Tag: Ishaqzaade

  • Mere Dad Ki Maruti to release on 15 March

    Mere Dad Ki Maruti to release on 15 March

    MUMBAI: Yash Raj Films‘ (YRF) next venture Mere Dad Ki Maruti (MDKM) under the Y-Films banner, has finally got a release date. It will release universally on 15 March.

     

    For some time now, it has been seen that YRF is becoming the perfect platform for budding talent. After having successfully launched Ranveer Singh and Anushka Sharma in Band Baaja Baaraat , it followed up by casting Arjun Kapoor and Parineeti Chopra in Ishaqzaade.

     

    Through Mere Dad Ki Maruti, the production house is all set to launch Saqib Saleem and Rhea Chakraborty. Incidentally, Saqib had earlier made his debut with Mujhse Fraaandship Karoge under the same banner.

     

    MDKM is an outrageous comedy set against the backdrop of a loud Punjabi wedding in Chandigarh. The film tells the story of a boy who sneaks his dad‘s fancy new car out to impress the college hottie and how all hell breaks loose when he loses it.

     

    MDKM also stars Ram Kapoor as the khadoos dad in his first full-fledged comedy role.

     

    MDKM also marks the directorial debut of Ashima Chibber who has been associated with some of the most talented directors of our times like Shimit Amin‘s first Assistant Director (AD) on Ab Tak Chappan and Chak De India‘ among others, The director‘s last project was as first assistant director to Imtiaz Ali in Rockstar.

  • Shoreline Entertainment picks up overseas distribution rights of Ishaqzaade

    Shoreline Entertainment picks up overseas distribution rights of Ishaqzaade

    MUMBAI: Los Angeles-based Shoreline Entertainment has picked up the overseas distribution rights of Yash Raj Films‘ Ishaqzaade. This was done at the recently held Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF).

    The film is a story about two people born to hate but destined to love. Rising from the ashes of hooliganism and small town clan wars, this is a love story of a passion ignited by hatred.

    Commenting on the acquisition, Shoreline Entertainment‘s CEO Morris Ruskin said, “Of all the films produced in India, this one really stands out and appeals to a worldwide audience. We are very excited to present it to the rest of the world.”

    Commented Yash Raj Films‘ Head of International Operations, Avtar Panesar,”TIFF was the perfect platform for us to showcase this film which started off as a small film in India but notched up a box office of $10 million. We are thrilled about our signing with Shoreline to take the film to and beyond the diaspora!”

    With this development, worldwide fans needn‘t wait any longer to follow the story of the Ishaqzaade‘s as their turbulent journey unfolds in the often unrealistic and daunting political confines of rural India.

    Directed and written by Habib Faisal and produced by Aditya Chopra, Ishaqzaade stars debutant Arjun Kapoor and Parineeti Chopra in lead roles. The film released on 11 May 11 in India to rave reviews by critics and audiences alike.

  • A series of 7 debacles at the box office

    A series of 7 debacles at the box office

    MUMBAI: The flood of seven releases this week – Arjun, Yeh Khula Aasmaan, MLA, Rakhtbeej, Chutki Bajake, Love Recipe, Love Wrinkle Free – met with disastrous results at the box office.

    Department has proved to be a debacle. After the film‘s opening weekend collection of Rs 81 million (not Rs 71 million as reported last week), the film ended the first week with Rs 111 million.

    Ishaqzaade has continued to sustain well in its second week, adding Rs 125 million to take its tally to Rs 382.5 million. The third weekend collections stood at Rs 43 million, closing its 18-day net collection of Rs 425.5 million.

    Dangerous Ishhq 3-D collected just Rs 4 million in its second week. The film has netted Rs 63 million.

    Jannat 2 added Rs 24 million in its third week, taking its total to Rs 448 million.

    Vicky Donour remained strong even in its fifth week to collect Rs 28 million, making its kitty swell to Rs 383 million.

    Housefull2 has collected Rs 6 million in its seventh week. With this, the film totals Rs 1.17 billion.

  • Ishqzaade is a mass puller with good performances

    Ishqzaade is a mass puller with good performances

    MUMBAI: Ishqzaade takes the age old formula of love stories of a boy and girl never seeing eye to eye, hailing from families of two sworn enemies and from different religious backgrounds.

    As is the norm, such films are always interesting till the boy and girl profess mutual romance, becoming predictable thereafter. Ishqzaade manages the feat of sustaining interest a little longer than the rest.

     

    Producer: Aditya Chopra.
    Director: Habib Faisal.
    Cast: Arjun Kapoor, Parineeti Chopra.

    c and Parineeti Chopra grew up hating each other and hurling abuses and stones at each other. Kapoor is the uncouth, couldn‘t-care-less kind who hails from a Rajput family. His grandfather is contesting the assembly elections; his opponent and arch rival is Chopra‘s father, a Muslim politician and a sitting MLA.

    Chopra is a firebrand girl who would even trade her earrings for a firearm when she can‘t win a fight verbally. The locale is a small town of Almore in UP where belonging to different communities is reason enough for tensions between two groups. Their being political adversaries only makes the situation worse as guns are picked up at smallest of provocations.

    What is more, both groups make sure the other is provoked into a fight at every possible opportunity. If one faction is having a party, the other will disrupt it and even take away the local nautch girl for his group party. They tear up posters and even empty one‘s bladder on rival‘s poster. One such act by Kapoor earns him a slap from Chopra. He seeks revenge by pretending to fall madly in love with her and to get her to marry him only to desert her after celebrating ‘suhaag raat‘ with her in an empty train compartment.

    The deception hurts Chopra even more, as, on the eve of the elections, the pictures of her Hindu ritual marriage with Kapoor are circulated all over town, which spells doom for her father‘s election prospects. Chopra picks up her gun to kill Kapoor and the fight between the two turns into an all out war between the two factions with the community angle coming to the fore.

    It costs Kapoor‘s mother‘s life to make him see sense and accept and protect his wife‘s life; he discovers true love for Chopra but the couple has to now run from both warring factions as one is not happy with having a Hindu son-in-law and the other with having a Muslim daughter-in-law. It is the later part where the couple is in hiding or on the run that gets predictable and is stretched unnecessarily.

    Ishqzaade is the debut film of Arjun Kapoor and he performs with the élan and confidence of a veteran. His dialogue delivery needs some working on but his position has been confirmed with this film as a mass hero. How he performs in a suave role remains to be seen. Parineeti Chopra, who impressed every one with her first film, Ladies vs Ricky Behl, excels here. She is a natural performer, here to stay. Gauahar Khan does well while the others support ably.

    The direction is good, sticking mainly to the proven formula of a mass film. Music goes well with the film‘s theme and situations, the song ‘Pareshan…‘ being the pick of the lot. Editing needed to be harsher in later parts while dialogue is routine.

    Ishqzaade has opened to very good houses and is also assured of a fair share of it business from single screens too thus making it a profitable enterprise.
     
    Dangerous Ishq is all wrong soon as it begins

     

    Producer: Arun Rangachary.
    Director: Vikram Bhatt.
    Cast: Karisma Kapur, Rajniesh Duggal, Jimmy Shergill, Divya Dutta, Ruslan Mumtaz, Arya Babbar, Gracy Singh, Natasha Sinha, Ravi Kissen.

    When the budget is limited and technique is available in the form of 3D, go for the ‘shock and awe‘ approach to secure a safe opening weekend and an assurance of recovery. It worked for Vikram Bhatt with his earlier film, Haunted, and hence is a formula worth repeating.

    Here, in Dangerous Ishq, the maker blends his use of 3D with spiritualism and reincarnation: the kind of stories you find in the work of Dr Brian Weiss and Ian Stevenson.

    In Dangerous Ishq, Vikram Bhatt begins his story of undying love, jealousy and betrayal in the present era and takes it back to various earlier incarnations of the lovers to the 17th Century. Since the subject of reincarnation can afford all sorts of liberties, the villain as well as the friends remains constant in all their incarnations spanning 500 years. The Brian Weiss and Ian Stevenson stuff is all very well but getting carried away with it is not; limiting the concept to a couple of incarnations would have made the film tauter and with a little work on the twists and turns it would have seemed more plausible and hence interesting. With limited resources, it is not really advisable to go into period sub-drama and end up making it look like street play!

    Karisma Kapur is a top model, deeply in love with her tycoon friend, Rajniesh Duggal. She gets an assignment in Paris for a year but has no heart to leave her boyfriend-cum-fiancé. She decides to go back to him and wants an instant wedding but he is kidnapped by a gang of masked men. A whodunit search begins that takes you back five centuries. Kapur dons various avatars in previous births like a partition victim Hindu girl in love with her eternal lover, a daasi to Meerabai in the 1600s in Mewar, a Mughal warrior‘s fiancé and so on.

    She is told that her villains are her fiance‘s past lives‘ enemies and she recalls their faces and identifies them. The investigating officer Jimmy Shergil pretends not to believe her stories but also lets her tag along on all missions because he is the only one who has been blessed to remember past lives of all concerned in the story. As the story traverses from one life to previous life, the proceeds become so tacky that the film turns into an unintentional comedy. But you don‘t laugh with it, you simply laugh it off.

    Every time the film takes a flashback/forward to present times, some contemporary villains are added-a supari killer, the hero‘s own brother- until one loses the sense of who is who.

    Every time the police follow a new clue, Kapur‘s brain takes her into the past as if she were just clicking a mouse. If only she did not take the viewer along every time she went into past; it is torture.

    Finally, this being a heroine-oriented film, Kapur outsmarts everybody including the police and the demons. She saves the hero instead of the other way around as is the norm in films and it is a happy ending; happy for the sole reason that it has ended.

    Dangerous Ishq is all wrong soon as it begins. The title shows a lack of imagination and the rest of the film is a study in how to squander a good idea. There have been some classic reincarnation films but this one is a joke on the theme. Direction is bad, music is wasted in picturisation and editing is poor. The performances are not much to write home about either.

    Dangerous Ishq is poor film on all counts.

    The Forest is a lost cause

     

    The Forest (Hindi-English in parts) is inspired from various writings of Jim Corbett, mainly from his book, The Man-eating Leopard of Rudraprayag. Woven around a story of a couple, it tells why as many as 150 people are killed each year in India in leopard or tiger attacks and what turns them into man-eaters in an attempt to address environmental concerns.

    Ankur Vikal and Nandana Sen, the husband wife duo is going through a troubled marriage. Nandana‘s inability to conceive, for which Vikal is responsible, dampens any possibilities of reconciliation between the two.

    They decide to take a break in deep jungles away from any contact, be with each other and sort out their life. What both did not expect was to meet Javed Jaffery, Nandana Sen‘s ex lover, who is a forest officer here living with his son, Salim Ali Zaidi. The ex-lovers soon realise that passion is still burning between the two and Javed Jaffery is the kind who would not mind playing a couple of dirty tricks to get Vikal out of his way and be left alone with Nandana Sen.

    On one occasion, on a night out in the forest, which is strictly prohibited since a man- eater leopard is on the loose, he leaves Vikal on a machan so as to give him an experience of hunting with a rifle. The leopard has been shot at and hurt; unable to chase animals, he has turned into man-eater.

    Javed Jaffery‘s prank costs a forest officer his life who is attacked by the leopard and despite his being picked up and hidden in a room, the leopard, as the jungle belief goes, would get to him anyway and so it does eventually. The story of a hurt leopard ends as does the childless couple‘s as both reconcile.

    The Forest has no prospects at box office; it could have been a good educational film for educational institutions but the story it has chosen to tell about animals and encroaching on their territory is of the adult kind and not quite the type for schools.

  • Yash Raj Films launches app of Ishaqzaade

    Yash Raj Films launches app of Ishaqzaade

    MUMBAI: In order to promote their upcoming film Ishaqzaade, Yash Raj Films has launched a new application (app).

    “Kahan Hai Ishaqzaade? Become an Ishaqzaade: Shout out your love,” is the app‘s Facebook status. Users of the app are given the opportunity to share their own love stories on a digital platform.

    The game is set against the backdrop of small-town clan wars and is based upon the format of a shooting alley.

    “Play the game and decide who you are, Haraamzaade or Ishaqzaade,” reads an introduction to the app. Players are given one minute to maximise their score. Points are awarded for hitting cans and points lost for targeting bombs and petrol cans

    The film, starring Arjun Kapoor and Parineeti Chopra, is scheduled to release on 11 May.

  • Dabaang 2 not to have Eid release

    Dabaang 2 not to have Eid release

    MUMBAI: YRF‘s Salman khan-starrer Ek Tha Tiger has been tipped for an Eid release. Going by the penchant of Khan to release his films on the occasion of Eid, it was being rumoured that his other starrer Dabaang 2 would also release on Eid.

    But the rumours have been put to rest by the makers of Dabaang 2. The film will now release during Christmas. The reason: Ek Tha Tiger and Dabangg 2 are completely different films but releasing two films of Khan on the same day wouldn’t be advisable.

    Producer-director Arbaaz Khan feels that crowding the Eid weekend with two Salman releases wouldn‘t be good.

    Meanwhile YRF‘s other release Ishaqzaade will now release on 11th instead of 18 May. The pre-poning of the release is due to the postponing of Vidhu Vinod Chopra‘s Ferrari ki Sawaari that was to release on 11 May but was later postponed.

    YRF confirmed, “With Ferrari ki Sawaari moving to a later date and the IPL crunch matches kicking in from 18 May, this shift will give Ishaqzaade a better window for release.”

    This means that Ishaqzaade will clash with the Kareena Kapoor-starrer Dangerous Ishq that also releases on 11 May.

  • YRF’s Ishaqzaade to release on 18 May

    YRF’s Ishaqzaade to release on 18 May

    MUMBAI: Yash Raj Films’ upcoming offering, Ishaqzaade, has been scheduled to hit the silver screen on 18 May.

    Ishaqzaade is a love story about two people born to hate and destined to love. It is all about passion ignited by hatred.

    Produced by Aditya Chopra and written and directed by Habib Faisal, the film will see the launch of Arjun Kapoor, son of Boney Kapoor, along with Parineeti Chopra, in the lead role.

    This is Parineeti’s second film with YRF after having won six awards so far for her debut role in Ladies vs Ricky Bahl that released last December.

    Incidentally, Faisal has been credited of writing Band Baaja Baraat and directing the award winning film, Do Dooni Chaar.