Okay, so 2014 was a
pretty good year when it comes to movies (a list of the best of the year will
be coming up in less than a week). But like almost every year of movies, it was
not without its own big let downs. And certainly not without big failures.
But this time, I am
even hurt more with the films that had genuine potential to be exciting,
entertaining and even brilliant but ended up being damp squibs all of them. So,
here is a list of the 5 films that could have been pretty good for the
moviegoers and maybe, some of them have been big in raking money but in terms
of filmmaking and cinema, they are letdowns.
So, 5 disappointments-
(spoiler alert, you can spot some popular blockbusters in them as well). And as
for the truly terrible- ‘Humshakals’, ‘Singham Returns’ and ‘Action Jackson’,
well they are so bad they can’t even be called disappointments. ‘Crimes’ would
be better.
5- Kick
Director- Sajid
Nadiadwala
I remember pretty
clearly that my first review of this pretty brainless Salman Khan-starrer, that
made hundreds of crores and kept on telling us about a Friday night (hear that,
Jason) was pretty positive and now, in retrospect, I blame it entirely on how I
got roped along with the cacophonous chaos of the monstrous Salman Khan fans
thronging the seats in the theater, whistling, hooting and clapping at the most
ludicrous moments, screen idol worship at its most perverse. Blame it on the
fact that the movie is aired on TV channel almost on a weekly basis but
watching it all over again, I do feel that it is well a strictly average film.
There is too much of a
Salman-Khan-addiction in the film (we normally blame Shahrukh and Aamir for
lavishing their characters all the praise in their starrers, but while Salman
might be a screen god, even gods have limitations) and it clearly soaks the
film and traps it into a messy form of hero-worship that feels genuinely
preposterous in today’s smarter, realistic times. And what’s worse is that the
hero itself is something of an overlong joke.
Sure, fans might kill
me for saying it but truth be told, Salman, playing the ultra-smart Devilal and
his alter-ego Devil, a way-too-brawny thief on the run stealing a mask from
Hrithik Roshan in ‘Krishh’, plays his character in an embarrassingly hammy way-
while he still has cocky charm, he blurts out his pitiable lines as if they are
written by Salim-Javed, he keeps on infuriatingly repeating that he wants a
‘kick’ like a delirious addict asking for one more joint and while he peps up
the action scenes, which are thankfully well-done and immediate, his quieter
moments are anything but quiet.
Add to that Jacqueline
Fernandes as the bland and simpering heroine, who has forgotten to smile, let
alone sparkle and a lazily scripted narrative that first piles up nonsense,
then something of a bad whodunit and finally, a pretty bad vigilante premise.
If you do want to watch it still, watch it for Randeep Hooda’s tough-as-nails
yet highly likable cop and Nawazuddin Siddiqui’s snarling villain, making
popping sounds and cackling in laughter, at the rest of the movie maybe.
4- Kill Dil
Director- Shaad Ali
Fans of ‘Saathiya’ and
‘Bunty Aur Babli’ did cheer when it was announced that Shaad Ali, after more
than 7 years of limbo, returned to make a film for Yash Raj Studios, the
thrillingly titled ‘Kill Dil’, taking its name from a Quentin Tarantino classic
of fast action and cinematic references.
Like all Ali films, it
begins promisingly as the slick and colorful trailers and promos promised us-
Gulzar’s words- sounding straight out of a Cormac McCarthy paperback- echo in
the background while we are introduced to a duo of gun-toting killers wandering
the urban highways up north- Ranveer Singh’s Dev as a sort of bouncy Butch
Cassidy and Ali Zafar’s savvy Tutu (!) as his Sundance Kid and a great, giddily
thrilling title track playing while the dancing and rejoicing funnyman of the
90s- Govinda- makes a dashing comeback.
Alas. If only Ali knew
what to do with such a potentially thrilling threesome acting as gangsters.
What he does is far more criminal- pile on more ‘Dil’ than ‘Kill’ and yes, make
an utter waste of the heroine.
Parineeti Chopra as the
totally inscrutable Disha is the weak point of an otherwise fairly entertaining
lineup (Singh is endlessly charming while Govinda does cartoonish evil quite
deliciously) but that’s not all- Ali might go high on style and spunky music
but his script goes nowhere- it’s also not even a proper script for a comic
caper, let alone a masala thriller and instead of sizzling action, sexy romance
and solid old world charm offers only nonsensical comedy.
3- Happy New Year
Director- Farah Khan
Yes, right, we knew it.
That Farah Khan cannot really move out of making pedestrian fare, disguised as
supreme entertainers packed with cruel humor directed to celebrities and flimflam
and everyone else and that her take on ‘Ocean’s 11’ as well as revenge sagas of
the past would be something that can be avoided.
Except for the fact
that it had the lead pair of clearly the only decent film that Khan ever made.
But to what purpose? At
nearly 3 hours, ‘Happy New Year’ is no different than all the Sajid Khan and
Rohit Shetty’s films clubbed together for a special screening on a particularly
crowded night.
The plot of revenge by
heists might have something of a ‘Dhoom’ style superficial density to it which
looks misleading and yes, even Shahrukh Khan’s greying yet muscular hero
Charlie- with his repetitive yet addictive dialogue delivery- hints at edgy
things.
But whatever
seriousness there is, it is all washed away as the extremely nonsensical plot
unfolds- of dance events, of diamonds, of Dubai hotels with extraordinary
security measures that would shame Terry Benedict and- the worst of it all- a
team made of fools rather than clever tricksters (save for, maybe, Deepika
Padukone).
Wait a minute, that’s
not all. I almost forgot the cruel jokes about deaf people, about epilepsy and
about an incredibly talented filmmaker, who has no business being here.
2- Ek Villain
Director- Mohit Suri
Okay, so here comes the
big villain of the year’s movies. A film that, while trying to be something of
an intriguing romantic thriller, ends up being a bad, bad film, one that should
be taken far away from the public and locked up in some trunk or something.
And yet it had
potential. Come on, people. Shraddha Kapoor has already proved that she has a
chop or two in acting, Siddharth Malhotra, the new heartthrob for the girls,
did feel promisingly gritty and Riteish Deshmukh as a scheming villain made
perfect sense.
Instead of a good blend
of all that, we get an exercise in pointless blood-letting, candyfloss romance
and unintentionally hilarious drama which does not even have a bit of suspense,
genuine romance or even a happy note.
Rather, it is
depressingly directed, badly, hammily acted (save for maybe Deshmukh, while
Malhotra is not even acting) and as a film, it is just too painful to bear.
God save us all.
1 1- 2 States
Director-
Abhishek Varman
Sorry
people, who spent their precious bucks in multiplexes and came out, with
‘wonderful’ insights on inter-culture marriage.
Sorry,
to the youngsters who thought the film connected so well with their own
problems and issues regarding marriage.
But
I have to say that ‘2 States’ does nothing of these things at all.
It
only repeats what has been said- all the same stereotype jokes about North
Indians and South Indians- of chicken-eating Punjabis and unfairly dusky South
Indians (okay, so Abhishek Varman, Alia Bhatt’s Ananya might be the only fair
South Indian girl, down there, right?)
This
is regressive cinema at its worst- a slickly packaged yet supremely bland and
lackluster film that tries to be like a modern-day yarn of romance and marriage
in culturally diverse India but only ends up saying one thing- that pre-marital
sex can lead to empty romances.
The
romance is rushed and punctuated by songs rather than by scenes, the actors are
wasted- the plot is virtually non-existent, in search for some melodrama so as
to keep the viewers in and as for Arjun Kapoor’s disgustingly dour hero, less
said the better.
As
I will always say, it’s not bad. It’s not good. It’s just bland.
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