Showing posts with label Salman Khan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Salman Khan. Show all posts

Sunday, January 06, 2013

Chulbule II



The irrepressible Chulbul Pandey (Salman Khan), now hitched to wife Rajjo (Sonakshi Sinha) is now posted in Kanpur, where he continues his streak of doing the right acts for the wrong reasons. Replete with item numbers and catchy one-liners, Dabangg 2 however does not quite pack the element of surprise that was Dabangg. Nevertheless, it has been quite successful, commercially (expectedly) and is apparently leading to a prequel that explores the origins of Chulbul Pandey

11/20 

Saturday, September 18, 2010

A Bit Incendiary, a Lot of fizz

Like the giant explosions in the second half of the movie, there are moments in Dabangg that are – well – explosive firsts in Hindi cinema in the action genre. What is not quite as catchy is the storyline, which gets caught in an uncertain zone between being the oh-so-familiar Bollywood melodrama, and being a loose vehicle for some over-the-top action sequences. With one-man action capers reminiscent of the likes of Desperado and Shoot ‘em Up, and liberal doses of inspiration from several other Hollywood flicks, this movie is on the one hand quite enough to be a popular hit, but could have gone much further in the over-the-top action genre. And then there is the issue of the never-ending careers of our Bollywood stars and whether it would have been really difficult to find a better lead than Salman Khan. In any case, watch this movie for the action, but you will not miss much if you snooze off whatever’s in between

10/20

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Get The Formula Right
And how much better could London Dreams have been only if the music was right! In a country where, as far as I can make out, people are falling over each other trying to out-sing each other on every single (of two dozen) TV channels every single night, to have sub-standard music in a movie where the core is supposed to be musical talent, is a travesty that is unforgivable (and the audience did not forgive – this was one of 2009’s quiet deaths). And then there is the cast. Salman Khan is great as the foil who becomes the lead, Ajay Devgan is watchable, Asin – the third key character in the movie – has nothing to do except jive on stage with the group and show her obvious lack of fit for the role. London Dreams should have spent time studying Rock On and its likes to figure out what made these movies click – spending a bomb on the sets is no excuse for a surprisingly bad job

5/20

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