Saturday, September 10, 2011

Mere brother ki dulhan

A Yash Raj Films release and production. Produced by Aditya Chopra. Executive producer, Aashish Singh. Directed, put together by Ali Abbas Zafar.With: Imran Khan, Katrina Kaif, Ali Zafar, Tara D'Souza, Kanwaljit Singh, Parikishat Sahni, Arfeen Kahn. (Hindi, British dialogue)Engaging leads, high-finish production values, wedding formulations, energetic musical amounts together with a familiar story should ensure healthy biz for "Mere brother ki dulhan," an easy-weight, unambitious three-way romantic comedy whose utter of the routine may be its finest resource. Occasions are telegraphed within the start (the title, meaning "My Brother's Bride," can be a dead giveaway) as our hero, asked for by his London-based bro to find him an Indian bride, falls on her behalf themselves. Audiences just have wait for figures capture around what auds know, then relax watching them learn to accomplish it. An assistant film director in Mumbai, Kush (Imran Khan, as charmingly sane and laid-back quite the hero while he reaches "Dehli Belly") reaches be considered a frantic mobile call from his investment-banker brother, Luv (Pakistani "prince of pop" and rising Bollywood star Ali Zafar, excellent here). Luv, which has just considerably separate with longtime g.f. Piali (Tara D'Souza) inside the pic's explosive London opener, begs Kush to snag him a bride. Tyro author-director Ali Abbas Zafar (no relation to its his star Ali Zafar) properly features a couple of Kush's noisy, drunken co-employees and basically enough fancy, strobe-lit Bollywood party footage to attain a saturation point making Kush's proceed to his traditional upper-middle-class hometown feel welcome. An instantaneous montage of unattractive potential fiancees, seen alongside their cringe-inducing parents, substitutes for nearly much better-developed comedy until Kush features a brainstorm plus they turn to advertising. His positioning from the clever matrimonial ad concerning the back page from the newspaper produces a perfect lady, Tooth decay Dixit (Katrina Kaif), the daughter from the high-placed diplomat. The only real problem is always that Kush has experienced a romantically charged (if unconsummated) encounter with Tooth decay, carried out in flashback in the coldly symbolic backdrop in the Taj Mahal -- an interlude that happened a long time earlier, throughout Dimples' version just like a high-octane rocker. The generally competent Kaif, equally sexy in many her various wardrobe-appropriate guises, shows the strain of maintaining her wild-and-crazy persona when given nothing zanier to accomplish than get inebriated and dangle her bags before Kush's face because they is trying to navigate a brand new scooter. But credible chemistry finally unites the happy couple, Dimples' harebrained impetuousness contrasting nicely with Kush's taken into account weighing of options. Helmer-scripter Zafar keeps it simple. Though superficial moral conundrums abound, there's nary a villain nearby to complicate the lovers' ultimate victory. Indeed, the film even conscripts Dimples' quasi-autistic brother (Arfeen Kahn) to see Cupid. Tech credits are top-drawer, out of the box right for a Yash Raj production.Camera (color, widescreen), Sudeep Chatterjee editor, Ritesh Soni music, Sohail Sen lyrics, Irshad Kamil production designer, Shruti Gupte costume designers, Rocky S., Harmeet Sethi, Neha Bhatnagar appear (Dolby Digital), Debasish Mishra line producer, Padam Bhushan choreographer, Bosco-Caesar. Examined at AMC Village 7, New You'll be able to, Sept. 9, 2011. Running time: 140 MIN. (I: 73 MIN. II: 67 MIN.) Contact the number newsroom at news@variety.com

No comments:

Post a Comment