Movie Review KIS KISKO PYAAR KAROON Is Entertaining Comedy For Family Audience
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Friday, 25th September 11:40 AM IST
KIS KISKO PYAAR KAROON Is Entertaining Comedy For Family Audience
Pluses: Kapil Sharma makes a very good debut as an actor, crisp editing, hilarious dialogues, Elli Avram looks ravishing, Simran Kaur Mundi and Manjari Phadnis are good too, Arbaaz Khan is too funny Minuses:
routine storyline, very poor set design, tacky camerawork, over dramatic climax
Critic Rating: 3/5
Business Rating: 3.5/5
Verdict:
Watch it for light hear-ted fun filled outing
Detailed Analysis: Abbas - Mustan has given some really big hits in last two decades in thriller genre i.e. 'Baazigar', 'Khiladi', 'Race', 'Humraaz' and 'Aitbaar'. And now for some strange reasons he has got responsibility of launching career of super star of small screen Kapil Sharma but with a film in comedy genre.
Rishi Kapoor plays a Mr Bhalla, who runs a bakery in a hill station called Kasol. He is never seen to be baking anything. All he does is to yell and shout at his wife, and sonny boy Inder (played by Supriya Pathak and Abhishek Bachchan, respectively). Why? That’s a mystery. Ms Pathak is to be found in an ‘ashram’, looking vacantly about. Abhishek switches locations from a Bangkok poolside with bikinied babes to the winding roads of Kasol, where he encounters college-mate Nimmi (Asin, colourless) who has feelings for him. Why anyone would have a tender spot for someone as indifferent as Inder is an even bigger mystery. Up pops a long-haired goon called Cheema who’s only job is to twirl a gun, and threaten people. Why the talented Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub took on this thankless part is a … yes, you got that. It’s a puzzle. Plot? Non-existent. The jokes? Screamingly unfunny. Rishi Kapoor doing ‘su-su’, singing ‘aiyi-aiyi-aiyi’? Groan. When will grown men wanting to urinate stop becoming an acceptable gag in Bollywood? Can someone solve this? It’s always good to see Supriya Pathak, but when will someone come up with a substantial part for her? - See more at: http://indianexpress.com/article/entertainment/movie-review/all-is-well-movie-review-abhishek-bachchan-asin/#sthash.7CQEWPe9.dpufRishi Kapoor plays a Mr Bhalla, who runs a bakery in a hill station called Kasol. He is never seen to be baking anything. All he does is to yell and shout at his wife, and sonny boy Inder (played by Supriya Pathak and Abhishek Bachchan, respectively). Why? That’s a mystery. Ms Pathak is to be found in an ‘ashram’, looking vacantly about. Abhishek switches locations from a Bangkok poolside with bikinied babes to the winding roads of Kasol, where he encounters college-mate Nimmi (Asin, colourless) who has feelings for him. Why anyone would have a tender spot for someone as indifferent as Inder is an even bigger mystery. Up pops a long-haired goon called Cheema who’s only job is to twirl a gun, and threaten people. Why the talented Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub took on this thankless part is a … yes, you got that. It’s a puzzle. Plot? Non-existent. The jokes? Screamingly unfunny. Rishi Kapoor doing ‘su-su’, singing ‘aiyi-aiyi-aiyi’? Groan. When will grown men wanting to urinate stop becoming an acceptable gag in Bollywood? Can someone solve this? It’s always good to see Supriya Pathak, but when will someone come up with a substantial part for her? - See more at: http://indianexpress.com/article/entertainment/movie-review/all-is-well-movie-review-abhishek-bachchan-asin/#sthash.7CQEWPe9.dpufFilm has nothing new to offer in terms of storyline. It is heavily inspired form Govinda starrer 'Sandwich' where a husband is in trouble because of his two wives. Here Kumar Shiv Ram Kishan (Kapil Sharma) goes one step further and he has three wives but he did not marry them intentionally, all were result of one accident each. In order to keep this secret from each of them, he puts them in same building Cocktail tower on 4th, 6th and 8th floor. His lawyer friend Varun Sharma is accomplice in this game. Simran (Simran Kaur Mundi) is always after making love to her husband, Anjali (Sai Lokur) is old fashioned devoted wife and Juhi (Manjari Phadnis) is todays modern wife. Things get complicated when Shiv starts preparation for his 4th marriage with his true love Deepika (Elli Avram) and simultaneously his parents (Sharat Saxena and Supriya Pathak) arrive. How Shiv manages to get his love forms the climax of the film. Performance wise Kapil Sharma is simply outstanding as he makes confident debut on big screen though he looks a bit out of sort in few emotional scenes. Arbaaz Khan as deaf gangster is hilarious and Manoj Joshi as father of Deepika is good. Out of girls, Elli Avram is best with her grooves in couple of songs followd by equally gorgeous Simran Kaur Mundi. Manjari Phadnis is decent but Sai Lokur struggles in her debut. Sharat Saxena and Surpiya Pathak are strictly good. But the real surprise package is Varun Sharma who actually overshadows Kapil in few scenes, he is a natural! Watch out for his science 'gyaan'. Film has dated screenplay and overall story is cliche though hilarious dialogues are big plus. Film has sharp editing. Music is below par. Cinematography is tacky and production design is poor.
Director duo Abbas Mustan again delivers an entertaining film despite not so great cast and not so great writing. They managed to capture Kapil's charm and wit in perfect manner. Film released today and it will get average to good reviews but it should still score decent numbers over weekend due to holidays and Kapil factor. Though it will depend on mass audience in order to become huge hit!
Go for this one if comedy films are your diet! |