POSSIBLE SPOILERS:
All right, I just watched Kyon Ki. Ahem...it was GARBAGE. GARBAGE. Roughly the first half was strongly "inspired by" One Flew Over the Cockoo's Nest, whereas the second was about as trite, obligatory, contrived "Bollywood" as you can imagine. Salman Khan was...Salman Khan. Thus, in the film, he was pretty bad. He didn't "act" (he never does, right? Isn't that his "thing"?); he was just sometimes-loud, sometimes-sad Salman Khan. The supporting cast had no scope; these weren't the believably insane characters of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest: they were there to fill space. Jackie Shroff hammed it up, and his character was typical and weak. Salman's characterization was slipshod: all over the place. At the start, he's totally OK, from where he slips into more and more insipid "nutty behavior" (which doesn't make sense in the story). About halfway through, Rimi Sen shows up, and we get a little while of "playboy, romantic Salman." Hell, a lot of it is just a Salman-showcase. The song at the hospital, even, manages to get him into some "club" clothing, and get all "jiggy." The songs, per se, aren't bad, but they're not what should be the selling-point of the movie, either. Kareena Kapoor does a good job, but her character isn't terribly engaging. Om Puri's character is just idiotically thought up. He's like a cross between Munnabhai M.B.B.S.'s Boman Irani, and One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest's "Nurse Ratchett." (Suniel Shetty's in it, in what may be considered a true "guest appearance": I think he has a total screen-time of about ninety seconds [literally]). The ending is RETARDED. It made sense in Jack Nicholson's film, but, here, it's a pitiable attempt to impose some sort of sick, twisted "tragedy." Also, the "tragedy" anything but goes with the film's obvious predilection for te light-hearted, in place of the "subtle." When you have jackass, fruitcake security guards running around, pissing up a scenes, a "serious" conclusion doesn't really work. The film seems to have no idea what audience it wished to target, being too stupid to appeal to people looking for a "good film," and too "Shah Rukh [or Salman] Khan," for those who settle for just having fun for a few hours. Altogether, Kyon Ki is an utter shit-fest, beginning to dumb-ass end.
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