Monday, 28 February 2011

tees maar khan hindi movie


Farah Khan knows exactly what she wants (rather what she can get) from her cast and employs them to that effect. With her trademark film-inside-film setting, when she wants someone to play the role of a boisterous, atrocious and artificial actor in her film, the natural choice is Akshaye Khanna.

Katrina is cast as the quintessential Bollywood actress who has to wear more makeup and less clothes and do practically nothing in the film. The biggest novel (rather navel) factor she brings to the film is her super-sexy midriff and her hip-hot gyrations. With Akshay Kumar coming into picture, Farah seems to leave behind her Manmohan Desai masala method and adapts her film to brother Sajid Khan’s slapstick sensibilities.

Ten minutes into the film and Tees Maar Khan (Akshay Kumar) is introduced in the league of two other chindi chors, though he makes claims of being an international crime master. His latest assignment is to loot a locomotive loaded with valuables worth crores. Since the booty is in bulk, he would need help from many hands.

Khan hatches a plan to shoot a fictitious film in a village from where the train passes and use the oblivious villagers to rob the train. He lures superstar Aatish Kapoor (Akshaye Khanna), who aims for an Oscar Award, into his mock movie and casts his wannabe-actress girlfriend Anya (Katrina Kaif) as the leading lady.

Remade from Vittorio De Sica’s 1966 film ‘Caccia Alla Volpe’ (After the Fox) starring Peter Sellers, the only major innovation that Tees Maar Khan shows is to shift tracks to train theft from the ship in the original. While the climactic train heist could have worked as a smart suspense element in the favour of the film, the entire fabricated film formula is revealed at the very onset, leaving nothing to your imagination.

Also it appears too far-fetched that a filmstar like Aatish Kapoor won’t comprehend that this one-take shoot, filmed by a single handheld camera is a hoax for heist. Unfortunately the audiences are not as gullible as the villagers in this film.

The Academy Awards and its Bollywood aspirants (from Aamir Khan to Anil Kapoor) seem to be the butt of most jokes here. The film emphasizes and also employs the widespread sentiment of how a poverty-stricken India has become a perfect recipe for Oscar wannabes.

Farah however takes things a little too far with a literal Oscar Award setting in the final reels. Also this time around Farah Khan seems to have gone slack on her signature spoofs, which were a highlight of both Main Hoon Na and Om Shanti Om. Even her trademark end credits are not much inventively conceptualized or different from her earlier attempts.

On the contrary, the film retains a more fervent feel and flavour of Akshay Kumar brand of loud and slapstick comedy. Akshay’s gags are dreary and add to it the other Akshaye’s antics are deafening. And if that is not enough there is a recap of all these histrionics in the climax as a part of the film inside the film setting.

Akshaye Khanna could win the Ham Scene of the Year award for getting possessed by his character in the bank robbery sequence. Then there’s a headless horseman’s anecdote which could make you feel ‘sleepy’ for its ‘hollowness’.

The dialogues written by Shirish Kunder and Ashmith Kunder in synchronized stanzas try too hard to be funny but fall flat at most instances and are repeated too often without much repeat value. Vishal Shekhar’s music has mass appeal. Farah Khan’s raunchy choreography to Sheila Ki Jawani has Katrina Kaif at her sexiest best. One expected some action in the train robbery sequence but there’s none over here.

The role is custom-made for Akshay Kumar and while he plays it effortlessly, he is clearly getting repetitive in his comic act. Katrina Kaif is categorically hired for her sex-appeal and she exudes loads of it. Akshaye Khanna is expected to act terribly and he does that with such perfection that it gets on your nerves.

Apara Mehta makes up as a cheap imitation of Kirron Kher. Arya Babbar gets no scope. You never get to know whether Avatar Gill’s character is a spinoff on A K Hangal from Sholay or he plays a blind man for no good reason. Aman Verma hams. Salman Khan invites whistles and claps in his cameo.

To sum up in Tees Maar Khan’s trademark style of dialogue delivery, Akshay Kumar se zara hatke comedy expect karna aur Akshaye Khanna se kuch bhi expect karna bekaar hain. Tees Maar Khan doesn’t even guarantee thirty good laughs in its three hour runtime. 





Source:  hindi movie {www.radiomaska.com}

saat khoon maaf hindi movie

Cast: Priyanka Chopra, Naseeruddin Shah, John Abraham, Neil Nitin Mukesh, Irrfan Khan, Annu Kapoor, Vivaan Shah, Aleksandr Dyachenko, Usha Uthup
Producers: Vishal Bhardwaj and UTV Motion Pictures
Director and Music Score: Vishal Bhardwaj
Lyrics: Gulzar
Genre: Action/Thriller
Release Date: 18 Feb 2011
Even before its release, the first look of movie “Saat Khoon Maaf” is grabbing lot of eyeballs that features the leading lady Priyanka Chopra absolutely in a different role with negative shades. Adapted from Ruskin Bond’s book – Susanna’s seven husbands, the movie revolves around Susanna portrayed by Priyanka Chopra and her desire to search for true love. Playing Susanna in Saat Khoon Maaf is indeed one of the challenging roles in Priyanka’s career as her role undergoes various transitions in terms of appearance.
After portraying negative shades in her earlier movies- Yakeen and Aitraaz, Priyanka is once again donning the garb of an enigmatic woman named Susanna whose charm is hard to resist. The movie also features dynamic versatile actors Naseeruddin Shah, John Abraham, Neil Nitin Mukesh, Irrfan Khan, Annu Kapoor, Vivaan Shah and Russian actor Aleksandr Dyachenko as seven husbands. After success of Kaminey, Priyanka is teaming up again with director Vishal Bharadwaj and UTV motion pictures hoping to recreate the magic with the upcoming dark thriller “Saat Khoon Maaf”.
Even the soundtrack of this movie is receiving outstanding responses from masses all over. Slated to release on 18th Feb 2011, Saat Khoon Maaf will be really a different visual treat to discover the real intention of Susanna and her motive behind killing her seven husbands.



Source: hindi movie {www.radiomaska.com}

Friday, 25 February 2011

latest hindi movie online

The season of marriages is not over yet and Tanu Weds Manu makes it just in time. Of course it is a love story. And like every other love story this has its clichéd moments. Plenty of them actually! But then you really can't help it considering love stories are bound to be predictable. After all it is about a guy and girl falling in love. Tanu Weds Manu could hence remind you of films such Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayena and Jab We Met.

TWM is about two people - both extremes in attitude - and them accepting each other in love. Manu (Madhavan) is a London based doctor who comes to India, on insistence of his parents, to get married. Contrary to regular stereotypes of NRIs Manu is docile, a Mohd. Rahi lover and quite rooted in Indian values. Manu, along with his parents and friend Pappi, reaches Kanpur to meet Tanu. He approves the bride only to realize soon after that she never intended to marry him. And that Tanu is a complete reverse of whatever Manu is. While Manu would go by what is conventionally right, Tanu is rebellious. She hates the concept of arranged marriage. Rather she intends to elope. Anything that is rejected by her parents is just what she wants to do. She makes Manu back out of the marriage. But as fate could have it the two bumps into each other again within days at their friends' marriage. There is a twist in the tale too as Tanu plans to get married to her boyfriend.

Tanu Weds Manu starts well. The director does not lose any time in establishing characters and settings. The characters and settings are in fact the highlights of this story. The story takes us through UP and Punjab and you have delightfully colorful personalities everywhere. And these characters are brought to life with some very lively dialogues and scenes. The settings are explored best by the Chirantas Das's cinematography. The music too fits the settings. The song 'Kajra Mohabbat Wala' is blended very well into the scene.


Thanks to the characters the first half works beautifully. But then, like most other filmmakers, Aanand L Rai loses his way in the second half! He falls prey to desire to create tense dramatic moments to keep up the interest. He does create drama but this time it does not heighten your experience but exhaust the audience.

Performances, except Kangna, are top class. Madhavan and Jimmy Sheirgill show their potential as actors. Deepak Dobriyal is delightfully spontaneous. Eijaz Khan fits right into the character. Swara Bhaskar is dynamic and leaves a mark. Kangna however is a complete misfit. She is clearly uncomfortable in dialogue delivery when it comes to comedies and we saw that in No Problem too. But she does get her expressions right.

Overall TWM turns out to be an average film because of the weak second half. It has a feel-good factor to it, which should work with some part of the audience. And then there are some dialogues which just stay with you. 








Source: hindi movie {www.radiomaska.com}