer Singh Sodi.Ranveer is a young, confident, intelligent and a very well settled man in India. Ranveer's elder brothers Balbir Singh & Bikram Singh are citizens of America. They are doing very well for themselves. They run restaurant business in the USA. Ranveer's parents leave for holiday to the US to meet their son. Ranveer doesn't want to join them as he is busy attending his friend's wedding in India. Life is easy going for this family.

The story takes a turn when Ranveer receives a call from his mother. Ranveer's life changes in a flash as he comes to know that his brother Bikram is dead. His father is seriously injured and his elder brother Balbir is missing. The cause of this is unknown. Ranveer is in a dilemma and he has to leave for the US.
The film about how he went to US and how he fight for the justice in US.
Expected Review of Movie:-To build expectations of any sort whatsoever, one has to be aware of the product at the least. In case of I Am Singh, one doesn't have any clue whatsoever around where did the film actually arrive from. Add to that the fact that it is a non-starcast affair and there are further apprehensions around what the music would indeed have in store here. With multiple composers creating a song or two apiece, 'I Am Singh' is a loaded album with as many as 10 tracks in it.
Next to arrive is the title song 'I Am Singh' which in its very treatment and flavour is different from the likes of 'Singh Is Kinng' or 'Shera Di Kaum' [Speedy Singhs]. This one is much more rooted in its appeal and has a 'desi' mood and feel to it. Composed by Sumitra Iyer and written by Raj Hans, 'I Am Singh'is a Punjabi track that sees the coming together of Daler Mehndi, Sukhwinder Singh and Hard Kaur. Though in first few listening it does lend a sense of deja vu, 'I Am Singh' does settle down after a while due to its boisterous and celebratory mood. Yet another song that lasts close to 7 minutes, it is also accompanied by a relatively shorter (four minutes long) 'Video Edit' version.
Though one didn't have any set expectations from I Am Singh to begin with, it turns out to be reasonably okay, though predictable, soundtrack. Given the fact that the album has arrived virtually unannounced on the stands, it is bound to struggle when it comes to making its presence felt amongst the listeners. However with a couple of Punjabi tracks expected to find their target audience, it may just manage to impress its target audience.


Movie Review:- After the 9/11 tragedy in US, the Sikhs were targeted and were victims of mistaken identity. The film highlights what happened to a few of them and their fights against it, never losing the faith in US judicial system. The film tells the stories of unsung heroes.
The direction is so incompetent that Punit Issar resorts to sunrise and sunset to metaphorically represent cheer and gloom.The cast is universally bad, and in competition with each other to snatch the trophy of 'Most Unconvincing Performer'.  The disgustingly silly, lifeless and done-to-death script; the boring drama; the irritating English dialogues; the never-ending rhetoric; the below-average performances; poor editing.The constant references to and from Sikhism which will appeal to the Punjabis and Sikhs in the audience; a couple of song picturisations.On the positive side, a few scenes, where members of the Khalsa Panth are depicted wielding swords and showing off their martial skills, are well-shot and exciting.This film is come 5 years too late. By now everyone knows what Sikhs and Muslims went through after the attack on the Twin Towers and how the world was outraged at this.
I AM SINGH is not the one chartbusting album that one may expect but is certainly an entertainer for all those who cherish the feel of being 'Singh' and like 'bhangra' beat culture music. Tracks like 'Dukalaang Pranaasi','I am Singh', 'Kya Jeena' and 'Turban victory', are really good.



LAND GOLD WOMEN Release Date : 02,Dec 2011

Producer    Vivek Agrawal, Avantika Hari
 Director    Avantika Hari
 Music    Amar Mohile
 Writer    Avantika Hari
 Release Date    02-Dec-2011

About Movie: Land Gold Women revolves around a small British Asian family caught between their traditional past and the tumultuous, faction-driven present. Shot entirely on location in Birmingham, Land Gold Women follows the story of a British-Asian family caught between Eastern tradition, Western culture and political turbulence. At the core of the film is the relationship between father and daughter and how the dynamics of it play out when the daughter decides to take her life into her own hands.

This Anglo-Indian collaboration aims to highlight the problems of forced marriage and honour crime, which affect thousands of women in Britain and across the world. The team that created Land Gold Women is led by Writer and Director Avantika Hari and Producer Vivek Aggrawal, both from India.Nazir Ali Khan is a History professor who had emigrated from India to Birmingham in the 80s and is now spending a happy life with his two children & a conservative wife Rizwana

Desi Boyz Release Date : 25,Nov 2011

Producer    Kishore Lulla
 Director    Rohit Dhawan
 Music    Pritam
 Writer    Rohit Dhawan
 Lyrics    Irshad Kamil, Kumaar, Amitabh Bhattacharya
 Release Date    25-Nov-2011

About Story:- Desi Boyz is set in the times of the economic recession. The year is 2009. The world has been struck by the financial meltdown. But Nick Mathur (John Abraham) and Jerry Patel (Akshay Kumar) don't feel a thing in their comfortable pad in London.
Nick feels smug with his successful investment banking job, the new bonus in his pocket and his beautiful fiance, Radhika, by his side, while Jerry is so used to scraping the bottom of the barrel and living off his best buddy Nick, that recession feels like home. But life has something else for these two lads.
Nick and Jerry stop smiling the day Nick's company decides to downsize and unceremoniously fires him. And Jerry is informed by the Social Services that his nephew Veer, whose local guardian Jerry is will be placed in a foster home unless he gets a steady job.
Desi Boyz is the story of two men who are forced to do something extremely bizarre which gives them instant gratification but the repercussions tear them apart and its aftermath which tests everything including their friendship.
Action comedy film which revolves around two friends Akshay and John Abraham who after losing their jobs start working as Pole Dancers, what happens after that, how they meet the beautiful heroines, with lots of comedy encounters is all about the movie.



Movie Review:- The movie is set in the year is 2009. The place: London. The world has witnessed a meltdown and recession is at its peak. Nick (John Abraham) and Jerry (Akshay Kumar) are best buddies who share the same home. Nick is an investment banker and Jerry manages to make ends meet doing odd jobs. He has a nephew, his sister's son, who has lost his parents. Jerry is responsible for his upbringing. The state is keeping a close watch on his abilities to care for a kid. The recession has both these buddies jobless. Nick has to maintain a high-end girlfriend Radhika (Deepika Padukone), who he has just given a diamond ring to, while Jerry has to pay his nephews bills.
Desi Boyzmovie is  Smart, sassy, sexy and sparkling with dark audacious humour, The film brings us a striking director in Rohit Dhawan, an entertaining time with these Desi Boyz promising full value for money.  Actresses. (Chitrangada) Singh plays a ‘hotness’ Economics professor who is supposed to be ‘sexy and powerful. Deepika Padukone looks glamorous, exudes sex appeal and acts with effortless ease. The songs (Pritam) and the choreography remain true to the film's entertainment-quotient. And the performances are a delight.

Dam999 Release Date : 25,Nov 2011

Producer    Abhini Sohan
 Director    Sohan Roy
 Release Date    25-Nov-2011

About Movie :-DAM Disaster...DAM999 is a tribute to the lost souls of the world's worst man made dam disasters which claimed a toll of lives. The story revolves around the central edifice in this movie, a 100-year-old dam built by the British during their colonial days in India. Like a dam, each character in this movie holds back their emotions for various reasons. Eventually the dam breaks along with that of its characters, drawing the audience to a gripping climax. The number 999 has great importance in British Colonial Indian history. The story reveals the concealed truth of India's age-old myths and science.
It’s a Emotional Thriller movie in 3D.
Suspense in the movie titles it as a thriller. DAM999 portrays the realities of life, some shared and some unshared. Navarasa or 9 human emotions are shown by 9 characters in the movie. Just as a Dam holds water, the 9 characters in the movie hold back their emotion, which eventually breaks out during a disaster drawing the audience to a gripping climax.


Movie Review:- The film deals with the disaster that big dams cause to human settlement and is based on the disaster that struck China when the Banqiao dam burst in 1975 and claimed the lives of almost 2,50,000 victims. But seriously, the film is less about the dam and more about stuff you fail to comprehend.Sohan Roy’s direction is horrifyingly pathetic. He mounts the film of an above average scale and makes sure he has got the right locations, but pays no heed to the demands of his botched script or narration.The 3D adds no value. Ajayan Vincent’s cinematography is good. The only high point about the film is the climax sequence of the dam-breaking and the floods washing away the town. It reminds you of films like 2012, and though it doesn’t live up to that technical brilliance, it is extremely well-done and deserve a mention.Stars abound 'Dam 999' doesn't actually produce any noteworthy performances except Ashish Vidyarthi.
Music is good and songs have quality. Eight tracks are there in movie including the theme song. Hariharan, Shreya Ghoshal and K. Niran gave good songs.

maaee Release Date : 21,Nov 2011

Producer    Nitin Shankar, Subhash Dawar
 Director    Mahesh Kodiyal
 Music    Nitin Shankar
 Release Date    21-Nov-2011

Maae is an upcoming Bollywood family drama genre movie.The special thing is that this movie casts legend Asha bhosle and Anupum kher as leading actors.Asha Bhosle will play role of Grand mother.
Maaee is expected to be super hit movie because he Hindi legend Lata mangeshkar is going to sing a song for the Movie. Asha bhosle’s Grand daughter will also sing a song for the movie.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Shakal Pe Mat Ja Release Date : 18,Nov 2011

Producer    Deepa Sahi, Aanand Mahendroo
 Director    Shubh
 Music    Salim Merchant, Sulaiman Merchant, Nitin Kumar Gupta, Yo Yo Honey Singh
 Writer    Shubh
 Lyrics    Shraddha Pandit, Shubh, Yo Yo Honey Singh
 Release Date    18-Nov-2011

Do not get deceived by the modest face-value of Shakal Pe Mat Ja assuming it to be of the low-on-star value but high-on-humour quotient varieties. The film starts as a seeming spin-off on last year's cult-comedy Tere Bin Laden but ends up being a commotional comedy-of-errors (rather erroneous comedy) treading into the Priyadarshan-Anees Bazmee zone.
So the film's actor-writer-director Shubh Mukherjee plays Aniket, who with his group of friends, aspires to make a documentary film on terror attacks. And you can actually see Aniket's attempt at making a college project film resulting into an amateurish filmmaking attempt by Shubh Mukherjee.
While taking random video shots within the international airport vicinity, the boys are taken into custody by police and detained at airport under suspicion of being terrorists. A potbellied anti-terrorist officer (Saurabh Shukla) comes to investigate. Amidst all this, one Omama Bin Laden, who heads some terrorist group Al Bakaida, is planning an actual attack at the airport.
Noise, disorder and confusion ensue for hours until Shubh comes to the point - to launch himself as the hero. And for that he just has to diffuse a bomb by snipping off one of the red-green-blue wires - a trademark gimmick of the 80s potboilers. Only if bomb diffusing and filmmaking were so easy, a lot more souls would have been saved.
Despite starting on a promising premise, writer-director Shubh Mukherjee isn't able to develop the plot in an interesting way and the potential for a fresh comedy is substituted by a formulaic film. The boys remain detained for more that half of the film and with nothing substantial happening through their confinement (other than repeated and redundant interrogation sessions), the narrative turns static and one-dimensional. The remaining film turns into a (supposed) comedy of mistaken identities inside the airport premises with beings and bags shifting hands every ten minutes.
The tone of the comedy, though not slapstick, is juvenile, inconsistent and ineffective at places. Neither is it supported by witty lines, nor by good comic-timed performances. The second half goes on and on and seems like an endless exercise where every character shouts their lungs out. An India-Pakistan live cricket match that plays in parallel has no relevance whatsoever with the central plot.
Shubh Mukherjee makes an earnest effort but gets the tone of humour wrong as the director. As an actor his dialogue delivery is suggestive of Shahid Kapoor, his acting is reminiscent of Riteish Deshmukh but, in totality, he comes across as a cheap imitation of Ali Zafar. Chitrak Bandhopadyay, employed as a prototype to the fat-bearded comic sidekick in films like Hangover or Delhi Belly, is not half as amusing. The only thing he makes noise for is his flatulent farting and fake firang accent. Child actor Pratik Katare isn't partially as funny as he was in Paa. Harsh Parekh lacks screen presence. Saurabh Shukla keeps 'shouting' at everyone around to lower their voice. Raghuvir Yadav appears malnourished. Pretty face Umang Jain is underused in an inconsequential role (once again after Love Breakups Zindagi). Aamna Shariff is hardly there. And why is Joy Sengupta even there.




Rockstar Release Date : 11,Nov 2011

Producer    Dhilin Mehta
 Director    Imtiaz Ali
 Music    A. R. Rahman
 Lyrics    Irshad Kamil
 Release Date    11-Nov-2011

In the film, Ranbir Kapoor is advised that to be a true-blue artist and a real rockstar he has to experience pain, which will come through heartbreak. If we go by this theory, most audiences of this film will walk out of the hall as rockstars, since the movie will largely leave them heartbroken. But for heartbreak, it is imperative to fall in love first and that's exactly what director Imtiaz Ali does. He starts off the film on a promising note and just when you fall in love with the amazing first half, the narrative nosedives with a stagnant second half.
So you have the naive Janardhan Jakhar (Ranbir Kapoor) who aspires to be a rockstar like Jim Morrison. His yearning for heartbreak gets him close to Heer (Nargis Fakhri), as they bond over soft-porn cinema and country liquor. Soon after, the girl is married off to some NRI, the boy is thrown out of his house, he seeks solace in a dargah and next you know he's a singing sensation rechristened as Jordan.
A foreign tour reunites him with Heer and their passive passion rekindles until Jordan is obsessed with her. What follows is another tribute to Devdas or rather Dev.D with the neurotic, lovelorn protagonist unable to get over his mixed emotions and confused definition of love. But that's not all as the plot meanders to culminate into an undesired arena of Erich Segal's Love Story.
Imtiaz Ali is known for his old-wine-in-new-bottle brand of cinema. Rockstar is very much engaging as far as it is in that familiar territory, where the director adds a refreshing touch to the regular romance drama. The casual chemistry that he induces between the lead pair through their wacky and eventful escapades has its moments of charm. The passion-play between them when they reunite after years is spontaneous, smoldering and yet tastefully achieved. Their reunion is also faintly reminiscent of the Jab We Met reunion, where the character-conduct is reversed with the burbling boy now trying to make the gloomy girl's life more exciting. And like Love Aaj Kal, Imtiaz Ali kick-starts the film with a montage song highlighting select significant sequences from the entire film.
But beyond that when the director ventures into uncharted zone, the narrative loses track. While one can still overlook the Dev.D influenced intoxicating attitude of the proceedings (which you can somehow attribute to the convoluted rockstar protagonist), the subsequent terminal illness conflict takes the film towards an unwelcome and undefined end. After an interesting graph to the narrative in the first half, the story almost turns stationary in the second half. The screenplay seems stretched and gets monotonous with repetitive media-bashing scenes and flashback shots of what has been already served to you.
Another problem with the plot is that it is neither a standalone story about the rise-of-an-underdog who becomes the biggest rockstar nor is it merely a love story with a rockstar backdrop. The director somewhere attempts to correlate the rockstar's rise with his romance but isn't able to achieve that impeccably. In fact the original one-liner plot with which the movie starts (a painful heartbreak gets out the real artist inside you) goes for a complete toss by the end. One can never clearly perceive when Jordan's heart is broken in the assorted scheme of events and that's where the film loses objectivity.
The storytelling pattern of the film is needlessly intricate for a simple romance-drama genre. While it is very much linear, the frequent use of multiple montages can have you confused. Initially the montages aid brisk storytelling but subsequently there are so much of them that it gets puzzling. Editing the film would surely have been a difficult task. Anil Mehta's cinematography is brilliant as he captures the beauty of Kashmir, Italy and Delhi with panache. AR Rahman's wide range of music has numbers which are instantly infectious (Sadda Haq) and others that take time to grow on you.
If Rockstar keeps you engaged even after you have given up on the story by the end, it is only because of Ranbir Kapoor. From his innocence in the opening reels to his arrogance in the climax, Ranbir breathes life into Jordan and keeps you riveted. Whether he adlibs his songs, gives a dance-tribute to Shammi Kapoor or dictates the concert crowd, Ranbir gives cent percent to his character. How much ever you try to ignore, but Nargis Fakhri fervently reminds of Katrina Kaif through her looks, acting, lip movements (and seemingly also has the same voice dubbing artist). Nevertheless she is likeable and shares good chemistry with Ranbir. Kumud Mishra as Jordan's advisor-turned-manager is impressive. Aditi Rao Hydari is confident but marred by a short-lived character. Piyush Mishra makes for an animated-yet-interesting negative lead. And it's pleasing to see Shammi Kapoor is his last decent cameo.
Rockstar rocks you but only partially thanks to the star called Ranbir Kapoor.

Na Jaane Kabse.. Release Date : 04,Nov 2011

Producer    Pammi Somal, Gurtejpal S. Somal
 Director    Pammi Somal
 Music    Jatin Pandit
 Writer    Pammi Somal
 Release Date    04-Nov-2011

New Delhi: With no big releases to draw audiences this week, smaller releases like 'Shakal Pe Mat Ja', 'Happi', 'Who's there?' and 'Na Jaane Kabse' were hoping to draw in the audiences between them.
But what actually happened, without a doubt, was a box office wipe out. Strikes one in the face when one walks in to an empty movie hall on a Friday evening.
'Na Jaane Kabse' stars new comer Gary Gill, Amrita Prakash, Sharat Saxena, Gurpreet Guggi, Lilette Dubey, Javed Sheikh, Ayub Khan, Anju Mahendroo and Himan Shivpuri.
'Na Jaane Kabse' is another brave attempt by the director Pammi Somal of the 'Mummy Punjabi' fame. It is a typical Bollywood love story between a 'self made' bartender-turned-resort's managing director and a librarian. At this point it must be added that the girl is actually the daughter of a bigger resort owner who has made the library for his daughter so as she does not have to work outside her protective precinct.
Could the movie have worked if the girl was actually a librarian? We may never know for economic differences are not Somal's bone of contention. Everyone in her movies seems to have ample money and fancy homes.
Karan (Garry Gill) is in need for a bride (albeit a fake one) when the girl he is supposed to get married to runs out on him. As Bollywood coincidences would have it he ends up taking a lift from Anjali (Amrita Prakash) and in a turn of events the 'drama queen' Anjali decides to help out 'tragedy king' Karan.
So begins the picturesque journey to a Karan's resort in the hills and in three days time they magically fall in love. Cliched? Who’s judging? They have the rains at the strategic time, the magical make over of a spectacled Anjali to a rather pretty 'fake' bride, the photoshoots by the foreign press, the Bollywood perfected gestures of affection and jokes.
The subplot of the story is Karan’s effort to get his resort publicity and the entry of Anjali's father – played rather deftly by Sharat Saxena who seems to have mastered comedy by now. He has been doing it since 'Mr India'. The main plot is the 3 day long love story filled with 'bhangra-perfect' songs – incidentally Somal has bhangra dancers ready all the time! And one prays silently that there will come a time when B grade Bollywood will grow up from the stock formula of a boy who wants to marry someone ‘hot and sexy’ and falls instead for a spectacle wearing 'gharelu' girl. And here’s the twist – he actually wears glassed himself!
And that is basically all the movie has to offer – the songs are not half bad but they suffer from bad choreography. At one point in the movie Anjali has a dream sequence in Leh-Ladakh and one can actually spot her wearing sneakers in quite a handful of scenes till finally a close up shows her golden sandals. You have to give it to the director – the locations are wonderful.
But as a film that aims to give a 'social' message as even 'Mummy Punjabi' does – the message seems to be rather obscure – Anjali tells her father – 'Why don't parents understand that their children can choose their life partners well'.
Characters appear and disappear just as abruptly and the audience (the few who can brave this) sit and wonder why they are even there. In his debut Garry Gill has a long, long, long way to go. Amrita Prakash, who ideally has more on-screen experience than Gill does – does a better job. She has played the kid sister in so many movies that she has not come out of that mode. It seems that Geet from 'Jab We Met' is the role model of all chirpy, smartly in-your-face girls all over India.
The story had some marginal potential but it was all done away with sub-standard acting from the lead actors. One can never figure out how the father suddenly changes his mind and is so terribly apologetic to his daughter – she was after all in love with a 'ex-bartender' – the old money against the nouveau riche logic. One cannot fathom the waste of an actor like Lilette Dubey and even Himani Shivpuri.
The most excruciating part of the movie is the love letter/proposal that Anjali sends out to her 'self made man of substance' Karan – for she wants to make sure she does not hurt his bruised ego (bruised by being jilted in love).
Give this movie a miss, you have nothing to lose.

Loot Release Date : 04,Nov 2011

Producer    Suniel Shetty, Shabbir Boxwala
 Director    Rajneesh Thakur
 Music    Shamir Tandon, Mika Singh
 Writer    Prawal Raman
 Release Date    04-Nov-2011

It might have taken debutante director Rajnish Raj Thakur huge efforts to mess up a fairly engaging plotline. His insipid direction, some disinterested performances, painful dialogues, shoddy editing and shabby production values do the wonders of looting Crime Spree of its original essence.
So you have four small-time robbers sent to Pattaya on a big assignment. Govinda and Javed Jafferi only speak in coded gibberish. Mahaakshay Chakraborthy's stereotype Christian character insists on uttering 'hey man' in every line he speaks in the film, perhaps to cover up the sissiness in his vocal chords. (Producer) Suniel Shetty takes a backseat, subtly hinting the group that he has sponsored the Thailand vacation and they have to run the extra mile. The quartet accidentally ends up robbing the wrong guy Lala (Mahesh Manjrekar), who happens to be a local don. Now he is out to get them and so are a bunch of some other guys (including the annoyed audience).
Rajnish Thakur does a blatant copy-paste job to the extent that he doesn't even bother to change the backdrops, locations or props in the scenes. It is certainly not a case of 'giving an apt tribute to the original' but more of 'having no vision of his own'. Crime Spree, in itself, was an offshoot of the cult success of Guy Ritchie's Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (1998) and interpreted its inherent sense of humour. Alas Loot isn't able to adapt the humour of the original and most of the gags are lost in translation and fall flat.
Also almost everyone seems to be miscast in the film. The comic genius of Govinda and Javed Jafferi are employed for action sequences in place of Suniel Shetty. The meek Mahaakshay is supposed to exude heroism. Mika doesn't sing but act. The dialogues are written as if a prosaic antakshari were playing, with every line trying to interconnect itself with the succeeding line. The editing is bad, cinematography is tacky and Pattaya looks so paltry that possibly Thailand tourism would think twice before sanctioning another film to be shot there.
The performances are consistently unappealing. Govinda and Javed Jafferi's potential to induce genuine laughs (esp. when the comedy was not merely slapstick) remains untapped. Suniel Shetty is regular. Mahaakshay Chakraborty should quit acting. Mahesh Manjrekar is let down by a dull director. Ravi Kishan and Mika are plain average. Thankfully Shweta Bhardwaj is knocked off pretty early in the plot and Rakhi Sawant's item number appears only in the end credits.
Loot robs you off some potential entertaining moments!

Miley Naa Miley Hum Release Date : 04,Nov 2011

Producer    Anuuj Saxena
 Director    Tanveer Khan
 Music    Sajid, Wajid
 Lyrics    Javed Akhtar
 Release Date    04-Nov-2011

Chirag (Chirag Paswan) happens to be the blue-eyed boy of his father ( Kabir Bedi) and mother (Poonam Dhillon), though his parents have separated years ago. Reason? Mother was upset that father was playing tennis when son was born!!! Never mind, now both the parents are hell-bent to marry off their only son to a girl of their choice. Prospective candidates come in form of Bollywood stereotypes of an NRI chick (Sagarika Ghatge) and the desi Punjabi kudi prototype (Neeru Bajwa).
One song with each contender and Chirag is convinced that neither girl is his type. So he hires an aspiring model Anishka (Kangana Ranaut) to pose as his girlfriend to ward off the others. All that the goofy Anishka does is spit and puke on Chirag and he still falls in love with her!!! Amidst all this, just forgot to mention (like the script) that Chirag's heart actually beats for tennis sport. Interested or not, you have to sit through an entire match before the film ends.
Writer-director Tanveer Khan comes up with a boring plot, which doesn't even qualify to be a TV serial and above that a screenplay, which is as amateurish as the performances. In what would seem like the most unconvincing scene of the year - when daddy dear makes a phone call to long-lost friend ( Dalip Tahil) with a marriage proposal for their kids, the friend, who is almost on the verge of marrying off his daughter to someone else, instantly calls off the engagement. Saying that a friend in need is a friend indeed would only be an understatement.
Chirag Paswan tries too hard to make an impact but fails to deliver with an inflexible demeanour. Had it been some other genre, one could have passed it off as a no-nonsense character (but sorry, no luck here). He maintains the same expression (or the lack of it) throughout the film. Thanks to her lack of comic timing, Kangana Ranaut continues to consistently disappoint from No Problem, Rascals to this one. Sagarika Ghatge and Neeru Bajwa are hardly there for a couple of scenes and comparatively Shweta Tiwari gets more visibility in her solo item number. Poonam Dhillon almost reprises her role from Dil Bole Hadippa. And Kabir Bedi's baritone leaves more impact than the whole film.
So if the question is Miley Naa Miley Hum, you know the answer...

Ye Stupid Pyar Release Date : 04,Nov 2011

Producer    Rakesh Jain
 Director    Rakesh Jain
 Music    Vipin Patwa
 Writer    Rakesh Jain
 Release Date    04-Nov-2011


Tension Doooor Release Date : 04,Nov 2011

Producer    Ekta Arora
 Director    Ambrish Sangal
 Music    Director Ali Gani
 Writer    Nawab Arzoo
 Lyrics    Nawab Arzoo
 Release Date    04-Nov-2011

If the other two releases of this week namely Loot and Miley Na Miley Hum weren't enough for atrocious viewing, here comes another flick that might seriously injure you brains cells - Tension Doooor.

Gopal that's Swaraj Singh is a sincere village boy who survives a freak road accident. Post recovery, he realises he also is able to hear and understand the unspoken feelings in a person's mind, which results in some of the corrupt authorities of his village being exposed and getting him thrown out. So when he leaves the village and his love that's Bijli (Swati Anand) behind, he finds solace in the company of Papplu (Ali Asgar) who helps him make a noble living with his ability that is till they land themselves in some deep trouble.

Tension Doooor is one such film that would make you run away from the cinema hall (that's if you choose to watch it in the first place) right in the initial 30 minutes. Though the only saviour of the entire film is stand up comedian and small screen actor Ali Asgar who provides some comic relief, the sight of the lead actor makes you squirm in your seat.

The fact that this movie shouldn't have been made is an understatement. Everything about Tension Doooor should carefully be kept doooor only. The makers who show the movie's name as Tension Doooor.com at one end and as just Tension Doooor at other prove just how careless the making is.

Performances by everyone especially lead actor Swaraj Singh is the purest form of torture. Song sequences test patience. Poor script and cheap editing make for a horrible watch. To mention that through the movie, supporting actors are forever speaking in chorus is also just being polite. Once known for his feat, director Ambrish Singhal lets us down with an ancient portrayal.

To sum it up, one can stay as doooor from Tension Door as possible unless one wants to invite Tension!

I Am Singh Release Date : 31,Oct 2011

Producer    Sardar Peshaura Singh Thind
 Director    Puneet Issar
 Music    Monty Sharma, Daler Mehndi, Sukhwinder Singh, Sudhakar Dutt Sharma
 Writer    Puneet Issar
 Release Date    31-Oct-2011

I AM SINGH – The film is a salute to the Undying spirit of unconquerable Sikhs all over the world. This film is written and directed by Renowed actor, writer, Director Puneet Issar best known for his powerful performance as Duryodhan in the TV series Mahabharata.
Cast: GulzarInder Chahal, Tulip Joshi, Mika Singh, Brooke Johnston, Rizwan Haider, Puneet Isarr
Written and Directed By : Puneet Isarr
Produced By: Sardar Peshaura singh Thind
Music Directors – Monty Sharma, Daler Mehndi, Sukhwinder Singh, Sudhakar Dutt Sharma
The story is about a young sikh named Ranveer Singh Sodi.
Ranveer is a young, confident, intelligent and a very well settled man in India. Ranveer’s elder brothers Balbir Singh & Bikram Singh are citizens of America. They are doing very well for themselves. They run restaurant business in the USA. Ranveer’s parents leave for holiday to the US to meet their son. Ranveer doesn’t want to join them as he is busy attending his friend’s wedding in India. Life is easy going for this family.

Damadamm Release Date : 27,Oct 2011

Producer    Studio 18
 Director    Swapna Waghmare
 Music    Himesh Reshammiya
 Writer    Himesh Reshammiya
 Lyrics    Shabbir Ahmed, Sameer
 Release Date    27-Oct-2011

Starring Himesh Reshammiya, Purbi Joshi, Sonal Sehgal
Directed by Swapna Waghmare
So here he is. Himesh Reshammiya is back in front of the camera. This time he moves away from the wannabe-rockstar’s image to play a working-class nerd. Himesh’s Sameer is a bit of an idiot. So he celebrates the departure of his over-possessive bossy girlfriend Shikha (Purbi Joshi) by dancing on the steeets, making weird faces at passing chicks(who should be shown reciprocating with a stern scowl if not a slap but are instead shown giggling), messing up his tidy apartment and binging on booze with his unsavoury boss who keeps giving our Sameer wrong advice on how to handle women, particularly bossy over-possessive girlfriends.
Damaddam has its nice sweet wholesome moments. It’s one of those innocuous romcoms that neither leave you impressed nor cold.The heartwarming moments come on when you are most expecting them and linger on screen long enough to make you forgot how annoyingly misguided a character the hero really is.
There is a ring of truth to Sameer’s selfdestructive rejection of a 5-year old seemingly stifling relationship for a posh fling in the tempting lap of luxury with his boss’ classy sister Sanjana(Sonal Sehgal).
Shah Rukh Khan had done the same in Aziz Mirza’s Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman, given up the comfort of true love for a fling with a rich heiress. To her credit Sonal Sehgal doesn’t play the Other Woman as a bitch. She echoes Sushmita Sen’s tranquil seductiveness from Goldie Behl’s Bas Itna Sa Khwab Hai. And that’s high praise.
Remarkably Surbat Sinha’s screenplay has a believable trio of protagonists, flawed, fumbling, all too human. But the peripheral characters are a letdown. They aren’t only sketchy but also clumsily etched into the plot. Also the music, Himesh Reshammiya’s mainstay, is here uninspiring and often obtrusive. The track ‘Ishq’ unplugged comes at an embarrassing juncture when the love triangle is in need of a solution, not a song.
What wins you over is the director Swapna Waghmare’s earnestness. She has her heart in the right place. So does the film. Some of the time. For the rest you’ve to grin and bear the excessive zeal of a supporting cast and a music score that don’t know where to draw the line.
Himesh Reashmmiya’s performance is that of a goofy Everyman, a bit of a messed-up soul who finally admits he needs a bullying girlfriend to get him through the complexities of life. Himesh works his performance around the character’s weaknesses and his own limitations as an actor.
It is the underused Purbi Joshi as Himesh’s overbearing girlfriend who steals the show. She imparts a sense of lived-in authenticity to her role, almost at times going beyond the script in search of her character’s lost soul. Why don’t we get to see more of this pretty talented girl in our films?

Tell Me O Kkhuda Release Date : 27,Oct 2011

Producer    Hema Malini
 Director    Hema Malini, Mayur Puri
 Music    Pritam Chakraborty
 Release Date    27-Oct-2011

Tania (Esha Deol), a supposed novelist who inspires others, is disillusioned when she learns that she was an adopted child. Thereby she sets on an aimless, endless and pointless journey to find her biological parents, accompanied by her friends (Arjan Bajwa, Chandan Roy Sanyal) who have nothing better to do than escort her on her sponsored world tours. She has managed to preserve her 24-year old hospital birth tag (phew) which leads them to an overtly enthusiastic municipality clerk ( Johnny Lever) who is more than willing to help her with paternal prescriptions. And every time the municipal hospital is refurbished, the clerk comes up with new options for Daddy dear!
That gives the film an excuse to explore different geographical territories from Rajasthan, Turkey to Goa. Of course that doesn't make the narrative one-bit multidimensional as one only wishes the story could have explored the characters and their conflicts better. The first father candidate is a Rajasthan Royal (Vinod Khanna) and the ensuring episode is a moral science lesson against female feticide and about gender equality. Nominee number 2 is a Turkish hotelier (Rishi Kapoor) whose wife has turned recluse ever since the death of their daughter. But do we care?
Finally comes our very own Papaji (Dharmendra) with tweaked side-locks and studded ears as Goa's don Tony Costello. Hema Malini also makes a default special appearance and you know who the daughter belongs to. So by the time Esha Deol walks with 'four fathers' in the climax, you realize that this dull drama dates back to your 'forefathers'.
While the film is certainly not designed as some suspense flick about the identity of the real father, it doesn't even work as a decent drama. Hema Malini's direction is slack, shallow and lacks the dramatic punches when the scene demands and, on the contrary, gets melodramatic when not required. There is no palpable tension when Tania confronts any of her prospective papas for the first time. The dullness in her direction can be simply sensed from the fact that she fails to add excitement or animation even in the potential camel race sequence.
Completely centered on Esha Deol, the actress disappoints with her apathetic act. She carries the same red-nosed, crybaby expression throughout and fails to strike a chord. And as desperately as she tries to exude an oomph appeal, all her attempts fall flat. Arjan Bajwa gets no scope. Chandan Roy Sanyal is used as an add-on who merely giggles and sprints like a buffoon. His comedy seems forced and the film could have even done without his character. Vinod Khanna has good screen presence. Rishi Kapoor is marred by a half-baked role. Dharmendra is unable to rise over the mediocre script. Farooq Sheikh and Deepti Naval are decent. Hema Malini fails to impress both off-screen and on-screen.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Ra.One Release Date : 26,Oct 2011

Producer    Gauri Khan
 Director    Anubhav Sinha
 Release Date    26-Oct-2011

Pataka? Item? Tota? An actor throws around a few casual words that mean a beautiful girl, until he hits upon one that encompasses all of the above: chammak challo. Shah Rukh Khan's superhero-blue eyes light up, Kareena Kapoor's red sari glows, and they start to dance to Akon's song along with Russian dancers in Bharatnatyam-inspired mini-skirts. Yes, it's that sort of a movie, where everything happens all at once. Amitabh Bachchan does part of the voice-over; Rajinikanth's Chitti, the Robot, shows G.One, Shah Rukh's superhero, how to twirl his sunglasses; artist Subodh Gupta paints the costume; and even pals Sanjay Dutt and Priyanka Chopra act out a juvenile joke, playing characters in video game where the star can vanquish the sisters of Bruce Lee called Iski Lee, Uski Lee and Sabki Lee. Even as you cringe at Shah Rukh's Tamil accented Hindi and his eating-curd-with-noodle act, hoping his curly wig will fall into his dinner plate, you realise it's a big party and everyone's invited.
Welcome to a movie as a gigantic open house. Shah Rukh is the host and he will make sure your VFX canapés are delivered at regular interval; your emotion goblet is kept topped up; and there are enough homilies about being careful-what-you-wish-for that you can take home as back presents. This is film-making not so much as noble passion but as grand indulgence, not so much as a marathon magic show but as an event to be managed. No effort is spared. Shah Rukh walks sideways on a Mumbai local train, stops an engine with his bare hands, charges himself with electricity, even slaps his heroine's butt and grabs her breast. In between throwing cars at his arch nemesis, recently escaped from a video game; dancing like Michael Jackson; and quoting V. Shantaram, the superhero moves between the digital and real world, London and Chennai, burial as Christian and prayer as Hindu.
I presume there is some lesson here about being a global citizen, and Shah Rukh's hyperactive child fans will no doubt benefit from it, but it would have been more fun to see more Volkswagens ploughing through many more red buses. But yes, we know, this is a superhero with a heart and ladai goliyon se nahin, dil se jeeti jati hai. The special effects work, but are not always evenly applied through the film. The cool metallic blue of the superhero suit doesn't always show up on screen. And hey, Arjun Rampal really needs to stop clenching his teeth while delivering menacing dialogues. We are not scared because we simply cannot understand. Shah Rukh throws himself about, vaulting up and own buildings, leaping through the air and even landing on his feet with Kareena Kapoor in his arms. In the face of such indefatigable energy, we surrender. Go on, Shah Rukh, give it a rest. In the words of your superhero, you did good.

Be-Careful Release Date : 21,Oct 2011

Producer    Amrit Guzari, Raju Bhati, Ritesh Charodia
 Director    Chandrakant Singh
 Music    Siddharth, Suhas
 Writer    M. Salim
 Lyrics    Kumaar
 Release Date    21-Oct-2011

Story: The best way for Sameer and Anand to enjoy a moment of sensuous bliss is to take a trip away from home... and away from their respective wives, Anjali and Kiran. But fun becomes a far fetched dream for the boys when they realise the wives themselves are up to something naughty in Bangkok....

Movie Review: So what exactly does one need to be careful about here? Is it the plot (Two sexually starved husbands run away from their wives to the sinful islands of Thailand for fun unlimited)? Is it the sense of humour (There are plenty of jokes on the Thais)? Is it the level of insensitivity (more than half of the movie goes into getting cheap thrills out of a possible rape encounter to please the girl everybody wants to bed)? Is it the likes of Rajpal Yadav and Johnny Lever left to rechristening themselves when in Bangkok -- One becomes Pands instead of Panditji?

None of the above. Avoid.

Ganga Of Wasseypur Release Date : 18,Oct 2011

Producer    Anurag Kashyap, Sunil Bohra
 Director    Anurag Kashyap
 Writer    Anurag Kashyap, Sachin K. Ladia
 Release Date    18-Oct-2011


Rang Rasiya Release Date : 14,Oct 2011

Producer    Deepa Sahi, Aanand Mahendroo
 Director    Ketan Mehta
 Release Date    14-Oct-2011

The much awaited film “RANG RASIYA”, internationally known as the Colours of Passion, has been selected to be screened at two prestigious international film festivals. The film will be screened at the BFI’s 52nd London Film Festival on 26th October and 30th October, 2008 followed by two screenings at the MIAAC Film Festival in New York, on 6th (Museum of Arts and Design) & 8th (Tribeca Cinemas) November, 2008 respectively.
Deepa Sahi made come back to bollywood movies from the film “Colors of Passion Rang Rasiya  ”. The film is directed by Ketan Mehta and Deepa porcupine and built by Anand Mahendroo. The film's script is based on the real life story of the famous painter Raja Ravi Verma.
The painter Raja Ravi Verma was born in Kerala in the year 1848 and he was criticized by social groups in the regional painting tradition is not a sunset. That he had photographs of the righteous is less common animals to man. Raja Ravi Verma, who was married to Queen Bhageerathi Bayi one of the Royal family and three daughters and two sons.
The film is based on the story of Raja Ravi Verma relationship with the muse Sugandha. Sugansha is played by Nandana Sen and passion is prevalent in the paintings of Raja Ravi Verma up as a topic of the film. Raja Ravi Varma's paintings had been accused of unethical paintings depicting Hindu gods, and he was arrested for his works. He completed Sugandha, a muse and he imagined that matches the beauty Raja Ravi Verma, in his mind.
Out to be the inspiration Sugandha turns for the Raja Ravi Varma, who paints her as a god. He painted many pictures to take Sugandha his subject, and the price paid for Sugandha tell your pictures.
Came across a site which has wallpapers and other interesting trivia of this movie..
Check out

Aazaan Release Date : 14,Oct 2011

Producer    M. R. Shahjahan
 Director    Prashant Chadha
 Music    Salim Merchant, Sulaiman Merchant
 Writer    Prashant Chadha, Shubra Swarup, Heeraz Marfatia
 Lyrics    Amitabh Bhattacharya
 Release Date    14-Oct-2011

The expectations of the movie goers about director Prashant Chadha's latest movie Aazaan suddenly went up after Bollywood Superstar Shahrukh Khan introduced actor Sachiin Joshi and his movie in IIFA 2011 in Toronto. The movie surely lives upto their expectations and it offers something extra-ordinary in the action genre.

Aazaan is an espionage thriller and the action sequences, which lack flamboyance, are the major highlight of the movie. It is the best action movie shot ever in India. Sachiin Joshi's performance, Salim-Suleman's music, Axel Fischer's stunning camera work and Shubra Swaroop's screenplay are other attractions of the film.

The movie is all about a tormented-Muslim secret agent Aazaan, who sets out on to save his country and his brother. The movie is in par with Hollywood standards in many aspects like action, screenplay. In the beginning, Aazaan appears like a beautiful journey, but it soon turns more foggy. Prashant Chadha has a very gripping narration and he goes beyond the predictions of viewers in every scene. Although different characters speak various languages like Hebrew and French, the director has managed that these languages do not divert the attention of the audience.

Aazaan Khan is an Indian army officer, who has Afghan origin. He is trained at the NDA and is working as a secret agent for RAW (Research and Analysis Wing). He goes undercover to find out information to save the country, when India faces the threat of lethal virus attack. Meanwhile, he is also on mission to find his missing brother, who is now involved in terrorists' biological warfare. How Aazaan saves the country and his brother will form the interesting portion of the film.

The director could have selected dynamic actor like Hrithik Roshan for the hero role. But this does not mean that Sachiin Joshi has not performed well. He done a wonderful job in all kinds of sequences. Candice Boucher is also good in her role and she is a feast to the eyes of pranksters. Prashanth Chadha does not seem to have used the actors like Sarita Choudhary, Dalip Tahil and Ravi Kissen in proper way.

In the technical front, Salim-Suleman's background music is the major attraction. Their composition of songs is also good and the placement of songs is also okay. Axel Fischer's cinematography is a visual treat. The action of film moves from Morocco to Germany to Hong Kong and Poland and he has captured this movement in a brilliant way. Dialogues are also commendable and they evokes the sense of patriotism.

Overall, Prashant Chadha has set a Hollywood trend in Indian action thriller with his latest movie Aazaan, which is a treat for action lovers.

Mod Release Date : 14,Oct 2011

Producer    Nagesh Kukunoor, Sujit Kumar Singh, Elahe Hiptoola
 Director    Nagesh Kukunoor
 Music    Tapas Relia
 Writer    Nagesh Kukunoor
 Lyrics    Mir Ali Husain
 Release Date    14-Oct-2011

Starring Ayesha Takia Azmi, Rannvijay Singh, Raghuvir Yadav, Tanve Azmi
Directed by Nagesh Kukunoor
Ahhhhhhh! It’s been a while since one felt that stab in the heart while watching a love story trot towards its somber culmination. Love’s like that. When put on film it can make you fall in love with the emotion called love, as it happened in Imtiaz Ali’s Jab We Met.
We’ll never know why Imtiaz didn’t cast Ayesha Takia in Jab We Met after she sparkled in Ali’s Socha Na Tha. But there’s Kukunoor who truly values in Takia’s talent.
She brings to this film about that silly thing called, a kind of inner conviction that makes you want to believe in her faith in the oft-abused emotion. When Ayesha speaks her lines they don’t sound written in this under-written film about love that has goes into the realm of the surreal.
Veejay turned actor Rannjvijay Singh is the nerdy stranger who walks into Ayesha/Aranya’s tranquil life in a  scenic soporific hill station that’s threatened, rather crudel, by a construction magnate whom we overhear saying, ‘The first thing we’ll do is get rid of all the greenery around here.’
Ouch! Happily for us and the film, such insensitive moments are too far and in-between to make a difference to the gentle tale of a girl who runs a watch repair-shop in town where time  has nearly stopped still.
Nagesh Kukunoor and his lovely leading lady are most comfortable with the silences that punctuate life away from the city. The camerawork by Chirantan Das shamelessly creates picture-postcard images all around Aranya’s life and world. The relationships that emerge from the  sedate silences of a life lived in an ageless vacuum are woven into a  plot which careens between being a fragile fable and a mawkish melodrama.
Caught in that morning-time dim dawn sun  when the world looks irresistibly innocent and shorn of corruptibility the goings-on in Mod are so evocative of an era that never existed outside the poet’s imagination that we tend to forgive the plotting excesses that mar the second-half  of the film.
The finale on the hilly railway station, however, erases the clumsiness of some of the proceedings in the second-hour. And what we are left with is a film of heart-aching beauty, soo tender and evocative that in terms of manmade craft it replicates the intrictate threadwork of a Kashmiri carpet where very often the design is so nuanced the naked eye can’t see the craftsmanship.
The film has some truly tender supporting performances from Raghuvir Yadav (playing a zany Kishore Kumar fan), Tanve Azmi (always capable of tremendous empathy) and specially Nikhil Ratnaparkhi as Takia’s overweight suitor who in that one sequence where he pleads and threatens Ayesha Takia to marry him, brings so much bridled emotion into the film you are left feeling satiated with the vast amount of talent that this delicately drawn fable-romance pitches forward.
Ayesha Takia Azmi of course presides over the subtle proceedings. With her effortlessly-drawn emotions she is a treat to watch in every frame. Rannvijay Singh in a complex role that demands various mood swings from the actor, is surprisingly in-charge.
Mod is like a gente sonnet played on a  cosy winter morning. It is the tenderest love story in ages with a central performance by Takia that strikes a chord deep in your heart. Mod is a film you want to adopt embrace and hold close to your heart.

Mujhse Fraaandship Karoge Release Date : 14,Oct 2011

Producer    Ashish Patil
 Director    Nupur Ashtana
 Music    Raghu Dixit
 Writer    Pooja Desai, Ashish Patil
 Lyrics    Anvita Dutt Guptan, Raghu Dixit, Aslam Noor
 Release Date    14-Oct-2011

Yash Raj Films are synonymous with love stories, and with their second release from newly launched youth division Y-Films, the production house stick to what they know best: a story about love.
A romantic comedy set against the backdrop of social networking, Mujhse Fraaandship Karoge tells the tale of two losers, Vishal (Saqib Saleem) and Preity (Saba Azad) who fake their online identities in an attempt to get the attention of drop dead gorgeous Malvika (Tara D’Souza) and rockstar Rahul (Nishant Dahiya). What they do not realize, is that the person they hate most in the real world, just happens to be the same person they have fallen in love with online.
So, the premise for the season’s most screwed up love story, is: Rahul loves Malvika. And Malvika loves Rahul. But Rahul is not Rahul. Rahul is Vishal. And Vishal loves Malvika too. But Malvika is not Malvika either. Malvika is Preity. And Preity loves Rahul. But Preity hates Vishal. And Vishal hates Preity. Got it? Good.
From the opening scene with a naked guitarist gone viral, it is clear that director Nupur Asthana – previously known for cult TV shows like Hip Hip Hurray and Mahi Way – is firmly targeting the 18-30 demographic. MTV style jump cuts, speeded up segments and innovative camera angles, do not let us forget that this is a film for the youth.
We have a vague plot centered on a college project to celebrate the founder’s day of the college. Add to that a cast of shiny, happy students, in a campus where seemingly everything takes place except the small matter of study. Throw in shirtless boys and debut heroines not yet at the ‘no-bikini-clause-in-my-contract’ stage of their career, and wash it down with copious amounts of tequila and a thumping background score. And there you have it, all the ingredients necessary for a sweet, zesty film.
Asthana scores bonus points for tapping into the language of young, urban India. So people are ‘despo’ and things are ‘obvo’. A ‘Jawaani Booty Booty’ (don’t ask, just watch) MMS scandal and a ‘BRB’ Facebook status announcing the intermission, will appeal to those always on Facebook – day and night.
As anyone in Bollywood will tell you, launching not one – but four newcomers – is a big risk. Here we have no established stars to support the debut actors, as YRF had tried previously with Shah Rukh Khan and Amitabh Bachchan in Mohabbatein. Nor have we taken the star offspring route Karan Johar is currently travelling down in his forthcoming Student of the Year.

When you are banking on newcomers, one of the key attractions that get you into the cinema in the first place, is the kick-ass promo backed by even more kick-ass songs.
With indie musician Raghu Dixit onboard as composer, Mujhse Fraaandship Karoge has created a soundtrack to rival the popularity of ‘Pappu Can’t Dance’ (Jaane Tu… Ya Jaane Na), and the I Hate Luv Storys title track. ‘Dheaon Dheaon’, a tribute to the South Indian street music form of Dappan Koothu, has been given a fusion feel with hip-hop and rap influences. Sung by Vishal Dadlani and Aditi Singh, the song is already a hit across music channel platforms. ‘Uh-Oh Uh Oh!’ is charming and likeable, picturised with a funky choreographed campus dance. ‘Chhoo Le’ brings Suraj Jagan belted out vocals into a modern twist on the classic stadium rock track.
As is de rigueur for every Yash Raj release post Bunty aur Babli, we are also treated to a bonus track, in the form of a karaoke version of ‘Kajra Re’ sung in the back of a speeding rickshaw.
Performance wise, Saqib Salim as loser Vishal gets my vote. Nishant Dahiya delivers a confident debut as the equally confident Rahul.  Katrina Kaif fans will see something of the star in Tara D’Souza (an identikit accent for starters), while Saba Azad brings the cuteness of Genelia to the table.  Pay close attention to how Preity goes through a post-interval metamorphosis. Graduating from checked shirts and hideously oversized jeans (1974 called and wants its denim back), to a sleek and sophisticated conventional Bollywood heroine look.
Without giving the movie away, the climax – all about love, pyaar, ishq, mohabbatein – ties up the story so that everything is as it should be, and everyone is with who they should be. The final reels have fun with a photo story montage, and seem to do the trick of preventing the audience of rushing en masse to the exit sign before the movie is properly over.
In the pre-Diwali rush to release everything and anything before the arrival of a certain Shah Rukh Khan sci-fi project, Mujhse Fraaandship Karoge jostles for a place in the crowded box office with four other releases. While its target audience will get it, and in urban centres the movie should do well, non-multiplex audiences, however, might literally not connect with this love story.
On the whole, BollySpice is quite happy to make fraaandship with the film (though perhaps on limited profile).  It is not just another love story. ‘It’s complicated’ and we ‘Like’.