Tag: Anil Kapoor

  • Colors’ 24 and Tata Motors to ride together

    Colors’ 24 and Tata Motors to ride together

    MUMBAI: It has been touted as one of the biggest fiction shows to hit Indian television in a long time. Based on the hit Fox series which ran for eight seasons in the US, Colors‘ long-in-gestation 24 series has already created a buzz because of the fact that Anil Kapoor is associated with it as producer under the banner of Anil Kapoor Film Company. Additionally many key names from Bollywood are working on it: right from acclaimed Delhi Belly director Abhinay Deo who is helming it to Rensil D‘Silva and Bhavani Iyer who have been scripting it.

    Colors CEO Raj Nayak saw a lot of promise in the Indian adaptation of 24 when Kapoor approached him and it took barely 20 minutes to decide to put it on his channel. Some of Raj‘s faith in it is bearing fruit. Colors today announced that it has managed to rope in Tata Motors Vehicles as the presenting sponsor.

    Ranjit Yadav believes it to be a good opportunity for the company

    Speaking on the association Tata Motors Vehicles Business unit president Ranjit Yadav says, “This association with 24 offers us an exciting platform to demonstrate the true capability of our dynamic cars, which delivers performance and comes with technology rich features.”

    Brand integration will be visible throughout the series as Anil Kapoor and Tata Motors cars and UVs will be racing in action. Nayak points out: “It takes brand partnerships to another level beyond the conventional 30-second commercial.” Previously, the channel had also experimented with its brands on Bigg Boss where a lot of its sponsors were seen during the show.
     

    The show will be a hit, according to Raj Nayak

    Anil Kapoor who plays the role of Jai Singh Rathod, the Indian version of Jack Bauer explains: “In the show, I will be driving Tata Motors‘ dynamic and exciting vehicles in my adventurous quests across terrains to tackle various security threats.”

    This will be Anil Kapoor‘s first stint on the Indian small screen (he acted in the English version of the series in the US) and will have the pace of a real time narrative. The set which has been developed to look almost like the American version is in Andheri (Mumbai) at Kapoor‘s own studio named Stage 1. Under pre-production and production for more than a year, it was to see the light of day on 1 April. However, Nayak says that everyone had to take care during the adaptation process because of sensitive issues such as religion, terrorism and politics; hence it has taken time.

    “It will be a game changer and I genuinely believe it,” says an optimistic Nayak.

  • Race 2: Fast, crisp and gripping

    Race 2: Fast, crisp and gripping

    MUMBAI: Race 2 is a film about Indian criminals abroad and more than a race, it is the game of one-upmanship between two criminals. Just when major films were going desi with their content and locations, Race 2 takes to the trend of a few years back when makers sought foreign locations. Race 2 had to follow the Race to a certain extent.

    Producers: Ramesh S Taurani, Ronnie Screwvala, Siddharth Roy Kapur. 
    Directors: Abbas – Mustan.
    Cast: Saif Ali Khan, John Abraham, Anil Kapoor, Aditya Panscholi, Deepika Padukone, Jacqueline Fernandez, Ameesha Patel, Rajesh Khattar.

    The turf is ruled by all Indian players, each wanting to be the best. Saif Ali Khan continues from where he left off in Race, John Abraham replaces Akshaye Khanna and is pitted against Khan in the game of one-upmanship. The ex cop, Anil Kapoor, is now the jack in the pack accompanied by his new assistant, Ameesha Patel, while Aditya Pancholi is the super don. Abraham, a street fighter has raked in millions with his nefarious activities with much help from his sister, Deepika Padukone. For girlfriend, he has Jacqueline Fernandez.

    Khan‘s pregnant girlfriend, Bipasha Basu, has been killed by Abraham and he has sworn to avenge her death by destroying Abraham financially and literally, ridding him of his five casinos and villa and bring him on streets. What better way to ruin someone then to befriend him? So both become friends while being very wary of each other, both know the purpose of the friendship and each thinks he is one step ahead. Sending wired moles and planting bombs is all a part of the game. Nobody trusts anybody, least of all Abraham who would even kill his sister, Padukone, to usurp her share of the loot. To keep the pace of the film fast, there are car bombs and chases and all kind of action that the writer and directors can cram in.

    While the heroes play their games, Kapoor and Patel provide some lighter moments with the latter having one track mind, that of seducing Kapoor, who gets his high from fruits, always munching on them. Their exchanges are always suggestive and full of sexual innuendoes. While Kapoor works on a piece of pie from the warring heroes enter Aditya Pancholi, a don no one dare mess with.

    Khan decides to make his killer move, a heist on the Church in Turin to steal the shroud of Turin, the burial cloth of Lord Jesus which has been stored in a high security zone. Abraham would buy it with plans to sell it off to Panscholi. It is a tough proposition and, as Panscholi puts it, ‘forget real life, I have not even seen the idea of pulling such a stunt in a Hollywood film‘. But one can count on our script writers to put it on a platter and deliver it. The mission is easily accomplished. It is time to exchange wares against cash. Khan is offered a drink laced with poison to celebrate the success of his mission, left to die as Abraham proceeds to complete his deal with Pancholi. But, someone has changed sides again and Khan lives to take on Abraham in an action filled plane ride.

    The shroud sold to Panscholi, it turns out, is an ordinary piece of cloth printed to look like the original. Abraham‘s wealth is sacrificed at the altar of the don. Yes, also his girlfriend, Fernandez chooses to follow wealth and villa and goes with Panscholi. Abraham promises to get even in Race 3!

    Though Race 2 offers no novelties, the way it is woven into the film keeps the goings on watchable without dull moments. Yes, music does bring those lulls since songs are just loud sans melody or foot tapping kind. Direction is usual Abbas Mustan style with finesse and fast pace but the second half however loses steam. They are amply aided by the action coordinator. Editing is crisp. Locations are well picturised. Dialogue, when witty, is good.

    The one-upmanship looks plausible because Khan and Abraham make it so; both are sincere in their roles. Kapoor helps add some star value while Panscholi is as usual. Padukone as the plotter is good. Fernandez adds oomph. Patel is okay as a duh. Bipasha Basu plays a cameo.

    Race 2 has had an opportune release week of Eid, followed by Republic Day Holiday and a Sunday to crown the weekend. The entertainment starved public has responded favourably (the last one being Dabangg2 five weeks back). Hence having opened well, the film will do well sans a strong opposition for the next two weeks.

    Akaash Vaani: Loose screenplay and insipid music add to woes

    Producers: Kumar Mangat Pathak, Abhishek Pathak.

    Director: Luv Ranjan.

    Cast: Kartik Tiwar, Nushrat Bharucha, Sunny Singh Nijjar, Sana Shaikh, Gautam Mehra, Kiran Kumar, Mahesh Thakur, Prachi Shah.

    Akaash Vaani is a love story with new faces; they have worked at times with some of them even going to launch stars‘ careers and being commercially successful. With high costs of production and promotions, this is a chance worth taking, especially if the banner is established and has the capacity to go it alone from production to distribution.

    Kartik Tiwari (Akaash) from Chandigarh and Nushrat Bharucha (Vani) from Dehradun join a Delhi college. Both are poles apart but since opposites attract, love happens. Over the next three years in college, their love gets stronger; when it is time to part at the end of the college, Tiwari proceeds to the US to pursue higher studies while Bharucha returns to Dehradun to attend her sister‘s wedding and, later, study for her post-grad.

    Bharucha‘s family is traditional and her father, Kiran Kumar, lives a life very conscious of ‘samaj and padosi‘ and what they think! What worse can happen to a man like him when his daughter, whose wedding rituals are on, vanishes leaving only a note. She has eloped with the one she loved. Kumar is devastated, breaks down. He does all the crying and sobbing on behalf of his entire family. Whatever her sister did, it puts paid to Bharucha‘s intention of taking her parents into confidence about her love for Tiwari.

    Worried that his younger daughter, Bharucha, may also do something similar, he fixes her match for an instant marriage. After all, parents always have a nice boy in mind for their girls. Bharucha puts up no resistance, calls up Tiwari to end their romance, goes ahead and ties the knot. To become a housewife, as that is what her husband said he wanted her to be, her romance has been sacrificed. But the husband is a sadist who never leaves Bharucha at ease and finds faults with her on regular basis. This is made amply clear so that one knows that she has married the villain under pressure from her family instead of the hero.

    The film‘s tagline says, “Love gets a second chance”. The girl gets a chance to visit Delhi while her husband is away for a week. This also happens to be the time of her college alumni meet. The star-crossed lovers, Tiwari and Bharucha, come face to face again. The romance is rekindled. Tiwari whisks Bharucha off to the kind of places where they had dreamt of spending their honeymoon.

    The lovers are back together and it is time for the final showdown, which turns out to be rather tame.

    Akaash Vani is a slow winding process spread over 140 minutes without any twists or turns. It takes an old fashioned route to a modern day love story. What is modern about it is that the girl is married and still takes time off to go with her college lover and finally decides to reject her husband.

    Akaash Vani has a very loose screenplay with little substance. The artistes are new and music, a must in a love story, is lacking. There is not a single lip sync song while the couple romances. Bharucha, on whom the story and its pathos rest, is ineffective. Tiwari is cute, as they say about a chocolate hero, but the trends indicate otherwise. Kumar sobbing constantly is silly. Of the rest, Sona Singh is good while Sunny Singh Nijjar is fair.

    Akaash Vani is not working. 

    Main Krishna Hoon (Part Animation): Poorly conceived and ineffectual

    Producers: Nandan Mahto, Promila Hunter.

    Direction: Rajiv S Ruia.

    Cast: Juhi Chawla, Paresh Ganatra, Rajneesh Duggal, Nameet Shah (Katrina Kaif, Hrithik Roshan in cameos.)

    Main Krishna Hoon is a live animation film designed to attract children. It follows the same line as the director‘s earlier film, My Friend Ganesha. That is to say the God children can identify with, in this case Bal Krishna, befriending a young boy to help him overcome his adversities and to help him come to terms with the fact that he is an orphan.

    Juhi Chawla is Kantaben who, aided by Paresh Ganatra, runs Ashray, an orphanage in Gujarat. The orphanage sustains by supplying papads and expects no aid from donors. One rainy night reminiscent of the Krishna Janmashtami night, a tiny tot is left in her shelter home in a plastic drum. It happens to be the night Krishna was born according to the myths. The child is aptly named Krishna.

    Barren couples often visit Ashray to adopt a child. One such couple refuses to adopt Krishna because he suffers from bouts of epilepsy. The next time a couple visits to adopt a child, the fact of Krishna‘s ailment is hidden from them on Ganatra‘s advice. The couple take Krishna home but they soon return after he suffers an attack. Krishna has been pining to have his own mother and father since he visited a garden where every parent is doting on their children. (This is a rather ridiculous scene.)

    Next, this child Krishna lands up at a Krishna temple and invokes the Lord. Soon the God Krishna appears and both become friends. The rest is predictable as the Lord helps Krishna get over his troubles as well as to help him fight kalyug villains. Finally, the prospective adoptive child Krishna adopts Chawla as his mother and father both.

    Main Krishna Hoon is a poorly conceived film with amateurish treatment. Besides Juhi Chawla, the film has cameos by Katrina Kaif and Hrithik Roshan. These are the only positives in the film but not enough to salvage it.

  • Indian director Sarthak Dasgupta wins Sundance-Mahindra filmmaking award

    Indian director Sarthak Dasgupta wins Sundance-Mahindra filmmaking award

    MUMBAI: Indian filmmakers are going places. Sarthak Dasgupta from India and three other directors have won the 2013 Sundance-Mahindra Global filmmaking award that supports the emerging independent talent from around the world.

    Dasgupta, who has previously written and directed award-winning film The Great Indian Butterfly, won the award this time for The Music Teacher. The other winners include Jonas Carpignano from Italy-US for A Chjana, Brazilian director Aly Muritiba for The Man Who Killed My Beloved Dead and Vendela Vida and Eva Weber for Let the Northern Lights Erase Your Name, a UK-Germany-US co-production.

    Each of the four winning filmmakers will receive a cash award of $10,000, attendance at the Sundance Film Festival and creative and strategic support.

    This is the second year that one of the four award recipients is an Indian. Last year‘s winner was Shonali Bose for her project Margarita, With A Straw.

    The awards were presented at a private ceremony at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah (US) by Rohit Khattar, Chairman, Mumbai Mantra, Michelle Satter, Founding Director, Feature Film Programme, Sundance Institute and Paul Federbush, International Director, Feature Film Programme, Sundance Institute.

    “At a time when there is no dearth of issues around the world that are crying out to be heard, the Global Filmmaking award recognises independent filmmakers who give expression to those voices,” said the Mahindra Group chairman and managing director Anand Mahindra in a statement.

    “The Mahindra Group is proud to assist the Sundance Institute in this endeavour, which, in line with the Group‘s ‘Rise‘ philosophy, aims to drive a positive change in communities across the world,” he added.

    The nomination committee for the Indian Award winner included prominent names from Indian cinema like Sharmila Tagore, Anil Kapoor, Rajkumar Hirani, Ramesh Sippy, Shabana Azmi, Shyam Benegal, Anjum Rajabali, K Hariharan and Ira Bhaskar.

    The Sundance Institute-Mahindra Global Filmmaking Award is part of a multifaceted collaboration that exemplifies a commitment to and support of world cinema by the Mahindra Group, one of the largest industrial conglomerates in India, and the non-profit Sundance Institute, one of the world‘s leading cultural organisations.

    This is the third and the last of the three-year collaboration between the two organisations.

    The Sundance-Mahindra Group‘s collaboration also includes the Mumbai Mantra Sundance Institute Screenwriters Lab in India, which provides an annual opportunity for eight screenwriters from India to develop their works under the guidance of accomplished international screenwriters.

  • Tips’ Race 2 being readied for release on 25 January

    Tips’ Race 2 being readied for release on 25 January

    MUMBAI: Tips Industries‘ Race 2 was flooded with association and in-film offers from over 15 brands thanks to the ensemble star cast that includes names like John Abraham, Saif Ali Khan, Deepika Padukone, Anil Kapoor and Jacqueline Fernandes.

     

    While global brands like Audi,Van Huesen and Tanishq have gotten attached to the film as brand associations, the film‘s marketing and promotions is also reaching a flashpoint with the star cast going all out to promote the film as it is being readied for release.

     

    Producer Ramesh Taurani said, “We are excited with the feedback coming our way for the film….The star cast is equally excited and is going all out to promote Race 2.”

     

    Apart from traveling to Delhi, Chandigarh, Ahmedabad, Pune and Bengaluru, the team will even travel to Dubai to meet the local press and then to London for a press conference organized at The Hippodrome Casino – Leicester keeping with the mafia theme of the film.

     

    While the starcast is already shooting for several reality shows like Bigg Boss, Comedy Circus, Nach Baliye and Sa Re Ga Ma finale ,the film‘s leading ladies Deepika Padukone and Jacqueline Fernandes have also started scorching the award season performing to the film‘s hit songs at the Zee Awards and Umang Police show.

     

    If that is not all, a special game will soon be launched on the film in association with an internet partner.

     

    Directed by Abbas-Mustan, Race 2 will release on 25 January.

  • Anil Kapoor buys out indoor film studio; to shoot Indian version of 24 first

    Anil Kapoor buys out indoor film studio; to shoot Indian version of 24 first

    MUMBAI: Anil Kapoor has invested in buying one of the biggest indoor film studios in the city situated in Andheri East. The company has, however, not disclosed the name of the studio.

    It is understood that the first project that will go on floors in this studio will be the actor‘s adaptation of the American series 24, in which he himself made a guest appearance.

    Abhinay Deo, who is known for helming Delhi Belly, will be directing the show. “Kapoor wants the Indian version of 24 to be on the same scale as the original,” says an insider.

    It is said that Kapoor has been going all out to make his Indian adaptation of 24 as grand as possible. A few days ago, he hired writer-director Rensil D‘Silva along with writers Bhawani Iyer and Priya Pinto to work on the screenplay. Kapoor even flew down one of the original writers of 24, Patrick Harbinson to brainstorm with Rensil and the team.

    In the original 24, Kapoor plays a cameo as the head of an imaginary Muslim nation. But in the Hindi series, he will play the lead role, which in the original is played by English-born Canadian actor Kiefer Sutherland.

  • Release of Shootout at Wadala pushed till 1 May, 2013

    Release of Shootout at Wadala pushed till 1 May, 2013

    MUMBAI: The release of Ekta Kapoor‘s Shootout at Wadala has been postponed for 1 May next year.

    This is the second time that release of the film, co-produced and directed by Sanjay Gupta, has been postponed. Earlier, it was scheduled to release on 7 December this year but it was pushed to 25 January, 2013 to avoid a clash with Aamir Khan‘s Talaash, that is scheduled to release on November 30.

    Looking at the release of the Anil Kapoor and John Abraham-starrer Race 2 early January, the film‘s release has been pushed further to May, it is understood.

    “When I recently saw the rushes of the film I was blown away. It was so engaging and a powerful film. With its content and massive star cast, topped by the marketing push that Balaji team will give…we needed a five-day long weekend for Shootout at Wadala,” producer Ekta Kapoor said in a statement.

    The makers are banking on the theme of the film which is based on the life of Maharashtrian labourer Manya Surve (played by John Abraham), who became involved in the first ever police encounter in the country.

    Shootout at Wadala, which is a prequel to the 2007 hit film Shootout at Lokhandwala, stars John Abraham as gangster Manya Surve while Anil Kapoor plays the role of police officer named Issac Bagwan. It also stars Tusshar Kapoor, Sonu Sood, Manoj Bajpai, Ronit Roy, Kangana Ranuat and others.

  • Anil Kapoor’s docu bags Gold at New York fest

    Anil Kapoor’s docu bags Gold at New York fest

    MUMBAI: Anil Kapoor‘s documentary film on human trafficking in India entitled Trapped By Tradition recently won the Gold Prize in the ‘Cultural Issues’ category at the New York Festival’s International TV and Film Awards 2012.

    “The awareness generated through such documentaries is important for combating this serious global issue,” Kapoor has reportedly said.

    “The focus was never about getting an award; it was about spreading awareness; 2,000 women have already been rescued from modern-day slavery (directly or indirectly) as a result of this initiative,” he added.

    The silver prize was awarded to a documentary that focusses on trafficking in Nepal by Demi Moore.

    It may be noted that Kapoor is an ambassador for The Freedom Project , an organisation working to eradicate slavery and human trafficking.

  • Shootout at Wadala shifted to 2013 release

    Shootout at Wadala shifted to 2013 release

    MUMBAI: Fearing a clash with the Aamir Khan-starrer Talaash that could result in the inevitable, filmmaker Sanjay Gupta has pushed the release of Shootout At Wadala (SAW) to next year. While Talaash is scheduled to release on 30 November, SAW was scheduled to release on 7 December.

    “Our original release date was 7 December. Later Talaash was announced for 30 November release. So it‘s obvious that when an Aamir Khan full-fledged ainstream film releases after almost three years, distributors and exhibitors will block the theatres for at least two weeks,” Gupta said in support of his action.

    On the other hand, pushing SAW’s release to next year also means that Gupta is also avoiding a clash with the Salman Khan-starrer Dabangg 2 that is to release on 24 December. Naturally, we had to look for a later date because Shootout… is also an equally big film. We are mature to understand that. Let‘s not eat into each other‘s business,” added Gupta.

    A screen adaptation of Mumbai police‘s first registered gun battle, Shootout At Wadala stars John Abraham as gangster Manya Surve along with Anil Kapoor, Sonu Sood, Manoj Bajpayee, Tusshar Kapoor and Kangana Ranaut.

  • Tezz is a poor film with disaster written all over it

    Tezz is a poor film with disaster written all over it

    MUMBAI: As the title suggests, Tezz is inspired by the Hollywood film Speed, which in turn was inspired by Hollywood film Runaway Train and the Japanese film, The Bullet Train. Some inspiration is also taken from popular American TV series 24, but that is where the comparison ends.

     

    Producer: Ratan Jain.
    Director: Priyadarshan. 
    Cast: Anil Kapoor, Ajay Devgn, Kangna Ranaut, Boman Irani, Zayed Khan, Sameera Reddy, Mohan Lal

    The theme was picked up by BR Films to make The Burning Train which, though being a novel idea for the Indian audience at that time and boasting of a mammoth star cast, bombed badly.

    Tezz comes at a time when English movies are dubbed in various Indian languages and the subject offers no novelty. What is more, the story is based on a faulty premise.

    Ajay Devgn is an illegal immigrant in London but having married a UK citizen, Kangna Ranaut, he is expecting legal status soon. He is also a crusader for other illegal immigrants who he feels have come to UK seeking a brighter future and should not be sent back as the local authorities have been doing after raiding their hideouts.

    In one such raid, Ajay Devgn manages to help Sameera Reddy and Zayed Khan escape but he is taken away and despite his explanation that he was married to a citizen and was awaiting his papers, he is packed off to India. With a feeling that he has been denied an opportunity to make a life for himself, he decides to plant bombs on a passenger train and extort a huge ransom from the UK authorities! Now this is not the kind of story heroes are made of – or films.

    It is not only the East India Company that an Indian has taken over; they also are the main thrust behind its police and railways. Once Devgn plants the bombs on the train with 500 passengers on board, London police needs to recall a just-retired cop, Anil Kapoor, to handle the case. The head of signal system on the railway is also an Indian, Boman Irani, and his pre-teen daughter is on the same train too (that is the emotion quotient in the film).

    As the ransom demand is being complied with, Kapoor is busy chasing Devgn and his accomplices- Khan and Reddy- and Boman Irani negotiates with Ajay Devgn. When Kapoor is asked to come alone and deliver the ransom amount, he goes with a fleet of police cars with sirens blaring and cops in fluorescent jackets. Is he the best London police have? As the alternative ways to save the passengers are used, there is nothing that you have not seen in a number of films. As Zayed Khan and Sameera Reddy have been martyred in the cause of illegal Indian immigrants in UK and having got his ransom amount, Devgn decides to call off his threat and get back to his wife and the child she gave birth to in his absence. But Anil Kapoor has still to fulfil his obligation, which is to apprehend Ajay Devgn and send the message that crime may get you 10 million Euros but won‘t let you live to enjoy it!

    The script is full of loop holes, lacks logic and is treated equally shoddily by Priyadarshan. Initially, exchanges between Indians and their British counterparts are in English which later turn to Hindi and those uncomfortable with English miss the very purpose behind the events to follow.

    Music is out of sync and a Mallika Sherawat item number has been forced in as if censors wouldn‘t pass a film without one. If at all the film offers anything worth watching, it is two chase scenes, one with Sameera Reddy and the other with Zayed Khan. The cinematography is good. Boman Irani, Sameera Reddy and Zayed Khan are passable; Anil Kapoor and Ajay Devgn disappoint. Kangana Ranaut has nothing much to do. Mohanlal playing a cameo as a cop escorting a criminal on the targeted train is wasted.

    Tezz is a poor film with disaster written all over it.

     
    Life Ki Toh Lag Gayi is one boring charade

     

    Producers: VM Final Vut Entertainments, K Sera Sera.
    Director: Rakesh Mehta.
    Cast: Kay Kay Menon, Ranvir Shorey, Pradhuman Singh, Manu Rishi, Neha Bhasin.

    Life Ki Toh Lag Gayi is an attempted comedy bringing together four characters, Kay Kay Menon, Ranvir Shorey, Pradhuman Singh and Manu Rishi with Neha Bhasin adding the glamour angle.

    These four characters converge in Mumbai on their own agenda. Kay Kay Menon wants to avenge the murders of his parents. Manu Rishi is here to apprehend some Nigerian drug peddlers. Ranvir Shorey, a chef in UK, has returned to be with his lady love. Ajoy Ghosh is a wannabe rock star.

    The four are expected to create laughter and regale the viewer; they do nothing of the sort and come up with one boring charade. Mumbai background is not exploited well.

    The film has opened to a ‘no audience no show‘ welcome.

  • Remake of Chhoti Si Baat on cards

    Remake of Chhoti Si Baat on cards

    MUMBAI: David Dhawan is planning a remake of Basu Chatterji’s 1975 made rom-com Choti Si Baat.

    Choti Si Baat is about a painfully shy young man Arun Pradeep (Amol Palekar), who lacks self-confidence and fails to stand up for his convictions; he is in the process making a mockery of himself. One fine day he comes across Prabha Narayan (Vidya Sinha) at the bus stop en route to work and it‘s love at first sight.. Lacking enough courage and unsure if his feelings are being reciprocated, he pines for her from afar and follows her around from a safe distance. Prabha, fully aware of his affections, secretly relishes his discomfort, while waiting for him to make the first move.

    In his desperation, Pradeep finally turns to Colonel Julius Nagendranath Wilfred Singh (Ashok Kumar) who agrees to help him and, thus, begins the turnaround as Singh begins to mould Arun into a mature, confident young man.

    It is being said that Dhawan is in plans to cast Anil Kapoor and Ali Zafar in stellar roles. The film will have Zafar play the role of the shy introvert who takes the help of Kapoor to win over his lady love.