Tag: Emraan Hashmi

  • Justice takes the spotlight as Junglee Pictures screens haq

    Justice takes the spotlight as Junglee Pictures screens haq

    MUMBAI: Justice found its stage and the stars took the stand as Junglee Pictures hosted an exclusive screening of its upcoming legal drama Haq in New Delhi. The evening saw a rare confluence of cinema and statesmanship, with union ministers Hardeep Singh Puri and Kiren Rijiju, Delhi lieutenant governor VK Saxena, former chief justice of India DY Chandrachud, and Times Group managing director Vineet Jain gracing the red carpet at The Chanakya Mall.

    Directed by Suparn S Varma, Haq stars Yami Gautam Dhar and Emraan Hashmi in a gripping tale inspired by a landmark supreme court judgment. The film explores the collision between personal faith and secular law, tackling patriarchy and power while celebrating justice and equality. Written by Reshu Nath, it’s the kind of story that lingers long after the credits roll, a mix of emotion, courage, and conversation.

    Produced by Junglee Pictures in association with Insomnia Films and Baweja Studios, Haq also features a compelling debut by Vartika Singh alongside Sheeba Chaddha, Danish Hussain, and Aseem Hattangady.

    From the first half alone, the film struck a chord with its audience. “It’s not just about women’s empowerment but about justice denied because of personal laws. Everybody should see this movie,” said Hardeep Singh Puri. Union minister Kiren Rijiju added, “The film carries a message that shouldn’t be limited to the screen, every Indian should watch it.”

    Former CJI DY Chandrachud called the screening “an emotional and personal moment,” reflecting on the historic judgment that inspired the narrative. “The rights given to women can’t be taken away, they are vindicated in law and in spirit,” he said.

    Echoing the sentiment, Times Group MD Vineet Jain remarked, “There are two kinds of films, the purely entertaining and those that make you think while entertaining. Haq is both.”

    Set to release in cinemas worldwide on 7 November, Haq promises to be more than just another courtroom drama, it’s a stirring plea for justice, equality, and the courage to question.
     

  • ReDefine celebrates its VFX work on ‘Chehre’

    ReDefine celebrates its VFX work on ‘Chehre’

    Mumbai: Global visual effects and animation company ReDefine has celebrated the delivery of VFX services for the Amitabh Bachchan and Emraan Hashmi starrer “Chehre”, the country’s second major theatrical release since the pandemic. The mystery thriller is helmed by production houses Anand Pandit Motion Pictures and Saraswati Entertainment.

    ReDefine contributed significantly to the film’s visuals with its scope of work involving over 200 crew members and also creating a great visual environment through the different stages of the day, as the film’s plot moved forward.

    The team from ReDefine was led by VFX supervisor Arijit Ghosh, successfully aligning with the director’s vision and executing state-of-the-art sequences including high-octane scenes such as a cliff breaking sequence and a major avalanche scene and quality CG snowfall sequences.

    “It is always a pleasure to bring a script to life, and offer our team’s unique vision and expertise to a project whilst building a close synergy with the director, in order to bring out the best output on screen,” said Ghosh. “While the filming was challenging owing to the limitations of the first wave of COVID, we were successfully able to beat any and all obstacles and produce the desired results. Our premier services to the project are indeed reflective of ReDefine’s continuous effort to promote great storytelling and create stunning visuals.”

    Launched in 2019, ReDefine provides creative visual effects and animation services focused on expanding international markets as well as independent filmmakers everywhere. It supports studios producing film, television, and animation content.

    “At ReDefine, we pride ourselves in our extensive experience and market leading technology, which has provided quality value additions to countless film projects and has been associated with the biggest names in the industry,” said ReDefine, general manager, Yohann Abraham. “Our work on the ambitious projects is reflective of our strategic undertakings and successful collaborations with the finest creative talents and production houses of the present day.”

    ReDefine is also providing VFX services to the upcoming film “Cry Macho” for legendary filmmaker Client Eastwood, as well as several Bollywood projects including “Brahmastra” starring Amitabh Bachchan, Ranbir Kapoor, Alia Bhatt, and Ranveer Singh-Deepika Padukone starrer “83”

  • ZEE5 ANNOUNCES ITS FIRST HINDI ORIGINAL FILM, TIGERS

    ZEE5 ANNOUNCES ITS FIRST HINDI ORIGINAL FILM, TIGERS

    MUMBAI: ZEE5, India’s #2 OTT player has announced its first Hindi Original film ‘TIGERS’ – Can a salesman be a hero?’starring Emraan Hashmi, by Oscar winning director DanisTanovic. TIGERS is a true story based on a Pakistani salesman Syed Aamir Raza (played by Emraan Hashmi) and his fight against unjust practices in the baby products’ industry. The movie will premiere exclusively on ZEE5 on 21stNovember.
     
    The movie shows Emraan Hashmi exposing his company for making a baby formula which is killing infants with the help of IBFAN (The International Baby Food Action Network). The film also features prominent artists like Adil Hussain, Geetanjali, Danny Huston (Wonder Woman), Khalid Abdalla (The Kite Runner),Supriya Pathak, Satyadeep Misra, Maryam d'Abo (The Living Daylights) and HeinoFerch (Run Lola Run) among others.

    Emraan Hashmi said, “This movie is very close to my heart, and I am thrilled to announce its premiere with a platform like ZEE5. We have premiered at the prestigious Toronto Film Festival and travelled around the world with the film and the story has received a heart-warming welcome across. We sincerely believe that this is a story that the people should know, and hope that the audience likes it.”

    Guneet Monga, Producer, TIGERS said, “Tigers is an important film – it is extremely relevant and topical. It is also an amazing collaboration of talent from around and has been a real labour of love.  It has been an incredible honour working with Danis and Emraan on this one. We are thrilled with Zee coming on board to distribute and release Tigers on ZEE5 as their first Hindi Original film.”  
     
    Manish Aggarwal, Business Head, ZEE5 India, said, “TIGERS is a film based on a true story that explores the power of corporates, media and ethics by DanisTanovic. Emraan’s portrayal of the protagonist will make sure the message travels far and wide. Movies such as Tigers are essential to spark a meaningful debate in popular conversation and we are proud to present it as the first Hindi Original film from ZEE5.”

    Besides Original films, ZEE5 has also been digitally premiering blockbuster and acclaimed movies for its subscriber base. FromPadman, Veere Di Wedding, Mulk, Parmanu and many more in Hindi to Faster Fene, Gulabjaam, Mercury and so on, ZEE5 continues to digitally premiere blockbuster movies across languages.

    With over 3500 films, 500+ TV shows, 4000+ music videos, 35+ theatre plays and 90+ LIVE TV Channels across 12 languages, ZEE5 truly presents a blend of unrivalled content offering for its viewers across the nation and worldwide. With ZEE5, the global content of Zindagi as a brand, which was widely appreciated across the country, has also been brought back for its loyal viewers.
     

  • A rustic comedy and a thriller fail to lift spirits this week

    A rustic comedy and a thriller fail to lift spirits this week

    Baadshaho………..Poor show

    Baadshaho is an action heist film which bases its story in the period after the declaration of the National Emergency in 1975. However for its plot, it takes its inspiration from various English as well as Hindi films where a bunch of daredevils are assigned to hijack an armoured truck full of royal treasure.

    A person, a lookalike of Sanjay Gandhi, is at a party. Also present is the princess, Ileana D’Cruz, of some place in Rajasthan. The privy purses have been withdrawn and now the source of sustenance for the princess is the treasure her ancestors gathered during their reign.

    The Sanjay lookalike has a eye on Ileana and when he makes his advances, she stops him cold by pulling out a family sword.

    The Emergency has been declared and it is time for the bad man to seek his revenge. He orders an army officer to confiscate all of Ileana’s family treasure and also arrest her on the grounds that she failed to declare her assets.

    Ileana has a personal bodyguard, Ajay Devgn, who earlier served under her father and who is the only person her father trusted. She romances Ajay to make doubly sure he remains loyal to her. She asks him to save her treasure which is being transferred in a fool-proof armoured military truck to the bad man’s personal collection.

    Ajay forms a group of four. He enlists Emraan Hashmi and Sanjay Mishra, an expert at opening any safe. The fourth in the group is Esha Gupta, Ileana’s friend.

    All this seems very exciting but the dull part starts when the four get into planning the heist. Ajay and his gang has to contend with men from the army no less, and they have assigned their best commando, Vidyut Jamwal, to protect and deliver the treasure-laden truck to the baddie in Delhi.

    What follows is a chase through the deserted roads of Rajasthan as Ajay, Emraan, Esha and Mishra get in the act to hijack the truck. There are some stunts and some gunfights before they take hold of the truck. The chase has now reverses with Ajay and his group being chased by Jamwal and his men to regain control of the truck. Some more action and some hand-to-hand fight and the final deceit—as Ajay was not the only one Ileana was romancing.

    The story is not convincing and the screenplay is too loose. An action-adventure film needs tense moments which are lacking. Even during the Emergency, one does not expect the army to help a politician, howsoever powerful, to steal somebody’s treasure. And, that an army commando on duty should be leading the theft. The direction lacks the slickness of a usual Luthria film. The film has thankfully avoided too many songs. An old Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan number, Mere Rashke Qamar….has been put to good use here. Cinematography is good but the climax action shot in desert amid a dust storm makes it impossible to see who is fighting who.

    Performance wise, the film is lacking as Ajay Devgn looks mechanical while Emraan is little better. Sanjay Mishra is good as usual. Jamwal dons a wig as big as a helmet and has none of his signature bare-chested fights. Esha Gupta adds the necessary glam angle. Ileana D’Cruz does not fill the personality of a royal.

    Baadshaho is a poor film with some appeal for single screen and poor prospects as a whole.

    Producers: Bhushan Kumar, Kishan Kumar, Milan Luthria.

    Director: Milan Luthria.

    Cast: Ajay Devgn, Emraan Hashmi, Esha Gupta, Ileana D’Cruz, Vidyut Jamwal, Sanjay Mishra.

    Shubh Mangal Saavdhan………..The title warns!

    Shubh Mangal Saavdhan is one more romantic comedy set in UP. The arranged marriages are said to tie two families and the extended families are meant to respect each other while also maintaining a kind of distance. The families in this film are a bit different.

    In an effort to give a purpose to the story, the film’s main theme is erectile dysfunction. Ayushman Khurrana is an engineering diploma holder working somewhere in the NCR. He has taken a liking to Bhumi Pednekar and stalks her every day. Yet, he stops short of approaching her and striking up a conversation. Bhumi, on her part, is pleased that a presentable young man is interested in her and, every day, when Ayushman stalks her, she expects him to come and break the ice.

    Finally, when he gathers courage to approach her, a bear from a roadside madari clings to his leg and his mission remains incomplete. The family may look traditional but their thinking is quite contemporary. On his mother’s advice, Ayushman sends a marriage proposal online to Bhumi.

    Both families are happy at the prospects of the wedding of their respective wards. A video conference between both families finalises the rishta.

    Bhumi is happy and  yet disappointed at the sudden development. She did not plan on a sudden arranged marriage. She dreamt of romance; to meet Ayushman, go through the whole process and the excitement of courting, the SMS, the late night chats, before marrying.

    The couple now plans to make up on the romance before the wedding date. And, one fine evening, both get excited and plan to celebrate their honeymoon not waiting for the wedding. To their disappointment, Ayushman realizes that he is not quite up to it (a bit late at age 26). He has a problem of erectile dysfunction. Looks like, he cannot get excited enough. Ayushman tries all the quacks and Bangalibabas to no avail.

    Ayushman is not sure about getting into matrimony anymore but Bhumi is determined. Her contention is that the duo can do a lot of things so what if there is no sex. Soon, Ayushman’s problem is known to everybody. The rest of the film tries to thrive on that but does not quite manage it. For the sake of comedy, the girl’s and boy’s parents trade blames, exchange insults, stopping just short of coming to blows.

    The writers seem to be in a hurry to introduce the erectile dysfunction angle and see the whole film through on that ‘ace’ in their script. So, that happens soon into the film even before the plot develops or before whiling away some footage on romance, song and dance.

    The erectile problem should have served its purpose had it been introduced best at the break of the first half. For, after springing early, there is nothing left to lift the film. The comedy situations are forced and you do not know who is doing what and to what end! The outcome is a farce.

    There is nothing much to say about the performances of the lead pair, Ayushman

    Khurrana and Bhumi Pednekar. The supporting cast has some talented lot who give a good account of themselves. Direction is below par. The film is only 105 minutes in duration but, lacking substance, seems too long. Cinematography is okay. Musically, Kanha….has some appeal. Dialogues provide some pleasant moments at times.

    Opened with poor response, Shubh Mangal Saavdhan offers little in the name of comedy.

    Producers: Aanand L Rai, Krishika Lulla.

    Director: R S Prasanna.

    Cast: Ayushman Khurrana, Bhumi Pednekar, Brijendra Kala.

  • Pink: Old wine with a new treatment

    Pink: Old wine with a new treatment

    MUMBAI: Three independent young girls, night out, boys, molestation and Delhi as the location. The leader of the molesting boys is from a political family with whom the cops don’t wish to mess. Put these factors together and you have a story to tell and the result is Pink.

    There may be comparisons with No One Killed Jessica and many such stories from real life cases based TV programmes on Crime Patrol and Savdhaan India.

    So, what is new about Pink? Nothing much really except that it stars Amitabh Bachchan and that it has been vigorously promoted.

    TaapseePannu from Delhi, KIrtiKulhari from Lucknow and Andrea Tariang from Meghalaya share a rented apartment in a typical Delhi raw house colony. They are independence loving working women who, like all other such girls, like a night out on occasions. On one such night out, the girls are enjoying among themselves at a joint at Surajkund (near Delhi in Haryana) when they are invited to join a group of boys because one of them happens to be known to Taapsee since her school days.

    The group moneybag is AngadBedi, hailing from a family of a politician and used to getting away with his evil ways. The boys do what Delhi boys are known to do. They invite the girls to rooms where the boys make their move and expect the girls to be chalu and, hence, reciprocate. While Andrea breaks loose and runs away from the room, Angad tries to be more aggressive with Taapsee who breaks a bottle on his head. Angad who is almost blinded in one eye and ends up with stitches on his forehead is livid with one of his sidekicks adding fuel to fire.

    The boys have decided to make the girls’ life miserable. The girls start receiving threat calls and their landlord is asked to evict them from the premises.

    Amitabh Bachchan is a keen observer of these girls’ movements. A retired lawyer, he occupies a house right opposite theirs. He watches Taapsee on her morning jog in a park he also visits and, otherwise, places himself behind a curtain and watching on girls go about their lives!He notices the sudden change in the girls’ behavior. They look scared. That is when he witnesses a car full of boys come into the colony and kidnap Taapsee.

    Bachchan is a renowned lawyer even if retired and he does what he can: call up the police commissioner informing of the kidnap to no avail. Nobody seems interested in the plight of these girls except Bachchan. Next, a Surajkund lady police comes and arrests Taapsee on charges of attempted murder of Angad. That sums up the first half of the film.

    Time for retired lawyer Bachchan to step in. He is back to donning his lawyer’s garb and neck piece. The second half is about the court case as Bachchan fights for justice for Taapsee while PiyushMishra, who is a public prosecutor, seems to fight for the boys instead. He is more interested in proving that the girls are professional escorts and of loose character while the case is about establishing the case of attempted murder!

    It is a court case like no other as Piyushgoes berserk shouting, stripping the girls of all their dignity, resorts to name-calling and making them look like culprits by design. Bachchan asks equally shaming questions to the girls; his purpose is to prove just that whatever the girls may be doing in their personal life and may have had other boyfriends but, when a girl says NO to a man, it means NO and a man has no right to force himself on her. While Piyush indulges in histrionics, Bachchan is matter of fact.

    As for molestation and putting up a fight go, Pink would be compared to No One Killed Jessica (2011) while, as a court drama for a woman’s honour, it would be with Damini (1993), both of which had more powerful content.

    The script is simple, tell the story with references to things that appear in news like how girls dress, plight of North Eastern girls in Delhi, reluctant police, et al besides the girls’ safety. It turns out to be a court drama sans drama. Director lets viewer assume a lot of things; like who is the bedridden woman in Bachchan’s life. Why should a public prosecutor behave like a mad man in court? Why Bachhcan who does not react to the prosecutor’s provocation be shouting at his own client. If that is supposed to add excitement to the proceedings, it does not. The judgment delivered also goes beyond the scope of the case! The direction is passable;the incidentthat leads to the case, is finally shown in the end title! Cinematography is fair. Editing is weak. Background score is apt. As for the dialogue, only Bachchan gets some good lines.

    As for the performances, TaapseePannu shines with her restrained act. KirtiKulhari uses the dramatic moments given to her ably. Andrea Tarinag has little to do except represent aggrieved North East. Amitabh Bachchan plays the moody lawyer with ease. Piyush Mishra is over the top.AngadBedi suits the role.Dhritiman Chatterjee as the judge lands some credibility to the proceedings.

    Pink is a court room drama with which the female audience may identify more and help the film score at select multiplexes, especially during the weekend.However, the range at the box office remains limited as it happens with such films.

    Producers: Rashmi Sharma, ShoojitSircar.

    Director:Aniruddha Roy Chowdhury.

    Cast: Amitabh Bachchan, TaapseePannu, KirtiKulhari, Andrea Tariang, AngadBedi, Piyush Mishra, Dhritiman Chatterjee.

    Raaz: Reboot

    Raaz: Reboot is the fourth instalment in the Raaz series from Vishesh Films, the earlier ones being Raaz(2002), Raaz:The Mystery Continues (2009) and Raaz 3D (2012). Raaz: Reboot is directed by Vikram Bhatt, who also directed the first and third instalments (the second one was directed by MohitSuri). Raaz: Reboot, like its predecessors, is also a horror thriller.

    KritiKharbanda and Gaurav Arora are married and decide to move to Romania. Gaurav needs better prospects which he seeks in Romania of all places. However, the shift is despite Gaurav’s reluctance who has agreed only on the wishes of Kriti, who thinks his job here was not up to the mark and he deserved better.

    Things seem to take a turn for worse once they move to Romania. Kriti feels that the things are not the same between her and Gaurav and no explanation is forthcoming from him. Saddened and disillusioned Kriti has more troubles in store for her; she starts getting that eerie feeling about the house they occupy. Also, Gaurav is no help when she tries to tell him about her discomfiture.

    Kriti then comes across Emraan, her ex and a fashion photographer who is also in Romania. Having found an ear to unload her problems, Kriti tells her fears to Emraan who is quite forthcoming unlike Gaurav. He also has some secrets to share with her. What follows is the usual mumbo-jumbo for exorcism while what some of the public may have expected from Raaz franchise, sex, is missing. Of course, Emraan’s forte, kisses, are not compromised.

    It has been a long time since Raaz (almost 15 years) and the franchise has only deteriorated in content and treatment. What is more, a lot has been happening in this genre on various television channels and there is no novelty left. Sadly, the film offers nothing better than such television shows.

    The script being predictable and routine, director Vikram Bhatt too goes about dealing with it as just another chore. The music, which usually is the scoring point in Bhatt-T Series ventures is not up the mark here. Dialogue is routine, considering that the film aims to find its target audience in masses, the use of English dialogue is a deterrent. The length, at 127 minutes sans substance, needed to be curtailed. The cinematography is good with Romania backdrop coming as a bonus.

    Emraan Hashmi sails through in the role he has played often before but the negative trait in his character may not be appreciated. KritiKharbanda passes muster. Gaurav Arora is okay.

    Raaz: Reboot has little to expect from multiplexes but will find its audience at single screens, especially away from metros.

    Producers: Bhushan Kumar, Krishan Kumar, Vishesh Films.

    Director: Vikram Bhatt.

    Cast: Emraan Hashmi, KritiKharbanda, Gaurav Arora.

  • Pink: Old wine with a new treatment

    Pink: Old wine with a new treatment

    MUMBAI: Three independent young girls, night out, boys, molestation and Delhi as the location. The leader of the molesting boys is from a political family with whom the cops don’t wish to mess. Put these factors together and you have a story to tell and the result is Pink.

    There may be comparisons with No One Killed Jessica and many such stories from real life cases based TV programmes on Crime Patrol and Savdhaan India.

    So, what is new about Pink? Nothing much really except that it stars Amitabh Bachchan and that it has been vigorously promoted.

    TaapseePannu from Delhi, KIrtiKulhari from Lucknow and Andrea Tariang from Meghalaya share a rented apartment in a typical Delhi raw house colony. They are independence loving working women who, like all other such girls, like a night out on occasions. On one such night out, the girls are enjoying among themselves at a joint at Surajkund (near Delhi in Haryana) when they are invited to join a group of boys because one of them happens to be known to Taapsee since her school days.

    The group moneybag is AngadBedi, hailing from a family of a politician and used to getting away with his evil ways. The boys do what Delhi boys are known to do. They invite the girls to rooms where the boys make their move and expect the girls to be chalu and, hence, reciprocate. While Andrea breaks loose and runs away from the room, Angad tries to be more aggressive with Taapsee who breaks a bottle on his head. Angad who is almost blinded in one eye and ends up with stitches on his forehead is livid with one of his sidekicks adding fuel to fire.

    The boys have decided to make the girls’ life miserable. The girls start receiving threat calls and their landlord is asked to evict them from the premises.

    Amitabh Bachchan is a keen observer of these girls’ movements. A retired lawyer, he occupies a house right opposite theirs. He watches Taapsee on her morning jog in a park he also visits and, otherwise, places himself behind a curtain and watching on girls go about their lives!He notices the sudden change in the girls’ behavior. They look scared. That is when he witnesses a car full of boys come into the colony and kidnap Taapsee.

    Bachchan is a renowned lawyer even if retired and he does what he can: call up the police commissioner informing of the kidnap to no avail. Nobody seems interested in the plight of these girls except Bachchan. Next, a Surajkund lady police comes and arrests Taapsee on charges of attempted murder of Angad. That sums up the first half of the film.

    Time for retired lawyer Bachchan to step in. He is back to donning his lawyer’s garb and neck piece. The second half is about the court case as Bachchan fights for justice for Taapsee while PiyushMishra, who is a public prosecutor, seems to fight for the boys instead. He is more interested in proving that the girls are professional escorts and of loose character while the case is about establishing the case of attempted murder!

    It is a court case like no other as Piyushgoes berserk shouting, stripping the girls of all their dignity, resorts to name-calling and making them look like culprits by design. Bachchan asks equally shaming questions to the girls; his purpose is to prove just that whatever the girls may be doing in their personal life and may have had other boyfriends but, when a girl says NO to a man, it means NO and a man has no right to force himself on her. While Piyush indulges in histrionics, Bachchan is matter of fact.

    As for molestation and putting up a fight go, Pink would be compared to No One Killed Jessica (2011) while, as a court drama for a woman’s honour, it would be with Damini (1993), both of which had more powerful content.

    The script is simple, tell the story with references to things that appear in news like how girls dress, plight of North Eastern girls in Delhi, reluctant police, et al besides the girls’ safety. It turns out to be a court drama sans drama. Director lets viewer assume a lot of things; like who is the bedridden woman in Bachchan’s life. Why should a public prosecutor behave like a mad man in court? Why Bachhcan who does not react to the prosecutor’s provocation be shouting at his own client. If that is supposed to add excitement to the proceedings, it does not. The judgment delivered also goes beyond the scope of the case! The direction is passable;the incidentthat leads to the case, is finally shown in the end title! Cinematography is fair. Editing is weak. Background score is apt. As for the dialogue, only Bachchan gets some good lines.

    As for the performances, TaapseePannu shines with her restrained act. KirtiKulhari uses the dramatic moments given to her ably. Andrea Tarinag has little to do except represent aggrieved North East. Amitabh Bachchan plays the moody lawyer with ease. Piyush Mishra is over the top.AngadBedi suits the role.Dhritiman Chatterjee as the judge lands some credibility to the proceedings.

    Pink is a court room drama with which the female audience may identify more and help the film score at select multiplexes, especially during the weekend.However, the range at the box office remains limited as it happens with such films.

    Producers: Rashmi Sharma, ShoojitSircar.

    Director:Aniruddha Roy Chowdhury.

    Cast: Amitabh Bachchan, TaapseePannu, KirtiKulhari, Andrea Tariang, AngadBedi, Piyush Mishra, Dhritiman Chatterjee.

    Raaz: Reboot

    Raaz: Reboot is the fourth instalment in the Raaz series from Vishesh Films, the earlier ones being Raaz(2002), Raaz:The Mystery Continues (2009) and Raaz 3D (2012). Raaz: Reboot is directed by Vikram Bhatt, who also directed the first and third instalments (the second one was directed by MohitSuri). Raaz: Reboot, like its predecessors, is also a horror thriller.

    KritiKharbanda and Gaurav Arora are married and decide to move to Romania. Gaurav needs better prospects which he seeks in Romania of all places. However, the shift is despite Gaurav’s reluctance who has agreed only on the wishes of Kriti, who thinks his job here was not up to the mark and he deserved better.

    Things seem to take a turn for worse once they move to Romania. Kriti feels that the things are not the same between her and Gaurav and no explanation is forthcoming from him. Saddened and disillusioned Kriti has more troubles in store for her; she starts getting that eerie feeling about the house they occupy. Also, Gaurav is no help when she tries to tell him about her discomfiture.

    Kriti then comes across Emraan, her ex and a fashion photographer who is also in Romania. Having found an ear to unload her problems, Kriti tells her fears to Emraan who is quite forthcoming unlike Gaurav. He also has some secrets to share with her. What follows is the usual mumbo-jumbo for exorcism while what some of the public may have expected from Raaz franchise, sex, is missing. Of course, Emraan’s forte, kisses, are not compromised.

    It has been a long time since Raaz (almost 15 years) and the franchise has only deteriorated in content and treatment. What is more, a lot has been happening in this genre on various television channels and there is no novelty left. Sadly, the film offers nothing better than such television shows.

    The script being predictable and routine, director Vikram Bhatt too goes about dealing with it as just another chore. The music, which usually is the scoring point in Bhatt-T Series ventures is not up the mark here. Dialogue is routine, considering that the film aims to find its target audience in masses, the use of English dialogue is a deterrent. The length, at 127 minutes sans substance, needed to be curtailed. The cinematography is good with Romania backdrop coming as a bonus.

    Emraan Hashmi sails through in the role he has played often before but the negative trait in his character may not be appreciated. KritiKharbanda passes muster. Gaurav Arora is okay.

    Raaz: Reboot has little to expect from multiplexes but will find its audience at single screens, especially away from metros.

    Producers: Bhushan Kumar, Krishan Kumar, Vishesh Films.

    Director: Vikram Bhatt.

    Cast: Emraan Hashmi, KritiKharbanda, Gaurav Arora.

  • Movies OK brings monsoon blockbuster festivals

    Movies OK brings monsoon blockbuster festivals

    MUMBAI : Monsoons are best spent with loved ones, a hot cup of coffee and your favorite movies on your home screen! This July, Movies OK is all set to make your monsoon a lot more exciting with two fantastic festivals, Kuch Kisse, Kuch Kahaniyan Aur Thodi Baarish and 8 Ka Thaat that promise to leave you enthralled and entertained.

    Kuch Kisse, Kuch Kahaniyan Aur Thodi Baarish, a festival perfect to watch with your loved ones, aims to make your monsoon afternoons magical. The festival will air movies including the superhit Aashiqui, Shah Rukh Khan, Preity Zinta and Saif Ali Khan starrer Kal Ho Na Ho, Shahid Kapoor’s debut film Ishq Vishk, the romantic drama Rehna Hai Tere Dil Mein, Mann, I Hate Love Storys, Dil, Dil Toh Baccha Hai Ji and Kahin Pyar Na Ho Jaye. This wonderful movie bonanza will culminate on 29th July with Alia Bhatt and Arjun Kapoor starrer romcom, 2 States.

    8 Ka Thaat, the prime time action festival, will feature Bollywood’s biggest action heroes that are bound to get your adrenaline racing. Kick starting with Ajay Devgn and Emraan Hashmi starrer Once Upon a Time in Mumbai, the festival will also feature Saif Ali Khan’s Bullet Raja and the dramatic tale of Amitabh Bachchan’s Agneepath amongst a host of others.

  • Movies OK brings monsoon blockbuster festivals

    Movies OK brings monsoon blockbuster festivals

    MUMBAI : Monsoons are best spent with loved ones, a hot cup of coffee and your favorite movies on your home screen! This July, Movies OK is all set to make your monsoon a lot more exciting with two fantastic festivals, Kuch Kisse, Kuch Kahaniyan Aur Thodi Baarish and 8 Ka Thaat that promise to leave you enthralled and entertained.

    Kuch Kisse, Kuch Kahaniyan Aur Thodi Baarish, a festival perfect to watch with your loved ones, aims to make your monsoon afternoons magical. The festival will air movies including the superhit Aashiqui, Shah Rukh Khan, Preity Zinta and Saif Ali Khan starrer Kal Ho Na Ho, Shahid Kapoor’s debut film Ishq Vishk, the romantic drama Rehna Hai Tere Dil Mein, Mann, I Hate Love Storys, Dil, Dil Toh Baccha Hai Ji and Kahin Pyar Na Ho Jaye. This wonderful movie bonanza will culminate on 29th July with Alia Bhatt and Arjun Kapoor starrer romcom, 2 States.

    8 Ka Thaat, the prime time action festival, will feature Bollywood’s biggest action heroes that are bound to get your adrenaline racing. Kick starting with Ajay Devgn and Emraan Hashmi starrer Once Upon a Time in Mumbai, the festival will also feature Saif Ali Khan’s Bullet Raja and the dramatic tale of Amitabh Bachchan’s Agneepath amongst a host of others.

  • Azhar…Of a fallen idol!..Dear Dad…Its Complicated!

    Azhar…Of a fallen idol!..Dear Dad…Its Complicated!

    MUMBAI: Biographical or sports films are being mademore often in recent times than they ever were. With a dearth of script ideas as well as the writers to deliver, this is an easy way out to keep production lineup running for a studios like Balaji Motion Pictures. This genre facilitates mid-range star cast films at affordable budgets.

    Azhar is one such film from the Balaji stable which mixes the themes of sport as well as a biography and, as a bonus, promises a potential tale to tell which would complete the makers’ requirements.

    The film is said to be based on the life of the mercurial cricketer Mohammad Azharuddin; his cricketing career, his marriage followed by a romance with a film star and the controversy that followed implicating him in a match fixing scandal. However, a disclaimer in the titles belies all such claims as well as denies resemblance to any cricketer dead or alive.It is an account of the rise and fall of a celebrated Indian cricketer on his way to becoming a legend.

    There a great feeling of joy and celebrations in this Muslim household of Hyderabad as the scion to the family is born. The maternal grandfather, Kulbhushan Kharbanda, names the boyAzharuddin, an Arabic word meaning, brilliant, luminous and such. Kharbanda expects Azhar to shine, stand out and to this end, he hands over a cricket bat in the hands of the child. He has taught Emraan some mantras for success in life and also predicted that not only will he play for India but will play 100 test matches.

    Emraan Hashmi playing the protagonist is now grown up having championed the game of cricket at various levels starting from streets. Soon enough, he is selected for the state Ranji Trophy team. Before you realize the scene has changed and jumped several years into future, you seeAzhar playing test cricket for India.

    Azhar makes his debut with a ton and follows it up with two more hundreds in next two tests. He is an overnight sensation so much so that the past masters give him various complementary epitaphs. The next step is inevitable; Azhar is offered the captaincy of the Indian team. This is in a very dramatic filmy manner where, instead of the cricket board calling him to the office to convey the decision, it is done by an official of the board doing it in the middle of an empty stadium making it look morelike a conspiracy than anhonour.

    The rest of the team consists of senior players and the resentment at Azhar’s appointment to lead them is evident. Leading from the front, Azhar is soon in command and is now playing his 99th test match. That is when the bubble bursts as he is accused of match fixing. He is suspended and also found guilty by the CBI. What follows is an 11 year long court battle to clear his name. The board’s lawyer is Lara Dutta, imported from London. Lara has been an ardent Azhar fan all along, but feels betrayed now and fights the case vigorously.

    Azhar, the film, tries to change the deeply embedded perception of people who once idolized the star cricketer. It is not easy to erase their hurt. The script takes recourse to a haphazard narration with past and present overlapping ad nauseam. The direction lets many glitches pass. To claim to have made a film on Azharuddin with a disclaimer does not let one change the facts of the case which dominated the media for long. The only catchy song is the remix of the old time mass hit, Oyeoye…. from Tridev. Even at 131 minutes, the film needs further clipping.

    As for performances, Emraan does his best but, Azhar’s persona is too big to live up to even in a disgraced state. While Prachi Desai is impressive, NargisFakri, playing the second wife, is passable. Lara is okay.  The casting of other cricketers, especially Kapil is laughable. Kunal Roy Kapur saves quite a few scenes as an idiosyncratic defense lawyer.

    Azhar is about a disgraced hero: there may be a few who would watch his tale out of sympathy not as an idol, which is not enough to sustain at the box office.

    Producers: Shobha Kapoor, Ekta Kapoor, Sony Pictures Network.

    Director: Tony D’Souza.

    Cast: Emraan Hashmi, NargisFakhri, Lara Dutta, Gautam Gulati, Manjot Singh, Kunaal Roy Kapur, Rajesh Sharma.

    Dear Dad

    Dear Dad is a father son bonding story. That would not have been fine thinking of a film like Masoom (1983). But, here, the already perfectly bonded family of two children and their loving parents is shattered as the father comes out the closet to declare his homosexual leanings.

    Himanshu Sharma is a 14 year old lad in Delhi living with his father, Arvind Swamy, mother and younger sister. He is ready to go back to hostel in the hill station of Mussorie. The plan is to travel with his friends. But, the father, Arvind, carries a load on his mind and offers to drop Himanshu to Mussorie. It is the coming of age for Himanshu and Swamy wants to first get through to his son’s teen mind presently fed on nude pictures, playing games on his mobile and generally enjoying the stage of life he is in along with his friends. On the drive to Mussorie, while Swamy tries to strike a conversation, the son is immersed in his cell phone.

    On the way to Mussorie, Swamy decides to stop at his parental home. Done with dotting momma, Swamy proceeds to see his father who has lost his speech. For, some reason, Swamy decides to tell his father that he was never interested in women. While his father has lost his speech (also, for no explicable reason, also his expressions!) and cant reply, the son overhears Swamy’s confession.

    The son, Himanshu, is devastated and feels betrayed. He withdraws from his father and all his affection and is in a rebel mode. The son also suspects his father of wanting to spend the night with a TV reality show celebrity, Aman Uppal, who they have given a lift on the way.

    Himanshu has confided in his closest buddy (all closest buddies in films are fat and seem to be jovial; this one fits the stereotypical, too). The friend takes him to a Bengali baba who can turn a homosexual in to a mard again!

    While Himanshu wanted a normal happy family of father, mother and sister living happily, his dream is shattered.

    Quite a few films seem to open the closet midway through the film lately; the recent examples being Kapoor & Sons while another one, Aligarh, was all about same sex attraction.

    Dear Dad is the maker’s film; the audience is less likely to participate. The film follows a script of convenience as things happen because they happen. While the theme is serious, the treatment is casual. The father son patch up is as hurried as the fallout was for after all, a Debonair collecting son should know both sides of a coin!

    What works for the film are the beautiful locales of Uttarkhand as the duo travel from Delhi by road, the scenic beauty has been beautifully captured.  As for the performances, Swamy underplays his being gay and the son, Himanshu, complements this with aggression. Uppal does very well. The rest are incidental.

    Dear Dad will find it tough fit into a slot when it comes to identifying its audience.

    Producers: Shaan Vyas, Ratnakar M.

    Director: TanujBhramar.

    Cast: Arvind Swamy, Himanshu Sharma, Ekavali Khanna, Aman Uppal, BhavikaBhasin.

  • Azhar…Of a fallen idol!..Dear Dad…Its Complicated!

    Azhar…Of a fallen idol!..Dear Dad…Its Complicated!

    MUMBAI: Biographical or sports films are being mademore often in recent times than they ever were. With a dearth of script ideas as well as the writers to deliver, this is an easy way out to keep production lineup running for a studios like Balaji Motion Pictures. This genre facilitates mid-range star cast films at affordable budgets.

    Azhar is one such film from the Balaji stable which mixes the themes of sport as well as a biography and, as a bonus, promises a potential tale to tell which would complete the makers’ requirements.

    The film is said to be based on the life of the mercurial cricketer Mohammad Azharuddin; his cricketing career, his marriage followed by a romance with a film star and the controversy that followed implicating him in a match fixing scandal. However, a disclaimer in the titles belies all such claims as well as denies resemblance to any cricketer dead or alive.It is an account of the rise and fall of a celebrated Indian cricketer on his way to becoming a legend.

    There a great feeling of joy and celebrations in this Muslim household of Hyderabad as the scion to the family is born. The maternal grandfather, Kulbhushan Kharbanda, names the boyAzharuddin, an Arabic word meaning, brilliant, luminous and such. Kharbanda expects Azhar to shine, stand out and to this end, he hands over a cricket bat in the hands of the child. He has taught Emraan some mantras for success in life and also predicted that not only will he play for India but will play 100 test matches.

    Emraan Hashmi playing the protagonist is now grown up having championed the game of cricket at various levels starting from streets. Soon enough, he is selected for the state Ranji Trophy team. Before you realize the scene has changed and jumped several years into future, you seeAzhar playing test cricket for India.

    Azhar makes his debut with a ton and follows it up with two more hundreds in next two tests. He is an overnight sensation so much so that the past masters give him various complementary epitaphs. The next step is inevitable; Azhar is offered the captaincy of the Indian team. This is in a very dramatic filmy manner where, instead of the cricket board calling him to the office to convey the decision, it is done by an official of the board doing it in the middle of an empty stadium making it look morelike a conspiracy than anhonour.

    The rest of the team consists of senior players and the resentment at Azhar’s appointment to lead them is evident. Leading from the front, Azhar is soon in command and is now playing his 99th test match. That is when the bubble bursts as he is accused of match fixing. He is suspended and also found guilty by the CBI. What follows is an 11 year long court battle to clear his name. The board’s lawyer is Lara Dutta, imported from London. Lara has been an ardent Azhar fan all along, but feels betrayed now and fights the case vigorously.

    Azhar, the film, tries to change the deeply embedded perception of people who once idolized the star cricketer. It is not easy to erase their hurt. The script takes recourse to a haphazard narration with past and present overlapping ad nauseam. The direction lets many glitches pass. To claim to have made a film on Azharuddin with a disclaimer does not let one change the facts of the case which dominated the media for long. The only catchy song is the remix of the old time mass hit, Oyeoye…. from Tridev. Even at 131 minutes, the film needs further clipping.

    As for performances, Emraan does his best but, Azhar’s persona is too big to live up to even in a disgraced state. While Prachi Desai is impressive, NargisFakri, playing the second wife, is passable. Lara is okay.  The casting of other cricketers, especially Kapil is laughable. Kunal Roy Kapur saves quite a few scenes as an idiosyncratic defense lawyer.

    Azhar is about a disgraced hero: there may be a few who would watch his tale out of sympathy not as an idol, which is not enough to sustain at the box office.

    Producers: Shobha Kapoor, Ekta Kapoor, Sony Pictures Network.

    Director: Tony D’Souza.

    Cast: Emraan Hashmi, NargisFakhri, Lara Dutta, Gautam Gulati, Manjot Singh, Kunaal Roy Kapur, Rajesh Sharma.

    Dear Dad

    Dear Dad is a father son bonding story. That would not have been fine thinking of a film like Masoom (1983). But, here, the already perfectly bonded family of two children and their loving parents is shattered as the father comes out the closet to declare his homosexual leanings.

    Himanshu Sharma is a 14 year old lad in Delhi living with his father, Arvind Swamy, mother and younger sister. He is ready to go back to hostel in the hill station of Mussorie. The plan is to travel with his friends. But, the father, Arvind, carries a load on his mind and offers to drop Himanshu to Mussorie. It is the coming of age for Himanshu and Swamy wants to first get through to his son’s teen mind presently fed on nude pictures, playing games on his mobile and generally enjoying the stage of life he is in along with his friends. On the drive to Mussorie, while Swamy tries to strike a conversation, the son is immersed in his cell phone.

    On the way to Mussorie, Swamy decides to stop at his parental home. Done with dotting momma, Swamy proceeds to see his father who has lost his speech. For, some reason, Swamy decides to tell his father that he was never interested in women. While his father has lost his speech (also, for no explicable reason, also his expressions!) and cant reply, the son overhears Swamy’s confession.

    The son, Himanshu, is devastated and feels betrayed. He withdraws from his father and all his affection and is in a rebel mode. The son also suspects his father of wanting to spend the night with a TV reality show celebrity, Aman Uppal, who they have given a lift on the way.

    Himanshu has confided in his closest buddy (all closest buddies in films are fat and seem to be jovial; this one fits the stereotypical, too). The friend takes him to a Bengali baba who can turn a homosexual in to a mard again!

    While Himanshu wanted a normal happy family of father, mother and sister living happily, his dream is shattered.

    Quite a few films seem to open the closet midway through the film lately; the recent examples being Kapoor & Sons while another one, Aligarh, was all about same sex attraction.

    Dear Dad is the maker’s film; the audience is less likely to participate. The film follows a script of convenience as things happen because they happen. While the theme is serious, the treatment is casual. The father son patch up is as hurried as the fallout was for after all, a Debonair collecting son should know both sides of a coin!

    What works for the film are the beautiful locales of Uttarkhand as the duo travel from Delhi by road, the scenic beauty has been beautifully captured.  As for the performances, Swamy underplays his being gay and the son, Himanshu, complements this with aggression. Uppal does very well. The rest are incidental.

    Dear Dad will find it tough fit into a slot when it comes to identifying its audience.

    Producers: Shaan Vyas, Ratnakar M.

    Director: TanujBhramar.

    Cast: Arvind Swamy, Himanshu Sharma, Ekavali Khanna, Aman Uppal, BhavikaBhasin.