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PostPosted: Fri Oct 25, 2002 2:24 am 
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DEWANGEE: " the only hope looks HOPELESS!!AFFAIR!

Producer: Nitin Manmohan
Director: Anees Bazmee
Starring: Ajay Devgan, Akshaye Khanna, Urmila Matondkar, Seema Biswas, Suhasini Mulay, Farida Jalal, Suresh Oberoi
Music: Ismail Darbar
Lyrics: Salim Bijnori & Nusrat Badr

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Genre: Thriller
Recommended Audience: Parental Guidance
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Released on: October 25, 2002
Approximate Running Time: 2hr 45min Reviewed by: Mandeep Bahra
Reviewer's Rating: 7 out of 10
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Cumulative Rating: 6.25 out of 10
Rated by: 20 unique users

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Director Anees Bazmee seems to have developed a penchant for remaking Hollywood flicks. His last film, Pyaar To Hona Hi Tha, was almost a scene for scene rip-off of French Kiss. Giving away the plot of this thriller is not my intention, but Deewangee is heavily inspired from the Richard Gere, Edward Norton starrer, Primal Fear.

Raj Goel (Akshaye Khanna) is a hot-shot lawyer, famous for never having lost a case and also publicly vocal about his belief in truth and justice. He is so engrossed in his career that he hasn’t yet selected a bride, much to his mother’s (Farida Jalal) dismay. Never fear, Sargam (Urmila) is about to sing and dance her way into Raj’s heart.


Why was Ashwin Mehta murdered? Is Tarang guilty? If you’ve seen Primal Fear, you’ll have a fair idea of where this story is heading.

Ajay Devgan takes on the challenging task of essaying a role that garnered Ed Norton an Oscar nomination. Does he succeed? To an extent, but post interval he lapses back into his trademark ‘three-words-at-a-time’ pattern of speech.


Urmila is fantastic in the song sequences, as expected. However, she is unbearably annoying whenever she has to convey distress or fear, which is most of the time, unfortunately.


The pre-interval court case is well handled and some of the secondary character artistes, such as Seema Biswas, Suhasini Mulay and Suresh Oberoi are enjoyable to watch.

The obligatory love triangle woven into the original story is not too much of a hindrance to the enjoyment factor.


However, the love triangle gets more attention in the second half when the plot goes haywire (having now abandoned the ‘Primal Fear’ template). Clichés are showered on the unsuspecting audience and the action leads to a climax that borrows heavily from John Woo films. I suspect budgetary constraints are responsible for Woo’s trademark white doves being replaced by pigeons, but hey, that’s probably more realistic for India.

Akshaye Khanna is the highlight of the film! Despite being saddled with what is conventionally the second lead, he manages to rise above all his co-stars and the clichés. While most critics will praise Ajay Devgan´s performance, it is actually Akshaye’s portrayal of Raj Goel that deserves the kudos. Raj is not the goody-two-shoes you expect him to be, and his ability to beat the bad guy at his own game by playing a little dirty makes him more believable.

Ismail Darbar’s music is put to good use and combined with Vaibhavi Merchant’s choreography, the songs are a visual and audible treat. Amar Mohile’s background score is suitably dark and chilling for the more macabre portions of the film, but the more conventional scenes seem to be decorated with stock, formulaic music.

Technically, the film is very good. If only Anees Bazmee had kept a tighter reign on the script in the second half, Deewangee may have been amazing. All in all, Deewangee provides some good entertainment for the weekend, but it won’t be winning any awards.






http://www.planetbollywood.com/Film/Deewangee/ :baaa:

get ready FOR DVD AFTER THIS WEEKEND!! :oo:




Edited By arsh on 1035512778


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PostPosted: Fri Oct 25, 2002 11:53 am 
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taran the moran hails ..........
http://www.indiafm.com/reviews/02/deewangee/index.shtml
Deewangee

By Taran Adarsh

Neha Arts' DEEWANGEE, written-directed by Anees Bazmee, is inspired by the Hollywood flick PRIMAL FEAR (1996; starring Richard Gere and Edward Norton).

Dynamic and successful criminal lawyer Raj Goyal (Akshaye Khanna) thinks he has it all figured out. An idealistic crusader of justice, Raj is equally committed in punishing the guilty as he is in protecting the rights of the innocent.

His involvement in his work is complete, ruling out any inclination of falling in love. But all this changes when he meets Sargam (Urmila Matondkar), a popular singer with several hit albums to her credit.

Through Sargam, Raj comes across Tarang Bharadwaj (Ajay Devgan), a talented musician. Tarang, Sargam's childhood friend and mentor, is a victim of circumstance, caught red-handed at the scene of a brutal and heinous murder.

The victim is music magnate Ashwin Mehta (Vijayendra Ghatge), found dead in his house, with multiple stab wounds. The violent nature of the murder implies a crime of extreme hate and vengeance. Sargam believes in Tarang's innocence and requests Raj to defend him.

Raj and Tarang have nothing in common, but in the course of putting up a strong defense, Raj's investigations bring him close to Tarang. It starts out as an open and shut case about proving his client's innocence, but in order to exonerate his client, Raj must find the real killer.

Before he realizes it, Raj gets entangled in a mystery more dangerous than anyone can imagine. Is Raj successful in solving the mystery?

For the Indian cinegoers, who are starved for some 'hatke' stuff, the story of PRIMAL FEAR offers enough twists and turns to keep their interest alive. An ideal plot for a Bollywood caper. Perhaps, this thought may have flashed across the minds of the makers of DEEWANGEE, which explains why they have adapted the Hollywood flick.

There's no denying that DEEWANGEE is a novel plot well told. The sequence of events and the pace at which the drama unfolds comes as a bolt from the blue. And, at times, the impact is spellbinding.

The first half is full of astonishments. The courtroom scenes, the sequences between Ajay and Akshaye and the ones between Seema Biswas and Ajay (specially the one when Ajay's split personality comes to the fore!), have been handled deftly. The interval point is amongst the highpoints of the film and catches the viewer completely unaware.

The snake-and-ladder game between Ajay and Akshaye subsequently is equally captivating. But there are some loose ends here as well.

The fault lies in the fact that the script (screenplay: Anees Bazmee, Neeraj Pathak, Humayun Mirza) in the latter half is not enough. Once the battle lines are drawn, the goings-on alternate between exciting and not-too-exciting moments.

Some cinematic liberties also surface. In the pre-climax, for instance, Ajay lands up at the show as a co-dancer and soon thereafter, kidnaps Urmila by guising himself as her driver. This looks utterly clichéd stuff and may not go well with the viewer. Even the climax is prolonged, with the end giving the feeling that the makers have set aside some scope for a sequel. A conclusion to Ajay's character was the need of the hour!

Another sore point is Ismail Darbar's music, which fails to elevate the goings-on. The tunes are just about okay and how one wishes that a story that had so much to do with music (it depicts a music baron, a pop star and a music composer), had everlasting melodies to offer.

Directorially, Bazmee is in great form. Besides drawing outstanding performances from the two lead men, he leaves a lasting impression in several sequences, like –
* The sequence when Ajay's split personality comes to the fore (with Seema Biswas first and Akshaye Khanna later).
* The interval point.
* The sequence in the mental asylum when Akshaye accuses Ajay of strangling him.
* Ajay assaulting Tanaz Currim brutally.

On the technical side, Pushan Kripalani's cinematography is eye-filling. The background score is appropriate.

In an enterprise that boasts of two powerful performers – Ajay and Akshaye – comparisons are inevitable. But, to be honest, it's difficult to gauge who's better.

Ajay Devgan essays a complex role with utmost ease – alternating between a simpleton and the shrewd (as part of the split personality!) with élan. Akshaye Khanna enacts a suave character with terrific understanding, proving yet again that he's amongst the best in the business today.

Urmila Matondkar makes her presence felt in a male-dominated film. Her performance towards the end is praiseworthy. Amongst character artistes, Seema Biswas, Suresh Oberoi and Tanaz Currim are adequate.

On the whole, DEEWANGEE has a novel story with several poignant moments as its USP. A well-made film with a few loose ends nonetheless, it has much to offer as compared to the vendetta fares and mushy love stories being dished out in the garb of entertainment. At the box-office, the impressive cast and the aggressive promotion have resulted in tremendous hype for the film, which in turn should translate into good business, keeping its investors smiling.

Rating:- * * ½.


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PostPosted: Fri Oct 25, 2002 1:46 pm 
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Ajay as Ed Norton? No way!

http://www.rediff.com/entertai/2002/oct/25dee.htm

Deewangee is a faithful rip-off from Hollywood's Primal Fear


Deepa Gumaste

The director of Deewangee, Anees Bazmee, claims his film is not a rip-off from Primal Fear (just as his earlier film Pyaar To Houna Hi Tha was not a copy of French Kiss).

He is partly right. Deewangee is not just a faithful lift from the 1996 courtroom drama starring Richard Gere and Edward Norton in a memorable role. That is only one half of the story.

The other half is, it is a newer version of Yash Chopra's Darr, which in turn had shades of Cape Fear and Sleeping With The Enemy.

Considering how much we are indebted to Hollywood for our plots, one wonders why people from the Hindi film industry find the term 'Bollywood' derogatory.



Anyway, coming back to the madness that is Deewangee, the plot is about Raj (Akshaye Khanna), a famous lawyer who has never lost a case and Sargam (Urmila Matondkar), a pretty dancer-cum-singer who hires him to defend her friend and guru Tarang (Ajay Devgan).

Tarang is caught red-handed running away from the site of music baron Ashwin Mehta's (Vijayendra Ghatge) murder, but claims he's very innocent and manages to convince Raj that he is being framed. So Raj takes up the challenge of defending a man who is most certainly headed for the gallows. In order to do so, he must now hunt down the real killer.

Those who have seen Primal Fear will know that the entire pre-interval portion is a pirated reprint. Barring, of course, the romance between Raj and Sargam and the mandatory song-and-dance sequences (which, as Bazmee rightly pointed out, make his film 'different' from the original).

Deewangee on Rediff
The Urmila Matondkar
interview
The Anees Bazmee
Interview
Deewangee: A Preview

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For the sake of those who have not seen the Hollywood thriller, let me not spoil the fun and spill the beans, especially because this is the better part of the film. Suffice to say Raj manages to keep his track record intact.

As already stated, the latter half degenerates into a pathetic duplicate of Darr with added doses of blood, gore and insanity. There is even an excruciatingly long chase sequence straight out of the Yash Chopra flick.

The film's climax is just as predictable and since everyone already knows what to expect, there are absolutely no surprises. Incidentally, the director has actually left a window open for the possibility of a sequel, and one shudders to think what it might be like if it ever gets made.

It is a difficult task trying to find an upside to a film like Deewangee. There is nothing exciting about either the situations or the dialogues --- at least not for someone who already knows the story. Sadly, Ismail Darbar's music too lacks lustre, barring the romantic number, Pyaar se pyaare and, to a lesser extent, Dholi O dholi. The background score, on the other hand, is quite effective.

As usual, the heroine has little to do apart from looking cute in the first half and scared in the second. It is another matter that she is supposed to be the object of the film's conflict. For what it is worth, Urmila Matondkar executes her part well. Poor Seema Biswas is wasted in a bit role as the psychiatrist hired to analyse Tarang.

The best lines (whatever there are) however are reserved for the two male adversaries, the clever lawyer and the incarcerated defendant. Akshaye Khanna continues with his fine form and puts up a spirited performance as the lawyer trying to keep his professional integrity and his love life intact.

Ajay Devgan does a good job of a complicated role, particularly in the Primal Fear portion of the film. While he does not measure up to Edward Norton's chilling portrayal of the young man accused of murder, for those who don't know about the twist in the tale, he could be full of surprises.

In the latter part though, his character loses its bite. Hence his act too fails to impress.

Finally, one must question Bazmee's decision to credit himself for the story of Deewangee. Wonder what it is with Hindi filmmakers.

Sanjay Leela Bhansali credited Saratchandra Chattopadhyay for a story that just wasn't Devdas, while Bazmee merrily puts his own name down as the writer of a plot that clearly is not his.

If you have not seen Primal Fear, you might want to watch Deewangee. But then, if you have to watch Deewangee, you may as well watch the original.


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PostPosted: Fri Oct 25, 2002 3:25 pm 
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Here r KOMAL's PRECIOUS..2/10..JUST TO COMPLETE THE ROUND!!

Q? Chalegi ya nahin? Call it HIT or MISS? Ur 2 cents?

DEEWANGEE - (Reviewed By Komal Nahta)

Director: Anees Bazmee
Producer: Neha Arts
Music: Ismail Darbar
Lyrics: Nusrat Badr and Salim Bijnori
Starring: Ajay Devgan, Urmila Matondkar and Akshaye Khanna

RATING: 2/10

Neha Arts' Deewangee (UA), inspired from the Hollywood film, Primal Fear, is about a conscientious lawyer, who has a cent per cent track record, engaged by a top female singing-star to save her friend and music teacher from the death sentence. The music teacher had been caught red-handed in the murder of a music company owner for whom the singer used to sing

Ajay Devgan does a very good job as the music teacher. The nervous stammer in his speech is excellent. After impressing the viewers in the role of the petrified accused, he shines as the menacing manic lover. Akshaye Khanna plays the lawyer with utmost conviction. Except in a couple of scenes when he is made to shout his lungs out, he is very good. Urmila Matondkar impresses in emotional scenes and is good in the other scenes. Farida Jalal is alright. Seema Biswas is natural to the core. Tiku Talsania is wasted. Tanaaz Currim is good. Vijayendra Ghatge leaves a mark in a brief role. Suresh Oberoi acts ably in a special appearance. Mohan Kapur, Nirmal Pandey, Nishigandha Wad, Rana Jung Bahadur, Suhasini Mulay and Madan Joshi lend able support.

Anees Bazmee's direction, though good, lacks the sting of a thriller. Not equipped with a tight script (Anees Bazmee, Humayun Mirza and Neeraj Pathak), his narration has some exciting moments but the excitement is not consistent. Dialogues (Anees Bazmee and Neeraj Pathak) are very good at places.

Ismail Darbar's music is a weak point in the film. 'Pyar se pyare tum ho sanam', 'Hai ishq khata' and 'Dholi o dholi' are the better songs and quite melodious but not appropriate to the genre of the film and the audience (youth) it targets. A couple of other songs are too slow for the public's liking. Picturisations of 'Hai ishq khata' and 'Dholi o dholi' are eye-catching. Action scenes (Bhiku Verma and Pappu Verma) have been very well composed. Camerawork (Pushan Kripalani) is of a good standard. Production and other technical values are upto the mark.

On the whole, Deewangee has a few exciting moments but lacks the flow of an entertaining thriller. With repetitiveness creeping in in the second half, the last impression of the viewer is not the best impression. Considering its dull start and the weak days ahead, it will find the going tough. Business in cities and multiplexes will definitely be good due to the class treatment of the angle of split personality.


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PostPosted: Fri Nov 01, 2002 5:00 pm 
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Usually!! screen r the last ones to REVIEW a FILM:

"""DEEWANGEE..GOOD!! but could have been BETTER""

Deewangee
Exceptional performances, gripping story


Cast & Credits
Producer: Nitin Manmohan
Director: Anees Bazmee
Music: Ismail Darbar
Cast: Ajay Devgan, Akshaye Khanna and Urmila Matondkar
Exploring all forms of love ranging from platonic to obsessive, Deewangee encompasses a good story interwoven within a complex screenplay and brought alive by performances par excellence. Although inspired by half-a dozen known and unknown Hollywood and Bollywood flicks (Primal Fear, Darr), Anees Bazmee deserves credit for experimenting with a different subject in a mainstream film, in fact using all the mainstream aspects to the story’s advantage.

The film begins with the brutal murder of music magnate Ashwin Mehta and the subsequent arrest of an innocuous-looking suspect Tarang (Ajay Devgan). Tarang’s protege and childhood friend, Sargam (Urmila Matondkar) approaches criminal lawer Raj Goel (Akshaye Khanna) for help and they eventually fall in love. A psychiatrist (Seema Biswas) confirms that Tarang is a victim of the split personality syndrome, and it could be his counter-personality (Ranjit) that committed the murder. He is acquitted on this ground, but the story exposes us to a startling twist. Tarang, who wins our sympathy for being mentally unstable, is in fact a scheming, highly intelligent and purely evil character, who stubbornly believes Sargam to be his wife. What follows is a brilliant conflict of wit and cunning between Tarang and Raj.

Disappointingly what starts off as a dark and full-of-surprises story veers towards a long-drawn climax of the good guy fighting the bad guy and ends on an uncertain sequel-ish note. Even the editing turns lax, making for a very tiresome second half.

As a writer, however, Bazmee excels giving each character depth. And doing full justice to the characterizations are the actors. Urmila Matondkar fits the bill of a pop-star, yet simple at heart girl. Akshaye Khanna amazes with his dexterous expressions and ability to live the character. Ajay Devgan is a pure delight as he slips in and out of the Jekyll and Hyde characters truly leading us to believe his character is schizophrenic. The camera work is sufficiently good and some shots are exceptionally well thought out. Ismail Darbar’s music has a few hummable numbers.

Deewangee, with smoother editing lessening the staccato pace, and a more taught screenplay would definitely make for a hands-down winner.

—Sonia Chopra


http://www.screenindia.com/20021101/frev.html


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PostPosted: Mon Nov 11, 2002 11:28 pm 
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DEEWANGEE SURVIVES!! :baaa: :cool:

Deewangee Survives
By: Abid
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A low key weekend in Bollywood this one, Diwali´s releases had a chance to redeem themselves at the box office thanks to the fact that no new release challenged them. Surprisingly, it was Aneez Bazmee´s Deewangee which kept up with the race, even though it did not release with the films on Diwali weekend. As suspected, Vashu Bhagnani´s Jeena Sirf Merre Liye managed to hold itself up despite its lackluster opening in many areas, but the film won´t prove a blockbuster or anything close to it. The industry has focused more as of late on music. Several big releases came swinging in and have been doing excellent business for the music industry. Talaash, Aapko Pehli Bhi Kahin Dekha Hai and Saathiya have done their bit in acquiring sales. The music for Indra Kumar´s Rishtey and Harry Baweja´s Karz released this weekend with dense promotions from T-Series. The company has started aggregate promotions for the release date of their soundtracks.




Film
Jeena Sirf Merre Liye
Starring
Tushar Kapoor, Kareena Kapoor
Released
November 1st, 2002
Summary
The film was expected to be another Mujhe Kucch Kehna Hai but it turned out to
be an anti-climax. Unlike the last three times, producer Vashu Bhagnani sold his movie to the
distributors. Perhaps, the failures of his last three films (which he distributed himself) Rehnaa Hai Tere Dil Mein, Deewanapan and Om Jai Jagadish must have persuaded him to sell his movie this time around. The movie opened to the highest collections of around 70%, first day in Mumbai, surprisingly some of the theaters recorded 100% collections (amongst allegation´s of feeding ,as we had said last time). In other territories the collections were as low as 25%. First week collection´s as a percentage of the occupancy range from 66% (Mumbai), 44% (Delhi), 36% (Indore), 32% (Rajpur) and 48% (Aligarh).
Final Verdict
The film will be a loser for the distributors, but not for producer Vashu Bhagnani. A final verdict of average to below average is predicted.




Film
Annarth
Starring
Sunil Shetty, Ashutosh Rana, Preeti Jhangiani, Sanjay Dutt in a Guest Appearance
Released
November 1st, 2002

Summary
We had broken the news last time that the movie could not be released on Friday in Mumbai. That information turned out to be true with a reasoning that the original distributor wanted a price reduction and showed his inability to pay the initial price. Luckily the producer, Ravi Dewan, found
another producer after a 6 hour haggling but lost out on the Friday initial. Only a handful of the cinemas could release the movie that too in the last show on Friday. First week collection´s as a percentage of the occupancy range from 49-50% (Mumbai, these are 6 day collections in comparison to the 7 day ones, there may be variations), 40% (Delhi), 30% (Indore) and 42% (Kanpur).
Final Verdict
After the above incident and collections the outcome is still unclear, but the film may do better than the other two releases.




Film
Waah Tera Kya Kehna
Starring
Govinda, Raveena Tandon, Preeti Jhangiani
Released
November 1st, 2002
Summary
The poor state of Govinda´s career seems to be going from bad to worse. Initially he used to pull through his movies in Mumbai, irrespective of its outcome elsewhere but he is losing that touch also. Sad end to a brilliant comedian´s career. The movie was sold for a very low price compared to an average Govinda starrer and still had a dismal opening of 18-20% in some sectors. Govinda must be thanking his star´s for not distributing the movie in Mumbai. Firs week collection´s as a percentage of the occupancy range from 31% (Mumbai), 22% (Delhi), 20% (Jaipur) and 16% (Nagpur).
Final Verdict
Despite of the low price it will be a loser all over for the distributors. The movie had disaster written all over it and has turned out to be the worst of the three releases this Diwali.



Film
Deewangee
Starring
Ajay Devgan, Urmila, Akshaye Khanna
Released
October 25th, 2002
Summary
When four new releases hit the marquee (Art film Leela being the fourth), it is rare to see a film that released the week before included in a box office report. With the poor state of the industry films are more prone to flopping quickly when they face opposition in upcoming weeks. However, Deewangee had a great opening the week that the four Diwali releases hit the marquee. It has picked up by word of mouth and has sustained itself. In some big towns of UP the film is also doing better than new releases. Even still, however, some suggest it is more a reflection of the poor quality of the new releases and no choice option. The collections fell minimally during the subsequent days
Final Verdict
Like last week Deewangee will be coverage or even below average (if fortune favors it) in Mumbai and do its best business in Hyderabad circuit, where it is running successfully. The film is failing in the rest of the places. In places like UP it is still doing better than new releases which should deem the film the privilege of escaping the usual flop status.


http://www.planetbollywood.com/BoxOffic ... 161251.php


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