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PostPosted: Fri Apr 11, 2003 1:09 am 
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THE NEW YORK TIMES... :oo:

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MOVIE REVIEW | 'THE HERO'
From Kashmir to Canada With a Bollywood James Bond
By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER


igh adventure and low comedy in the spirit of James Bond and Jackie Chan, star-crossed lovers bathed in sentiment worthy of Claude Lelouch and coincidence to warm the heart of Charles Dickens heap the lavish Bollywood banquet that is "The Hero."

Stretching from the snow-capped peaks of Kashmir to the ski slopes of Canada, mingling gunplay, spectacular explosions and chases with songs, dances and romance, this colorful Indian spy adventure constitutes the cinematic equivalent of the delightful and inconsequential escapism of a 700-page summer beach novel.

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As timely as a moist headline or a CNN crawl, "The Hero," which opens today in the New York metropolitan area, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Houston, Dallas, Toronto and Chicago, rips its text from the seething border tensions between India and Pakistan. The film spices its conflict with hot-tempered religious zealots bent on nuclear havoc and uses its saintly but deadly title character to tell a grandly romantic tale that exalts humanity and patriotism, elevates country above self-interest, deplores the perversion of the Muslim faith and sermonizes on the true meaning of jihad.

Directed by Anil Sharma and written by Shaktimaan, "The Hero" stars Sunny Deol as Arun Khanna, an Indian superspy and master of disguise, weaponry, poetry, atomic science and women's hearts, among other accomplishments. Told in flashback after ceremonies in Canada honoring him for valor, the story relates his efforts to thwart an evil conspiracy, hatched with the aid of a Pakistani general, to allow terrorists to steal a nuclear bomb to use against India in the dispute over Kashmir.

The stage is set for Arun's long but ultimately predictable battle against the murderous mastermind Ishaq Khan, a struggle that takes him (in the guise of an army major) to the Kashmir border, where he promptly encounters the beauteous, good and brave orphan shepherdess Reshma (Preity Zinta).

Amid efforts to win the hearts and minds of the local populace with sweetmeats and kindness, Arun also gives money to further the poor Reshma's education. While chaste romance flowers, he also recruits her to train as a spy, cross the border and find out what the villains are up to.

Reshma's guardian fears that she will be caught and dishonored and thus be rendered unworthy of marriage. Should that happen, Arun pledges, he will take her as his wife. But no need. Arun, who races lethally to her rescue when the plotters uncover her role, truly loves her.

At their magnificent engagement party on New Year's Eve in a glass-domed pavilion in the midst of singing, dancing and feasting, the vengeful fundamentalists strike back. As a hundred people die in blasts and flames, Reshma vanishes into raging waters, and Arun, bereft, is left alone to continue his investigation after deliberately misleading news articles report his death.

Has Reshma died? Or, believing Arun dead, is she going to turn up, paralyzed but under treatment in Canada, where he is tracking a powerful industrialist with ties to the terrorists and with a beautiful, nubile daughter who rehabilitates paralytics? And if Arun plans to marry this woman to further his investigation, what if Reshma should turn up on his wedding day as her bridesmaid?

Finding the answers to these questions maintains the multiple pleasures of "The Hero" right to the very end.

Directed by Anil Sharma
In Hindi, with English subtitles
Not rated, 160 minutes

http://www.nytimes.com/2003....=GOOGLE


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 11, 2003 3:10 pm 
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Another Review from Rediff
http://www.rediff.com/movies/2003/apr/11hero.htm

Excerpts:

At last an original desi spy who combines the guile and charm of James Bond and the raw appeal of Rambo!

He can survive devastating landslides and treacherous jumps off snow-capped peaks. He can venture into forbidden enemy territory and single-handedly rescue his lady love from the clutches of death. What's more, he has a suitable line for every occasion and the ability to keep his worst enemy spellbound with his patriotic outbursts.

For once in a Hindi film, foreign locations have actually been put to good use.

Priyanka Chopra makes her debut (as Kabir Bedi's daughter) in a relatively small role. We will have to wait for Andaaz to figure out whether she can act.

Preity Zinta is wonderfully refreshing to watch. Even in a film that doesn't demand too many emotional histrionics, she comes up with a touching performance.

The Hero is as much a comicbook spy movie as Bond's Die Another Day or Ethan Hunt's Mission Impossible. And if you could accept James Bond strutting into North Korea and bashing up the military ruler's son, you will love watching Arun Khanna make mincemeat of the ISI chief.




Looks like a good review and a good film.

Rana


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 11, 2003 3:34 pm 
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Adarsh is not very impressed....

http://www.indiafm.com/reviews/03/thehero/index.shtml


The Hero - Love Story of a Spy

By Taran Adarsh

When you have a huge hit like GADAR behind you, the expectations from your next film multiply manifold. In that respect, the expectations from THE HERO are gargantuan.

THE HERO has it all – The golden combination of director Anil Sharma, writer Shaktimaan, music director Uttam Singh and lead man Sunny Deol.

THE HERO has it all – Grand production values, breath-taking locales of the U.S., Canada and Switzerland, opulent sets... In fact, if at all there's a 'Lion-hearted Producer Award', it should be reserved for the Shah brothers of Time for sparing no expenses in making a film of epic proportions. Truly, the Shah brothers are the behind-the-screen heroes of this flick.

THE HERO has it all – Fiery dialogues that would send the crowd into raptures, references to the neighbouring country that would be greeted with cheers, like it happened in BORDER and GADAR, and also edge-of-the-seat stunts that make you gape in awe.

THE HERO has the looks of a hero, but unlike GADAR, it lacks the soul to make you cry and make your heart go out for the on-screen characters. The husband-wife-son saga in GADAR continued to haunt you even after the show ended. Sadly, THE HERO lacks in this vital department – emotions. And the emotions depicted Iin THE HERO are superficial.

Sunny Deol is an army intelligence officer posted in Kashmir. He has been posted there to keep track of the terrorists' activities across the border. He falls in love with Preity Zinta and soon, she becomes a part of his network.

Preity is sent across the border as part of a strategy, but soon the plan fails and Preity finds herself exposed to the militants – Amrish Puri, Khalid Mohammed and Rajat Bedi.

However, she escapes from their clutches and is saved by Sunny in the nick of time. Sunny and Preity get engaged but during the celebrations, the militants explode the place and Preity is feared dead.

However, Preity is very much alive and has reached the shores of Pakistan. She is saved by Parvin Dabas, but due to a shock, she cannot use her limbs. Parvin takes her to Canada for treatment and coincidentally, Sunny also reaches there to accomplish his mission.

The doctor treating on Preity is none other than Priyanka Chopra, who happens to be the daughter of Kabir Bedi, an accomplice of Amrish Puri. To have an access to Kabir Bedi, Sunny befriends Priyanka and plans to marry her. But Amrish Puri gets to know of Sunny's true identity. What happens next?

The problem with THE HERO lies in its screenplay. Now, that's all the more surprising since the screenplay was the highpoint of GADAR. Writer Shaktimaan goofs up bigtime in weaving a tale around the loves and lives of a spy, but the outcome is not as intriguing as a James Bond flick, nor is it as captivating as the Dharmendra – Mala Sinha hit ANKHEN.

To start with, the script relies too heavily on the nuclear bomb, sidelining the Indo-Pak issue or for that matter the Kashmir issue completely. The writer goes into the minutest of details explaining what a nuclear bomb is all about and how it gets made, making the goings-on too technical at times. To be honest, the making of a nuclear bomb or its parts hold no significance for the ordinary cinegoer. Moreover, the dialogues in English [at several places] may not find flavour with a sizeable chunk of the audience.

Ideally, issues such as crossborder terrorism and how the spy exposes the neighbouring country's devious plans should've been given prominence, since the common man can identify with these issues. Tracking the formula of a nuclear bomb could've been a small segment in the screenplay, giving it so much prominence was not required.

The film also lacks the romantic and emotional feel of GADAR. The romantic moments between Sunny and Preity are far too less and even the ones that have been depcited are not the type that would register an impact. The film has been publicised as a love story of a spy, but the love story is hardly exciting.

Even the Sunny – Priyanka love story should've had a solid foundation. At least there should've been some tender moments between them to justify their romance.

Director Anil Sharma takes a step forward when it comes to providing larger-than-life visuals. The money spent is visible in every frame, the grand look of the film just cannot be overlooked. But barring a few individual sequences, the drama clearly lacks a hammer-strong impact.

Yes, a few sequences do linger in your memory, like the one when a militant [Rajat Bedi] performs a thorough check of Preity, his hands moving at all the wrong places and a helpless Preity standing bewildered.

The avalanche in the first half can also be singled out. Something like this hasn't been depicted on the Indian screen before. The drama during the celebrations in the second half, when Preity and Sunny come face to face, is also electrifying.

But the drama depicted in the film is not a patch on Anil Sharma's earlier works like SHRADDHANJALI, BANDHAN KACHCHE DHAGON KA, HUKUMAT and of course, GADAR. The director's efforts to give something different from GADAR is laudable, but the screenplay lets him down terribly. Even the climax, though novel in concept, does not come across as spellbinding.

If Shaktimaan is not in form as a screenplay writer, he more than compensates in the dialogues department. The dialogues, especially against the militants, are clapworthy. Cinematography deserves distinction marks. The visual appeal of the film is terrific. Action sequences are awe-inspiring.

Uttam Singh's music is a sore point. Barring the 'Dil Mein Hain Pyaar' and 'In Mast Nigahon Mein', the remaining tracks just don't appeal.

Sunny Deol does well in a role that seems tailormade for him. He's good, not excellent. One does miss his fiery outbursts, synonymous with the roles he plays. He seemed to have worked hard on his get-ups and that's commendable.

Preity Zinta is competent, radiating charm all through. Priyanka Chopra's role could've been properly developed. Yet, despite the shortcoming, the newcomer oozes confidence.

Amrish Puri excels. Kabir Bedi is equally convincing. Rajpal Yadav is passable. Shahbaaz Khan is fair. Khalid Mohammed is first-rate.

On the whole, THE HERO has gloss and hype as its trumpcards, but comparisons with GADAR will go against it. THE HERO lacks in emotions, music and a taut screenplay. At the box-office, the opening of the film is fantastic and keeping in view the vacation period, will only add to its grand opening, giving a respite to the drought-stricken industry. Also, with no big film scheduled for release in the coming weeks, the film will get an open run, which should prove beneficial to its investors.

Rating:- * *.


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 11, 2003 3:55 pm 
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Lots of good reviews. Lots of hype. Lots of people have seen the movie.

In Canada the first screening is still 3 hours away and that too in a theatre not equipped to do justice to the film. I guess, the distributors and the exhibitors underestimated THE HERO appeal.

Rana


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 11, 2003 5:13 pm 
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is it playing at the toronto imax theatre?


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PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2003 3:42 am 
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well everyone liked it as i heard peole talking during intermission and after the movie that it is a good movie and i agree any idea when the dvd is coming out will there be any extra features


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PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2003 5:27 am 
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sknath wrote:
izzy wrote:
well everyone liked it as i heard peole talking during intermission and after the movie that it is a good movie and i agree any idea when the dvd is coming out will there be any extra features

Forget abt the DVD... its gonna be a Load of Crap !... I wish some company releases a PIRATE of this film on DVD ... else we will be stuck up with the $hit VideoSound version !

Unfortunately, "forget about the DVD" is the correct advice. With Hindi DVDs the way they are, it's best to see the movie in the theater and then forget about it forever :nopity: That is, if anything worth seeing is released.




Edited By DragunR2 on 1050211667


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PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2003 5:30 am 
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I just came home from watching the 9:30 pm showing @ Woodside, and let's say that the movie is strictly ok... The production values are top notch, and the film features some dazzling cinematography but it doesn't have enough action for a hardcore spy movie. I mean the movie has multiple plots that are not well developed at all and which makes the movie crawl at a very slow pace. And a major drawback is that much of the movie is concerned with the Sunny Deol - Preity Zinta romance!! Shouldn't saving the world (or India) be a major concern rather than the spy's romance with some village girl???

Thankfully the movie isn't as racist as Gadar, but it should be still very offensive to any race! I mean yeah it has some pro-Islamic lines, but still blames all of India's troubles on Pakistan (which is not true) and it still has a VERY VERY OFFENSIVE line towards Pakistanis. The director is still trying to deliver his anti-Pak propaganda here and it shouldn't be that way (I'm a Hindu Indian btw).

Sunny is very good in his role, but he doesn't do anything cool (or even kill anybody in a supercool way) or say any pleasing lines. Preity Zinta overacts while Priyanka Chopra impressed in a very brief role. Kabir Bedi was given nothing to do, while Amrish Puri was in fine form as the film's main villain. It's good to see him back in his villanous form, and he's constantly bursting with energy - even though he's pushing way past 70.

All in all its a decent enough movie, but I was more entertained by Ek aur Ek Gyarah then this movie. In comparison with other Sunny movies, I would say that its not as good as Karz, Ziddi, Salaakhen or Gadar but instead on par with Indian and Champion. Take that as you will. I just hope that Jaal is better.


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PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2003 5:54 am 
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darius25 wrote:
In comparison with other Sunny movies, I would say that its not as good as Karz, Ziddi, Salaakhen or Gadar but instead on par with Indian and Champion. Take that as you will. I just hope that Jaal is better.

Pray tell, except for Gadar, are'nt all the films you mentioned, pure crap? As far as I can remember, Karz, Ziddi, Salakhein, Indian & Champion are all pretty much the same atrocious film and Gadar was by far superior even with all its flaws.


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PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2003 5:37 pm 
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HERO collects HONORABLE 6.5/10, while 9,2 gayara got 7.5/10:

I think, it is FAIR!! as GADAR was around, 7-7.5/10!!


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Film Reviews



Producer: Time Movies - Dhirajlal Shah, Pravin Shah
Director: Anil Sharma
Starring: Sunny Deol, Preity Zinta, Priyanka Chopra, Amrish Puri, Kabir Bedi, Rajpal Yadav
Music: Uttam Singh
Lyrics: Late Anand Bakshi, Javed Akhtar

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Genre: Action Thriller
Recommended Audience: Parental Guidance
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Released on: April 11, 2003
Reviewed by: Vijay Ramanan
Reviewer's Rating: 6.5 out of 10
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cumulative Rating: 7.41 out of 10
Rated by: 171 unique users

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------





When it comes down to a Sunny Deol film, I am biased. I love watching the Jatt scream, I love his illogical action sequences, and most of all, I love his raw patriotism. In the past I have never had expectations from a Deol flick. Today I made the mistake of walking into the theater expecting to watch a hi-tech blockbuster espionage-action thrill ride only to walk out disappointed having watched a love story with a few explosions and a hazy lesson on building and smuggling a nuclear bomb.

PLOT.. ......The bomb is to be rebuilt in its entirety in Canada with the help of a wealthy business tycoon Zakaria (Kabir Bedi) who owns a cancer radiation research facility that houses resources where the bomb can be assembled. Confused? So was I....

While the Jatt set out to stop Ishaq Khan and co., I found myself asking the same questions over and over again – “Where is the action? Why are the songs so long? And why is Sunny Deol so quiet?”

With all due credit to writer Shaktimaan, he actually had a very good story in hand and for once, the love story actually fits well within the framework of the film. Unfortunately he fails to translate it into an engaging screenplay. The first half moves at breakneck speed with a good exposition. The second half slows down thanks to excessive dialogue and insipid music from Uttam Singh.

Director Anil Sharma has paid more attention to the details of RAW and ISI operations than creating thrills. There are definitely a few good action sequences such as the avalanche scene, the explosion at the engagement party, and Sunny’s jump of a mountain peak. Sorry Mr. Sharma but that is simply not enough for action buffs like me who make up such a large portion of your target audience. If I wanted to know the details of nuclear formulas, I would pick up a nuclear physics textbook instead of watching your film.

Performances were missing for the most part in “The Hero.” Sunny Deol is too quiet and underplaying his character simply makes him look uninterested. To cast him in a patriotic fare and not have him scream is as ludicrous as walking into the cage of a starving tiger and expecting it not to eat you. Amrish Puri portrays Ishaq Khan as a baffoon rather than the menacing ISI chief he is supposed to be. Kabir Bedi too comes across as laughable with his put on accent that goes amusingly haywire at times. Priyanka Chopra with her uninspiring lines and the Pakistani nuclear scientist with his incomprehensible technical mumbo jumbo compete with each other to see who can slow the movie down further. Preity Zinta is the movie’s saving grace with her spontaneous interpretation of a character that starts off well-defined but is later left undeveloped.

“The Hero” also disappoints on the technical front despite having a very impressive crew. Cinematographer Kabir Lal (“Pardes,” “Taal”) creates a very slick look fluctuating between warm and cold lighting schemes, using impressive camera moves, and at times even cranking up the shutter speed to accentuate the details of certain shots. Allan Amin does a fine job of destroying Sanjay Dhabade’s sets as well as staging the exterior stunts the few times that he is given the opportunity to do so.

However, ignorant editing from Suresh Urs mars all their work. Urs, arguably one of India’s finest editors who has cut great films such as “Roja”, “Bombay” and “Dil Se,” shockingly uses out of focus takes on a number of occasions. He seems to have lost all sense of pacing and also pays very little attention to creating meaningful transitions. Either the director was not bothered about pushing Urs to make a better cut or Sharma’s direction was so bad that this was the best Urs could do with the dailies he was given.

For being touted as the most expensive Indian film ever made, “The Hero” doesn’t do justice to that claim. Some of the post-production visual effects used look like they were done for a paltry sum. The few action sequences that exist just don’t warrant the kind of money mentioned. With the potential that Shaktimaan’s story has, all Sharma really had to do was throw in more Deol, more action, and take out the unnecessary talking. Had he done so, like most of his target audience, I too would have walked out of the theater very satisfied. With Sunny Deol, the formula to successfully entertain is quite simple. It is very surprising that it would not be employed on such a high-risk venture.



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PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2003 6:31 pm 
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I thought the movie was disappointing, esp. considering all the money they wasted on it. The first half was not bad, with the Sunny/Preity romantic angle and her being sent on a dangerous spy mission (ala MI:2). However, the second half was slow, boring, and ridiculous, like when the bad guys follow Sunny to the gym and then go out jogging with him. Why waste so much time on these stupid comedy scenes?! Get to the action, man!

The climax has one of the worst special effects I've ever seen, involving Sunny, a snow mobile and a train. I liked Preity's performance but Priyanka didn't impress me. Sunny was Sunny, but more reserved than usual. The Pakistani bashing was so over the top it was funny. Stuff like "To err once is to be human. To err twice is to be Satan. To err and err...is to be a Pakistani."




Edited By Duplicate Govinda on 1050258760


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 16, 2003 3:22 pm 
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i e-mailed vs and they said they did not decide when the hero will come out on dvd but it will have lots of extras and anamorphic video and dd5.1 also they r tryin 2 find deleted scence


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 16, 2003 8:39 pm 
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Would that help to RECOVER COST:

Ticket rates increased by 30-50% in Mumbai for The Hero
By: Abid
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Get Latest Bollywood Scoop by Email - Sign up Now!

Cashing in on the tremendous response to The Hero in Mumbai city and suburbs, the admission rates have been hiked by 30-50% in Metro and other theaters of Mumbai. The new prices are effective for this week only to cash in on the 3-4 day holiday period and the initial hype.

The movie has been released with about 40 prints in Mumbai and suburbs and has already grossed Rs 66.5 lacs here and the week is not over yet.

The Hero has approximately 125 prints in the entire Mumbai-Maharashtra territory, and the makers (who are also the distributors here) are hopeful of good collections, for the first week.




http://www.planetbollywood.com/News/n041603-055243.php


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 16, 2003 8:53 pm 
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When was the last time they hiked ticket prices for a short period only??
Which movie was it??

Rana


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 17, 2003 11:04 am 
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THE HERO

2/10

It is apparent that Indians lack a certain sense of cinematic aesthetic and grammar. Movies are no more than cheap getaway from life's troubles. Movies are seldom, if ever, art.

This film boasts of a mega-budget. It is a blatant manifestation of exorbitant nonsense. The screenplay is so bad that I'm not going to talk about it. Let's go to the technicalities.

Sound - This film was presented in Dolby EX 6.1 - but that is just a technology. Knowing how to use it is quite another thing. The sound design and effects were pedestrian by today's standards. The voice dubbing was atrociously done with syncing mistakes in virtually every single scene of the movie. In comparison, many small budget films are way ahead of this film in this aspect. It's not a difficult thing to fix. It's just that the filmmaker either doesn't care, or he is too lazy and assumes that the Indian audience is stupid anyway. My assumption is that the actors did not follow the screenplay of the film and forgot the lines in the dubbing room and 'replaced' the scenes with whichever lines that came in their head. Apparently, this means that they also didn't record guide voice tracks on location to help in the dubbing. Otherwise, in one of the scenes, why is Kabir Bedi mouthing,"And then", but we hear "Aur phir"?

Cinematography - Kabir Lal strikes again with unintentionally super-shaky dollying and tracking. Not to mention, a plethora of out-of-focus shots. It makes one wonder what he has been learning all these years in the industry. Check out all his films, the problems are always so similar that you would think this was a 'style' of his work. Pardes, Taal, Yaadein and Kaho Naa Pyaar Hai come to mind. Expectedly, there are bound to be people here who think that those films have nice cinematography.

Set design - Sunny, the fat super spy enters a 'chemical' factory a la Mission impossible via some duct. He spies on a security guard who watches over CCTV cameras connected to, voila! A multitrack sound mixing control! What the heck is that?!!!!! I started laughing at this comedy scene. At the same time, i felt strangely embarrassed that the Indian audience was seriously gulping down this gobbledygook. Later on, an African-American man speaking with an Indian accent arrives to repair the faulty CCTV cameras. He pulls out a couple of 1/4 inch sound jacks from the multitrack mxing control to 'correct' the problem! :stupid:

Editing - It was all poor Suresh Urs could do to stick this sorry excuse of a film together.

Music - The music was ok, but not quite befitting of the 'biggest' Indian film ever. Also, I noted that the music was probably arranged by someone else. Someone younger and more enterprising.

Why I gave it 2/10 at all? Preity Zinta's restrained performance and certain scenes that worked because of her.

If we give our hard-earned money to money-spinning filmmakers like these, we are telling them, "Go ahead...go ahead making trash. Why bother with quality? We don't care. Just bash those Pakis and listen to the cash registers ringing!"


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