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hedwig_fawkes thumbnail
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Posted: 15 years ago
#81
Mixed reviews... hmm... chalo, atleast the BO response seems decent. Some actual figures:

Boxoffice : Badmash Company Opening •May 7, 2010 • 22 Comments
Badmash Company is going to surprise many including me , Movie has opened to good response in morning shows. Opening at NCR and Mumbai multiplexes are in range of 40-60%. This is very good opening considering mediocre star cast. Though movie is expensive(35 Crore) and reports are plain average, It is remain to see how much strong legs it will hold in coming days. Movie released on capacity of approx. 11 Lakhs foot falls per day. Total capacity of weekend is ~29 Crore. The way it opens and looking at reports, if manage to pick up normally on weekend, it should do around ~15 Crore weekend.
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Posted: 15 years ago
#82
no idea whether these are posted or not,sorry in a rush,so pls ignore if already posted..!!!

Badmash Company - Badmash Company Movie Review
Last Updated: 2010-05-07T15:27:24+05:30
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Badmaash Company: Movie Review

07 May, 2010 03:05 pm ISTlINDIATIMES MOVIES

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Director: Parmeet Sethi
Cast: Shahid Kapoor, Anushka Sharma, Meiyang Chang, Vir Das
Rating:


Badmaash Company is an extraordinary story set in the 90's in middle class Mumbai of four young friends who get together to start a company. Their business is an instant hit because they find a way to beat the system...By doing all the wrong things... the right way!

Parmeet Sethi makes an impressive debut as a director with Badmaash Company with an entertaining story and extracting good performances from the cast.

Certainly, worth a watch!
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Posted: 15 years ago
#83

Review: Badmaash Company has zing, style and entertainment

Aniruddha Guha
Friday, May 7, 2010 20:06 IST
Last updated: Friday, May 7, 2010 20:26 IST

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Film: Badmaash Company
Cast: Shahid Kapur, Anushka Sharma, Meiyang Chang, Vir Das
Director:
Parmeet Sethi
Certificate:
U/A
Rating:
* * *

<
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Badmaash in chief: Shahid Kapur in a still from the film
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Bindaas act: Anushka Sharma in a still from Badmaash Company

It's got a background score that sounds suspiciously like Ocean's 11, a storyline with shades of 21, and clichs that you associate with a 'Bollywood' film. In spite of all that, Badmaash Company is immensely watchable. Without some inconsistencies and a little more imagination, it could have been a lot better.

The film starts in the year 1994, with Karan (Kapur), Zing (Meiyang), and Chandu (Das) wanting to make a quick buck after graduation. Along with Bulbul Singh (Sharma), they take on the job of carriers — a 1990s term for people who smuggled imported goods into the country — and soon their aspirations soar.

They form Friends & Co (are they inspired by the sitcom that was a rage at the time?) and start importing goods from abroad. But the business isn't as simple as it seems. Karan, the most astute of the lot, devices a plan to hoodwink customs and save on the duty levied on branded goods: an astronomical 120% in those days. The goods, thus available to the four at a cheaper rate, bring in huge profits for them.

However, then finance minister Manmohan Singh's liberalisation policy, which brought down the duty levied on imported goods, puts a spanner in their works. Karan then comes up with another plan. This time he has his sights set on foreign shores.

Once there, their cons get more ambitious, and the benefits, greater. But the payback is big too, as the four eventually find out.

Each of the three men develops a vice — Zing becomes an alcoholic, Chandu a womaniser, while Karan's weakness is money — and it leads to interpersonal differences and the group breaking up.

After a period of falling out and 'retribution', the four get back together for one more con. This time, though, it's to bail out Karan's uncle from a business debacle and not for monetary gains.

Parmeet Sethi, still remembered as the Punjab da puttar that Simran was to get married to in Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge, gets to kickstart his directorial career with the same banner that launched him as an actor. And, frankly, he does a good job, too. When you read his name under Story, Screenplay, Dialogues, and Direction, you are a wee bit sceptical, but your doubts are laid to rest soon.

The story, of course, isn't anything we haven't seen before. Ambitious youngsters resorting to con jobs to make quick money only to realise their 'follies' eventually is something we saw even recently in the very forgettable Teen Patti, which itself was a rip-off of the Hollywood hit 21. In fact, Yash Raj's Bunty Aur Babli had a similar storyline, too.

Where Sethi makes his mark, though, is in the screenplay, which moves fast and keeps you hooked, and in the dialogues, which make the proceedings fun. His characters are interesting, the casting is apt, and he has managed to extract good performances out of the fairly new bunch of actors.

Setting the film in the 1990s is not only apt, given the plot, but also brings a certain charm to the proceedings. A catchy score by Pritam helps, with Ayashi, Chaska and the title song bringing the film alive. Fakeera, sung by Rahat Fateh Ali Khan, is a great track, too.

You wish, though, that some corners weren't cut. Although the cons have been well thought out and executed, sometimes you get the feeling that the four get what they want a trifle too easily. Whether it is persuading an American company to do business with them though they are newcomers, or securing a bank loan in a foreign country, it all seems a cakewalk.

Karan's marriage with an American for a green card disappears from the plot as suddenly as it appears. Whatever happened to that track? Also, though the more conventional audience may be impressed by the fact that the characters 'realise their mistakes' and Karan has to 'pay for his crimes', it takes away from the inherent zing the film possesses till that point.

Frankly, if Sethi had kept out some unnecessary 'weepy' moments, like the one where Karan's father (Anupam Kher) receives an award, or the one where Karan finds out he's a father, the film could have been shorter, crisper, and more enjoyable. And we would have got to see a Hindi film in which the protagonists aren't apologetic about wanting to do something they don't consider 'wrong', even if it may be so morally.

That little conventionality and some convenient writing apart, Badmaash Company is fairly entertaining. Shahid Kapur rediscovers the good form he struck in Kaminey and seemed to have lost in Chance Pe Dance. The actor has the persona and the skills to carry off the shrewd con man he plays with style.

Sharma looks like a million bucks and puts in a bindaas act. She and Kapur share a great chemistry and are responsible for making the film immensely watchable.

Both Vir Das and Meiyang Chang put in good debut performances and have the potential to be seen in supporting roles on a regular basis.

Badmaash Company is the film entertainment-starved audiences have been waiting for. And this one might actually go beyond 'opening weekend numbers' and prove to be a genuine hit. It has what it takes to do so, for sure.

Edited by -anisha- - 15 years ago
hedwig_fawkes thumbnail
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Posted: 15 years ago
#84
The powers that be, do Public Response videos qualify for this topic as well?

http://www.bollywoodhungama.com/broadband/video/First-Day-First-Show/QCSf7S82/3/First-Day-First-Show-Of-Badmaash-Company.html
gujunpyo thumbnail
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Posted: 15 years ago
#85
Spicezee Bureau

After 'Kaminey', Shahid Kapoor has done it again with 'Badmaash Company'! In some ways, Shahid Kapoor reminds of younger Aamir in 'Dil Hai Ki Manta Nahi', Shah Rukh in 'Kabhi Haan Kabhi Na', as he has the same boyish charm and endearing qualities. It is very likely that Yash Raj Films' latest offering may become a serious rival to 'Housefull' in coming weeks.

It is young, vibrant with a sparkling quality, which is sure to leave its mark on the audience. Directed by debutant Parmeet Sethi, 'Badmaash Company' is a fresh film and unlike most of the YRF productions, it is very realistic.



The film, based in 1990s, is a story of 4 youth who want to make it big in life. Karan (Shahid Kapoor) wants to start a profitable business while Bulbul (Anushka Sharma) wants to be a big model. The other two characters - Chandu and Meiyang - played by Vir Das and Meiyang Chang, aspire to be a filmmaker and bar owner respectively. The foursome comes together to open a rogue company for quick riches and beat all odds by doing wrong things the right way.

The film underscores the fact that one needs a great idea rather money or gun to become big. They bring to light that all one needs to succeed in business is not money but big idea. But they face trouble when due to some unforeseen circumstances; they are forced to stop their company. But just at the nick of time, another million-buck idea strikes them…

What's great about the film is that the ideas shown are really wonderful. One wonders how Parmeet Sethi managed to come up with the original concept in six days time. Shahid Kapoor does a great job and Anushka Sharma looks quite hot and appealing. The 'jodi' has a great chemistry (off-screen we mean!) and Vir Das as well as Meiyang Chang of 'Indian Idol' fame have done their part well. The music by Pritam is intrinsic to the film and the cinematography capturing exotic locales of Thailand and Bangkok is commendable. A great one-time watch!

Rating: Three cheers
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Posted: 15 years ago
#86
Badmash Company - Badmash Company Movie Review
Last Updated: 2010-05-07T15:27:24+05:30
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Badmash Company- Badmash Company Movie Review
Badmash Company
Badmash Company
Director: Parmeet Sethi
Star Cast: Shahid Kapur, Anushka Sharma, Meiyang Chang, Vir Das, Anupam Kher, Kiran Juneja, Pawan Malhotra, Jameel Khan
Shahid Kapoor, the suave and sexy dude is back again after 'Kaminey'. Though Shahid displays the grey shades of his character but he looks fantastic in this flick 'Badmaash Company'. 'Badmaash Company' is the directorial debut of actor turned director, Parmeet Sethi. He had also written the script and dialogues of the movie. It's a Yash Raj Films so audience expectations are highly set for this movie. Aditya Chopra produced the flick. Anushka Sharma adds an oomph factor to the movie. Meiyang Chang and Vir Das also play important characters in the movie. The music of the movie has been composed by Pritam Chakraborty. Anvita Dutt Guptan gave the lyrics. The music of the movie is already a hit.
The movie drags us a decade back in the 1990s. The story of the movie is about four middle class youth Karan (Shahid Kapur), Bulbul (Anushka Sharma), Chandu (Vir Das) and Zing (Meiyang Chang). This bunch of young brains with high dreams work as a team to open up a business of importing stuff which are desired by the young Indians. They break the regular norms and methods and with that their business blooms making them the kings of their trade. Soon, quick money starts pouring in. This is where the story takes a turn, the group of four friends soon realizes that money is just not the only constituent of successful business but it's all about a great idea which clicks the business and they start doing wrong things in a right way and plunge into the world of tawdriness and glamour.
They first enjoy the beginner's luck but soon such circumstances arise that their business sinks down. They soon start mustering ideas and cook another plan to get back their lost success. Could they succeed in their plans? The climax of the story will answer these questions and so let this be suspense. Anushka Sharma's character in the movie is quite opposite to what she had done in 'Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi'. She would be seen flaunting sexy tops and chic dresses in 'Badmash Company'. She is all set to woo all her fans with her new avatar. Well, Shahid will not be a chocolaty boy in this flick. He will play the part of a cool and confident man and is bound to appeal all the ladies watching the flick.
Verdict: This movie is a must watch for people who want to watch a movie with a different plot.
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Posted: 15 years ago
#87

May 07, 2010 - 07:20 PM

Badmaash Company

[ 0 ]

Director: Parmeet Sethi
Cast: Shahid Kapoor, Anushka Sharma, Chang and Vir Das
Release Date: 2010-05-07 00:00:00
Quick Take: Badmaash Company's fun to hang out with

Bottom line for Badmaash Company - go watch it. Your money's worth guaranteed. It's fun, zippy and racy and only occasionally takes itself too seriously. That much we can forgive, given the love we Indians harbour for a 'moral of the story' sorta thing. Crime never pays, sure we all know that. But then films like Ocean's Eleven (Twelve and Thirteen) and directors like Guy Ritchie and Steven Soderbergh have shown us that crime and con can be a cool thing as long as you are not ripping out people's innards or leaving them to die on a highway with a slit throat. Conning people is amusing for the people who do it and if it's a film then for the people who get to watch them do it.

So four friends in a mad bid to get rich do just that. Successfully con people. Karan (Shahid Kapoor) is at the helm. The others are Bulbul (Anushka Sharma, smoking hot), Chandu (Vir Das, extremely competent) and Zing (Chang, aptly cast). Their capers pay off and they all get rich. Karan gets smug and arrogant too along with rich and things start to go downhill. Finally when Karan learns that 'izzat dene se izzat milti hai' he sets off on a path of redemption and self-discovery (albeit with a 'my best friend died' face) and finally rises in his own esteem and that of his friends too. This phase is the bit where the film drags its feet but then the denouement is as fun and racy as the first half.

The slightly apologetic moral undertone notwithstanding Badmaash Company is a wonderful debut by actor turned director Parmeet Sethi. His writing is confident and his direction has composure. And his casting is bang on. This is undoubtedly an ensemble cast film with Shahid getting a slight edge over the others (how else can it be, he is the 'hero') and all the actors do a fabulous job. Anushka Sharma is one to watch out for, as not only does she look pretty darn hot, she can actually act too. Shahid Kapoor is marvelous as he usually is when he seems convinced about a role (Jab We Met, Kaminey) and the way he surrenders completely to become his character is always a pleasure to watch. So coming back to the bottom line - sure place your bets on this one. It's pretty decent cinema


Thats the Filmfare review...Sorry if posted before.
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Posted: 15 years ago
#88
Filmfare gave it 4 stars!!! What's with the extreme reviews?

Anyway, the Economic Times Review :D 3.5 stars

Movie Review: Badmaash Company
7 May 2010, 2036 hrs IST,INDIATIMES MOVIES

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Director: Parmeet Sethi

Cast: Shahid Kapoor, Anushka Sharma, Meiyang Chang, Vir Das

Rating: ***
Imagine a crime caper sans any guns and gore. Not all films of the genre need to be dark and Badmaash Company is just that lighthearted change. The colleagues in this company use wits over weapons to win in the same way like director Parmeet Sethi employs cleverness over clichs to come up with engaging entertainment.

The story opens in mid 90s when an ordinary middleclass graduate Karan (Shahid Kapoor), who aspires to make it big in short time, devices a smart import business where they can evade custom duty and sell foreign goods at low prices to Indians yearning for imported items. With the help of his friends Chandu (Vir Das), Zing (Meiyang Chang) and Bulbul (Anushka Sharma) they find a way to beat the system and make it big. But when the import duty on foreign items is drastically cut down by the government, their flourishing Bangkok business flops.

Now they shift to US and continue their conning commerce until success gets into Karan's head. Due to differences the company collapses with the partners in crime going their individual ways. As each of them renounce their wrongdoings, they come together in the climax to beat the system for one last time – but this time within legal limits.

Parmeet Sethi makes an impressive debut as a writer and directs the film with as much finesse and panache. Unlike Yash Raj's earlier con flick Bunty aur Babli (to which this one was compared) where the hoodwinks were hurried, the conning here is very credibly and comprehensively crafted and doesn't insult your intelligence. From the import duty scam to the housing loan fraud and the final swindle in stock market (also involving Michael Jackson), the deceptions are imaginative and interesting. The pace is swift enough not giving you time to mull over the treachery.

The director doesn't waste time on independently working on the romance track as the focus is primarily on the con games. The sizzling natural chemistry between Shahid Kapoor and Anushka Sharma (refreshingly reinvented from her girl-next-door image of Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi to a cool, confident and come-hither look) makes things easier for him.

Not an out-and-out crime flick, the second half works towards the reconciliation of the characters. While this wasn't really expected from the film esp. with its upbeat and unapologetic approach towards delinquency, Parmeet Sethi still saves the film from turning out to be melodramatic take on good v/s bad. He endorses righteousness without losing on the fun factor by incorporating a smart game plan in the climax.

Anupam Kher as Shahid Kapoor's virtuous father who doesn't agree with his son's ideologies reminds of his submissive act from Khosla Ka Ghosla, more so with Kiran Juneja playing his wife. Parmeet deftly directs Shahid's fallout sequences with all the three of his company colleagues. Shahid's argument with Meiyang Chang and his confrontation with Vir Das at the bistro-bar are commendably acted and executed scenes. The fallout and reunion of friends reminds of the Rock On camaraderie. Also Chang's casting is used to good effect. And this is the third film in a row after Housefull and Ajab Prem Ki Ghajab Kahani where an actor stammers when he is nervous. Thankfully this slapstick attribute isn't exploited much in the film.

Pritam's musical score isn't something that you carry with you beyond the film. The title track is evidently derived from the theme track of Mission Impossible but goes well as a background piece. Cinematographer Sanjay Kapoor skillfully captures the flamboyance of Bangkok and US. The costume designs by Ameira Punvan and Mamta Anand are vibrant and trendy; esp. Anushka Sharma's styling is hot and sexy. Ritesh Soni edits the film with fast-paced energy, never letting you lose your attention.

After dull and disappointing films like Chance Pe Dance and Paathshaala, Shahid Kapoor is back in good form delivering a powerful performance. He gets it correct in every scene exuding oodles of confident. Anushka Sharma looks absolutely ravishing with a bare midriff and plunging necklines and continues to have the most electrifying smile. But she is surely more than mere gorgeous looks. With a lot of conviction, she perfectly balances the bold and beautiful act. Vir Das is hilarious in his high on testosterone act. Meiyang Chang never goes out of control despite playing a hardcore booze-buff. Both Das and Chang come up with strong supporting characters never getting overshadowed by the lead pair. Anupam Kher never goes wrong in his morally right father figure act. Pawan Malhotra and Jameel Khan are good in their parts.

Badmaash Company is a good entertainer. Worth a watch!
ffkhan thumbnail
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Posted: 15 years ago
#89

Originally posted by: tweety_lovely

Movie Review: Badmash Company

A clich-ridden mess

Insulting audiences with 'Housefull' and 'Badmash Company' on consecutive weekends threatens to split the lucrative, undiscriminating dumb-ass demographic.

Director Parmeet Sethi has said that he wrote 'Badmash Company' in just 6 days. He was obviously lying. The film gives the impression that Mr Sethi was just making it up as he was filming, with little or no regard for the audience's intelligence. Make no mistake, 'Badmash Company' is the umpteenth summer skinny dip in Yash Raj's putrid pond of retread action-thriller-musical twaddle. Its all shrill, convoluted and boring, and it sinks in a sea of interminable chases and con gobbledygook. Staying awake during this ordeal of incompetent, incomprehensible stupidity is not difficult - it's so noisy that you can hear it in the next town; staying interested is something else entirely. Thanks to this insipid product, audiences now have a new simile to hoot over - 'amateurishly uneven like a Parmeet Sethi film, and loudly stupid like a Yash Raj film'.

In 'Badmash Company' a bunch of dudes plan on going against the system and making quick money. If this theme were any more familiar you could buy it a bouquet and take it to a dinner date. Call me a victim of cultural brainwashing, but even the audience snickered at the idea of Anushka Sharma conning Manhattan police. The key to conning, as I understand it, is NOT sticking out like a sore thumb. There are the usual glossy foreign locales, montage of scenes with the foursome popping open bottles of champagne, indulging in all kinds of debauchery, parading about in expensive clothes. And in a shocking twist that you'd never see coming they turn against each other. After nearly two and a half hours, it all mercifully ends, leaving the viewer to ponder all the ways that dozens of crores of rupees might have been better spent. Maybe one would have liked 'Badmash Company' better ten years ago, when overproduced co(r)n films were simply stale instead of downright moldy.

Not enough can be said about the intermittently hamming and flat Wooden Leading Man Shahid Kapoor, with his frustratingly self-righteous demeanor, his pursed lips, and eyebrows that seem to have a life of their own. Parmeet Sethi unfortunately did not have access to the horse tranquilizers that Vishal Bharadwaj administered to Shahid while filming 'Kaminey'. Anushka Sharma puts the 'Bad' in 'Badmash' - her vacant-faced, anorexic, midriff-baring Bulbul exists to make sure you know Shahid Kapoor's Karan is heterosexual - useful in a leader of a pack of men on their own. Anushka and Shahid's pairing does sound promising in theory, but their lack of chemistry makes Dhruv Ganesh and Shraddha Kapoor in 'Teen Patti' look like old, familiar vaudeville partners. Meiyang Chang's Zing has no zing while Vir Das' Chandu is practically nonexistent.

Final verdict? 'Badmash Company' is predictably soulless Bollywood tripe, it is thoroughly and maddeningly obtuse. Shelling out Rs 500+ at your nearest multiplex for this sorry excuse of a film would render one of its songs into your life. It goes by the name of 'Fakira'.

Who the heck rated it only half star?😕
And how can a man write any movie review in this language specially like this, "It goes by the name of 'Fakira'"
Edited by ffkhan - 15 years ago
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Posted: 15 years ago
#90
@tweety-lovely,
Your profile picture is making me confused. Again and again I am thinking that BC got thumbs down seeing your profile pic.😆

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