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Predict Indian Box Office Outcome of Kya Kool Hai Hum
Poll ended at Tue May 10, 2005 5:34 pm
Hit/ Super Hit 25%  25%  [ 1 ]
Average/ Above Average 50%  50%  [ 2 ]
Flop/ Disaster 25%  25%  [ 1 ]
Total votes : 4
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PostPosted: Fri May 06, 2005 5:34 pm 
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Not much was expected of KKHH in comparison to Main Aisa Hi Hoon.
viewtopic.php?t=7641 As Arsh mentioned in another thread, MAHH has been trashed (Indiafm, Rediff) by the reviewers (only one star by TaranAdarsh/ Indiafm), KKHH got 3 stars from TaranAdarsh/ Indiafm plus all the praise.

Perhaps Taran's review/ rating will hit the marquee this time?? Let's wait and see.

Excerpts:

http://www.indiafm.com/reviews/05/kkhh/index.shtml

Kyaa Kool Hai Hum

Fasten your seat belts and get set for a joyride called KYAA KOOL HAI HUM. A rib-tickling comedy on the lines of MASTI and AMERICAN PIE, this Sangeeth Sivan-directed film follows the same path that -----

If you're looking for logic or sensible cinema, KYAA KOOL HAI HUM is not for you. But if you prefer the laughathons -- films that stress on masti and dhamaal in those 2.30 hours -- KYAA KOOL HAI HUM is just for you.

Targeted at the youth and laced with naughty jokes and hilarious situations, KYAA KOOL HAI HUM is akin to a 'kool' shower in this scorching heat. It refreshes you for sure!

KYAA KOOL HAI HUM abounds in illogical situations and the writers [Sachin Yardi, Pankaj Trivedi] make no bones about it. The gags, punches and situations -- most of them are of the nonsensical variety -- keep you in splits and thoroughly entertained through the entire first half.

Besides, the film moves at a lightening speed, giving the viewer no time to blink an eyelid. Not just Tusshar and Ritesh, but even Isha Koppikar, Anupam Kher and Razzaq Khan's characters keep you glued to the goings-on. It's these characters and their interaction with the two boys that makes the mood upbeat.

Sangeeth Sivan tackles a different genre this time around and he does it extremely well. It's difficult to make people laugh, but Sivan succeeds in tickling your funny bone at most places.

he has extracted wonderful performances from one and all, which is a tall achievement considering the fact that none of the actors are supposed to be veterans at comedy.

One of the strong pillars of KYAA KOOL HAI HUM are its dialogues, which are exceptional [also penned by Sachin Yardi, Pankaj Trivedi]. The witty one-liners are sure to catch your attention from the word go. Without doubt, the dialogues are the USP of the enterprise.

there's no denying that both Ritesh and Tusshar vie for top honors. After MASTI, KYAA KOOL HAI HUM is another film that showcases Ritesh's talent to the optimum. The actor sheds his inhibitions and delivers an incredible, knockout performance.

Tusshar is lovable and the sincerity in his performance shows all through. Cast in a role that suits his persona, Tusshar handles his part with remarkable ease and emerges trumps. The innocent look, coupled with his performance, makes him a winner.

Isha Koppikar is a revelation. The industry and moviegoers are sure to wake up to this reservoir of talent after this film. The role of an uncouth cop would've fallen flat had it been entrusted to someone inferior, but Isha handles it like an efficient professional.

Neha Dhupia doesn't really get much scope or the best lines, but she fits the glamorous part extremely well. Anupam Kher is in form after a long time. He is outstanding! Razzaq Khan is another actor who is superb. His pronunciations are sure to make the audience go wild.

On the whole, KYAA KOOL HAI HUM is a refreshing, fun-filled entertainer targeted at the youth mainly. At the box-office, the film should sail safe on the basis of the youth brigade. Its business at multiplexes during the weekends mainly will be heartening. Has the potential to grow with a good word of mouth!

Rating:- * * *.

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

And the film has perhaps not been picked up for theatrical screenings in North America in favour of Main Aisa Hi Hoon??


Last edited by rana on Fri May 06, 2005 5:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Kya Lukewarm Hai Hum
PostPosted: Fri May 06, 2005 5:36 pm 
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Kya Lukewarm Hai Hum

Raja Sen | May 06, 2005 18:13 IST


Kool isn't for everybody. And neither is Sangeeth Sivan's new film, titled with enough Ks to keep the head honchos of Balaji Telefilms quite, I daresay, kontent. The film has been promoted as 'a Masti kind of movie', which isn't saying too much.

But then, it isn't trying to. The new film is expectedly juvenile, puerile, over-the-top, loaded with entendres so singular in meaning it's a shame to call them double, and, all in all, anything but subtle.

Which is fine, because that, again, is what this genre is trying to be: a not-quite 'family' comedy, a bawdy affair with skimpily dressed women to make up for the lack of plot, and something basically college kids will enjoy laughing at, despite simultaneously raising a condescending eyebrow or two. Not to mention ample nudge-nudge-wink-wink moments.

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But that was Masti, and this, well, is not.

The film starts off well, establishing Tusshar and Ritesh as a couple of wannabes trying their best to fit in, establish their own groove, meet women and somehow get rich as quick as possible. Obviously, work isn't really a part of their vocabulary as they mooch through life in every manner, ducking landlords, running from bouncers and picking up several convenient alter egos in the course of an evening. Nothing very original, but 'fun' nevertheless.

When we first meet these lads, we like them tolerably enough. As a bunch of other characters are thrown into the increasingly insane mix, we slowly begin to long for scenes like we saw at the start, where Ritesh coolly riffs off his straight-man Tusshar. They have pretty good chemistry, and go reasonably well together. But then comes that most unnecessary -- in this case -- ingredient for a risqué comedy -- a plot -- and it throws everything awry .

And what an absolute ripper of a plot it is -- the scriptwriters tossing in a transvestite (Bobby Darling, who else?), an eccentric sex-crazed psychiatrist (Anupam Kher), a serial killer, hapless policemen, bandits in Osama and Bush masks, and most every comedy cliché you can come up with. The film sadly turns from (the very initial) frothy to frown-worthy. Too many inane characters spoil the broth, which was an insubstantial stew to begin with. With the compulsory droplets of emotion and melodrama, the film, after the first one-fourth, is essentially ruined.

Ritesh Deshmukh, with all due credit, is the best thing in Kya Kool Hai Hum. The Masti dork here plays the know-it-all who optimistically wants the world to call him 'dude'. Predictably, he strikes out constantly, but his scenes are worked with considerable élan, enough for us to say the fellow has a Bollywood future.

Then again, it'd help if he worked in a film where his role isn't whittled cruelly down to a decidedly second lead because the producers want their kid to shine.

Unfortunately, the said kid doesn't. Tusshar Kapoor might be one of the most likeable actors on screen today, by sheer dint of his diligence and earnestness, but he can't carry a film as a leading man. When he mouths words of romance, you're advised to bury your face deep in popcorn, and hope it ceases fast. The two guys, as mentioned, do well together, with a few punchline-filled scenes managing to work smoothly, but they aren't given enough screen-time together. Other characters need room to be introduced, you see.

Then, there are the women.

Now, Isha Koppikar isn't, by any stretch of a benevolent imagination, an 'actress' but, in this film, she is comparatively better than Neha. Not that this is a great benchmark, given that the Dhupia woman -- she's playing a doctor? Of course! Can't you see she's wearing glasses in her first two scenes? -- has less time on-screen than the stammering laundry man, the euphemistically named Popat.

Back to Isha, here we meet her in policewoman garb, complete with betel nut and barbell, a tough khaki nut opposed to all men. Yawn -- Hema Malini she ain't! Koppikar puts on a harsh Marathi tone, but once in love with the murder suspect, both her accent and attitude conveniently melt away.

Then again, this isn't a movie which requires the word Anupam Kher's Dr Screwwallah repeatedly emphasises -- 'logic'. We aren't meant to think about the implausibility in every single frame of the film; we are meant to willingly suspend cynicism and laugh.

Kya Kool... does have moments where we grin, and there are a few wittily written and surprisingly sharp lines. And then there are the bits Ritesh pulls off by himself. Unfortunately, there aren't enough of these situations, and we spend more time groaning than actually laughing.

Kya Kool Hai Hum starts well, sags in the middle, and ends on a surprisingly spry high -- which would be acceptable enough, if only the flabby middle wasn't two hours and 40 minutes long.


*** Well, it is totally opposite!!


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