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PostPosted: Sat Dec 23, 2006 10:44 pm 
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I watched film, last night, unexpectedly sound was good! It is more on line with Priya's Hungama and imho, was better than stupid garam masla!!

Govinda is long gone, totally out of form and shape.

It seems like Hungama in London!

No rimi Sen, Lara was decent!

But RSVP of film is Akshay Kumar I thought first time that he did come long way in comedy and was pretty natural this time with able and dependable support from Paresh Rawal and Yadav( would liked to see more role)

I would recommend a good family giggles to past time, if you do not have any thing better to watch and you do not want to waste your eyes and tears on rotten Babul!

On opening responce was just luke warm? Hall was not full for opening day! but imho, will pick up with word of mouth.

Govinda fans will like to see come back of their favorite star that is overshadowed hugely by Akki the rising star here!

Priya try to weave suspense thriller with comedy but does not quite succeed!

Do not leave the theater without watching END CREDITS! I thought that was the better part of entire film.

I am glad no Shitty or John here!

More people still watching Dhoom 2.

do not get surprised if you have seen, Priya style entire cast climax before!!

I thought it was inspired from ITS A MAD MAD WORLD!? :?: :idea:

Previews were EKLAVYA( MUSIC?), SALAM E ISHQ etc!


Last edited by Zoran009 on Sat Dec 23, 2006 11:16 pm, edited 2 times in total.

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PostPosted: Sat Dec 23, 2006 11:13 pm 
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Bhagam Bhag: Akshay top, Govinda flop

Gullu Singh | December 22, 2006 18:59 IST




The promos of Bhagam Bhag give the impression that the film is Govinda's Bollywood comeback. But after watching it, I couldn't help but wonder where was Govinda in the film?

The Hero No 1, who used to make us laugh and inevitably got our feet tapping during his song sequences, is missing in action in this film. He simply plays second fiddle to Akshay Kumar, who steals the show.

The story revolves around a theatre company headed by Sethji (Paresh Rawal), whose company is offered to do an act in London. Of course, not once do you see any of the actors rehearsing.

When they are about to board the aircraft, the play's heroine, played by Tanushree Dutta, disappears. But still, the theatre group board the plane to London, and decide to find a new heroine.

Enter Lara Dutta, a girl with suicidal tendencies, who bumps into Akshay one day. She replaces Tanushree in the play. Surprisingly, no one bothers to find out whether she can act, dance or sing.

Akshay soon falls in love with her but later, finds out that she is already married.

There are far too many characters in the film, and by the end, you're left wondering who's who. Asrani, Sharad Saxena, Rajpal Yadav, an overweight Jackie Shroff (playing a London police officer) and innumerable other characters keep running on the streets of London with sticks. The law and order machinery seems to have no problem with that.

Director Priyadarshan sticks to his old tested and tired formula -- a comedy of errors, and you're left wondering how many times he will continue to repeat the same formula.

The film flows well till the interval, but loses steam then on, as Priyadarshan adds an element of suspense, making you wonder if the film is a comedy or a thriller.

Akshay looks old -- you can see patches of white in his stubble. Govinda looks old as well. The only real Govinda moment in the film is when he sings the already popular song, Signal. He has his funny moments but lacks the punch. And he really needs to step on that treadmill.

Paresh Rawal is wasted, with few comic moments. Rajpal Yadav has his moments too.

Priyadarshan's silly comedy does not end here. The three actors --Akshay, Govinda and Paresh -- are wanted by the London police for a murder and their pictures are flashed all over the local newspapers. Yet, they roam all over the city without a care.

Lara keeps disappearing in the film. Priyadarshan tries to introduce suspense with her character but after a point, one couldn't care less whether she was dead or alive.

The real hero of the film is Akshay Kumar. He outshines everyone and has some of the best dialogues in the film. He is a treat to watch.

Rediff Rating: 2/5


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 05, 2007 6:19 am 
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(I suspect that there will be spoilers ahead; so, if you're concerned about that sort of thing, you might want to stop reading:)

Priyadarshan seems to be one of those directors who can pull turd after turd out of their assholes, and still somehow not become the objects of critics' and audiences' venomous ridicule. Yes, Priyan somehow weaved together a hillarious, intelligent, sincere film called Hera Pheri in the year 2000. Since then, however, he hasn't pulled even a single magical delight out of that directorial top-hat of his. Hungama fell apart at the end, but was overall all right, and that's as close as the man came to success after Hera Pheri. Again, though, through some freaking pact with Satan, Priyan goes on being regarded as a competent, intelligent film-maker. If nothing else, I think Bhagam Bhag should be the final straw in breaking this one-hit-wonder's relentless, undeserved credibility.

I'll start with the good, since there's just so much bad, and I want to start out with the easy stuff. Akshay Kumar — after sucking goose-crap in the boring, unfunny, painfully-stupid Garam Masala — is back to his comedic best. He's not the "Raja" that he was in David Dhawan's incalculably under-appreciated Mr. & Mrs. Khiladi. Instead, Kumar gets to play here the one guy in the film who is both believably funny, and, well, has a brain in his skull. It's in part the way his character is written, but also largely the way Akshay plays it that makes "Bunty" the only sympathetic character in Bhagam Bhag. When everyone else is still pulling very 1990s "running around and screaming like a fucking Bellevue-runaway" bullshit, Akshay Kumar's character is concerned that they keep the buffoonery to an utter minimum. His lines as the lover, as the homocide-suspect, as the entertainer — his delivery of them: Kumar just steals the show.

It's nice to see Govinda back on the big screen, but it would be foolish to call this his "comeback vehicle." He's got a better part in Bhagam Bhag than Amitabh Bachchan had in 1997's Mrityudaata (the latter's supposed "comeback film"), but he's got next to no screen-time. Yes, Priyan grants him a few classic fast-talking Govinda lines, but, other than those few-and-far-apart moments, the man has nothing to do but occasionally hang around Akshay Kumar. Paresh Rawal, too, is predictably watchable, but, toward the end, his "Champak" just forgets the person he's been till that point in the film, and becomes a bumbling, fumbling, foolish "Baburao" (Hera Pheri) clone (hell, he even gets the eyeglasses for a second or two). Rajpal Yadav, though not yet what Johnny Lever was for the late 1990s, is getting there. Of course, that's a terrible fucking thing. Unlike Lever, Rajpal Yadav has talent; like him, however, he's grossly over-exposed, and resorting to the same gimmicky tricks in every comedy cameo he gets. I think, in Bhagam Bhag, he still works; but, just barely so. Jackie Shroff is finally not sickening to watch again, and Lara Dutta is just adaquate in her small (stupid-as-shit) role. Neither has much to do, though, and, thus, neither really affects how good or bad the film is.

Unfortunately, most of the remainder of the "secondary cast" is composed of raving idiots. Sharat Saxena is a decent actor, and he tries to work with what he has, but, let's face it: what he has is the dumbest, most annoying part in the movie. "Yes, boss" gets irritating by the fifth time it's uttered; by the twelfth, I almost want to tear into the screen. Sadly, all this happen within the first two or three minutes that his character is on screen. (More sadly, he's got a decent bit of total screen time, but only the one line to fill it.) I hate Arbaaz Khan, and he doesn't do anything to make me not hate him, here. He's not around for too long, but every time he shows his face, I want to throw my show at his head. I abhor Manoj Joshi about as much as I do Arbaaz Khan, and he's at least as despicable an actor. Though he has more room in which to work than does Sharat Saxena, he manages to flaunt his pitiable skills by making you hate his presence even more than the latter's. Shakti Kapoor's character is not just neglectable; it's intrusive. His "Guru" pops up at all the wrong times, and actually doesn't do a thing to facilitate the plot. His mere existence is an ode to how insane Priyan has gone.

I guess I started in on the bad in that last bit, but, here's the last of the good: "Signal" is a hell of a way to start off the movie. The ending-credits song works as well. Till about fifteen minutes before the interval, the movie holds together as a good-enough comedy, and Akshay gets the pleasure of pulling it a few notches above being merely "adaquate." ...That's it.

The bad: Just about eveything that happens from about a quarter of an hour before the intermission, until right after the words "Filmed by Priyadarshan" shamelessly come splattered onto the screen. Bhagam Bhag is a movie that has no idea what the hell it wants to be. It starts out a comedy, but soon thereafter becomes something that tries to be much darker. Seeing someone stand in a room, lit afire — plainly, painfully, obviously — is not something that belongs in a light-hearted comedy. I don't object to violence of gore or anything, but I don't see how it's meant to work in a comedy, either. Death can occur in a comedy: Weekend At Bernie's is just stupidly good fun. If people are to be killed (even supposedly) left and right, that's fine... so long as it's done against a comical back-drop. Bhagam Bhag, however, seems to go all out in trying to elicit moods of altogether different genres of films at several moments. One minute, it's a comedy; the next, a thriller; the next, an "on-the-run" film; the next, an "on-the-run" comedy. The tempo of the film is about as consistent and compelling as the background music to which it is set. The climax is not only dumb and half-assed per se (for the love of god, cease trying to explain the excess of horse-manure that you've spread over the past two hours of your film by having some mysterious character "explain it all" in the sum of about five minutes... ALL OF YOU FILM-MAKERS: STOP IT!), it's totally at odds with the tone of the other goings-on of the plot. How can anyone accept an emotional climax when a barrage of retards is scaling the steps of a clock-tower to reach the scene? Which brings me to my final gripe:

I don't know just why he does it: I don't know if he thinks it's honestly funny, if he's under pressure to make an ass of himself by the mob, if he's fearful that "breaking tradition" will result in his untimely and gruesome death. I don't know what it is about him, but Priyadarshan seems to harbor this unassailable fucking proclivity to include, at the ends of all his pictures, about ten minutes of every fucking character in the script running around and behaving, almost literally, as though he or she were a retard who was wrongly placed in an insane asylum, and has now escaped and decided to wreak havoc on the tolerance of the audience. Following the shitty suit of all his other movies that I can recall having seen, Priyan's Bhagam Bhag ends on a note of sheer bull-shit idiocy. The film's about to end, and it hasn't happened yet, so every cast member of the project is paraded on-screen simultaneously to hand from a ladder or something like a god-damned moron till every last one has suffered some sort of comical injury. ...Yeah. It barely worked in Hera Pheri, and hasn't worked once since, but Priyan seems just convinced that this little trick of his is pure gold, and so refuses to let it go. Well, it's not gold; it's a 24-kt. brick of shiny yellow shit, and it needs to stop.

A good movie is more than just a couple of very-enjoyable moments. It's a total, coherent effort, which Bhagam Bhag just is not. Maybe it's high time that Priyadarshan stopped being praised as some sort of creative genius, and instead became recognized as a guy who, one time, got lucky (or, maybe, managed to do a good job on his own). I haven't seen his regional films, and it's entirely possible that his work there is utterly marvelous. Maybe Priyan's just not good at making good Hindi films. Maybe he doesn't care enough to really try in the "Bumbai industry." Maybe it's this, or maybe it's that. No matter what, though, what it certainly is not, is an acceptable reason to praise a man who's done nothing of value, nothing meritorious, in more than five years. Bhagam Bhag is stupid, sloppily-thrown-together garbage, and it's about time for Priyadarshan to shape up, or ship the hell out of the movie-making business.


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 05, 2007 5:01 pm 
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I loved Hera Pheri (2000) a lot because of dialog based comedy compared to all other Priyadarshan's comedy movies (after 2000) and Niraj' Phera Hera Pheri, which had comedy based on characters running around and messing up.

Similarly, I liked one-liner from Warsi in Kabul Express compared to running around comedy in Bhagam Bhag.


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PostPosted: Fri Jan 05, 2007 6:43 pm 
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VijayDinanathChavan wrote:
I loved Hera Pheri (2000) a lot because of dialog based comedy compared to all other Priyadarshan's comedy movies (after 2000) and Niraj' Phera Hera Pheri, which had comedy based on characters running around and messing up.

Similarly, I liked one-liner from Warsi in Kabul Express compared to running around comedy in Bhagam Bhag.


as long we keep patronizing priyadarshan, churning/remaking this same running around crap/month, thats what we will get!

He has found his easy money making machines and thats too, too fast! :evil:


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PostPosted: Sat Jan 06, 2007 12:13 am 
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I really wish Priyadarshan would drop his apparent addiction to the bull-shit "running around" stuff. Honestly, Priyadarshan is now what David Dhawan once was, while Dhawan's somehow magaged to go from atrocious to "OK."


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