Saturday, April 6, 2013

Chasme Baddoor



The occasional laughter



                As I planned to catch Chasme Baddoor this weekend, my obvious homework for reviewing it was watching its original, which I must admit I couldn’t. Surprisingly, not having watched the original totally worked for me, as I could experience the novelty of the story without having to scrutinize and compare the two films.

                Director David Dhavan tries to pull out his type of humour out of a 1981 comic film Chasme Baddoor. Now to begin with, the story is simple, predictable and really stupid in parts. So all Dhavan could offer us is a big laugh riot in which he didn't totally succeed. Witty one- liners and some well written scenes are the saviours but film falters to totally appeal to the audience as the original did.
 
 

                Dhavan uses the clichés: Friends falling for the same girl, crossing agendas, lies and then a settlement. What he does right here is that he writes a fast paced screenplay and finishes the movie within 2 hours, not giving us the chance to lose patience. The first half disappoints as it offers a repetitive script and some pretentiously comic dialogues that provide absolutely no humour. It is fun to watch mad dialogues, but don’t be too surprised to find some really stupid one’s too here!

                Dhavan uses the location of Goa well. Beaches, cafes and shopping malls are well shot. Editing is interesting, especially in the flashbacks. Costumes are conflicting; you see a broke Ali Zafar in branded clothes and specs. Music is fun, catchy and one of Sajid-Wajid’s better works.

                Dhavan messes up the casting. Ali Zafar as the lead character seems out of the place and doesn’t find his spot in any scene. Tannu Pannu as the lady love fails the impress and needs to take big lessons on acting. Anupam Kher, Rishi Kapoor and Lilette Dubey are dependable as always. Siddharth and Divendu Sharma sparkle through the film with a superb comic timing.

 

Dhavan offers you a not so bad film. If you are ready to settle for it, go watch it. I am going with an average 2.5 out of 5 for David Dhavan’s Chasme Baddoor.
 

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