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Posted: 12 years ago
#21

Review: SOTY is no KKHH but it's a fun watch

October 19, 2012 12:57 IST
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A scene from Student of the YearStudent Of The Year is no Kuch Kuch Hota Hai [ Images ] but Karan Johar [ Images ] makes it look good, writes Sukanya Verma.

A lot has changed since I wrote my first ever piece, the music review of Kuch Kuch Hota Hai. I was still a student that year (1998) when I penned down my thoughts on Jatin-Lalit's soundtrack for Karan Johar's directorial debut in a rough note book while listening to every song over and over again on my prized Discman.

In KKHH, which came out in the third week of October, a substantial portion is set in college, sharing its name with my alma mater St Xavier's, and weaves a tender love story between the campus hottie, coolest guy and his tomboyish best friend. The entire scenario was, at once, familiar and relatable.

Forteen years later, I'm back to college, a super swankier upgrade from the last one, to review Johar's latest Student Of The Year (also released in the third week of October). And while it's nowhere as epic or close to home as KKHH, this no-holds-barred musical brimming with bright new faces has enough going for it to ensure a good time.

Now, college is a crucial period in one's life and also the most carefree. But Bollywood prefers to focus on the latter, interpreting it as a premise for fun, games and laughter. Whether it's Khel Khel Mein, Khiladi, KKHH or Main Hoon Naa, canteen takes precedence over classrooms, exams are secondary to extra-curricular activities and romance/ rivalry not report card is what drives a student's ambition. And filmmakers like KJo and Farah Khan [ Images ], lending it the Riverdale High treatment with desi Veronicas and bumbling Weatherbees, just add to the mirth.

Give in to the prospect of an academic township as glamorous and indulgent as St Teresa's (students drive Ferrari [ Images ] and wear Jimmy Choos, the dean carries a Louis Vuitton case and Burberry umbrella, prom nights are hosted on stage twice the size of the one at an awards ceremony, cafeteria could cover half a mall and all-expenses paid holiday weddings in Thailand) and Student Of The Year works well as a shiny, brisk high school fantasy about wealthy kids and poor kids who look like rich kids and their issues -- parents. There's a hilarious snippet to explicate this bizarre and varying degree of parent-child equation that comes forth during weekends at home.

All of which is narrated through a series of flashbacks via close pals of the leading troika (as in the case of Chalte Chalte and Jaane Tu [ Images ]... Yaa Jaane Naa), which builds towards a mysterious (read clumsy) climax. Only Student Of The Year employs this technique with better supporting actors and finesse than its afore-mentioned predecessors.

Treatment is Karan Johar's forte and it is what makes his first film with rank newcomers, despite the absence of a logical plot, so fresh and zany. Unlike KKHH, which had the advantage of two superstars and one dazzling aspirant, neither of SOTY's three key players are seasoned actors. Incisive as he is, the filmmaker is well aware of the strengths and limitations of his inexperienced cast, concealing their inadequacies to imply that strange allure of rawness while drawing on their eager energy to convey a refreshing charm.

With the best of technicians and aesthetics to go, St Teresa embodies the lavish platform he's offering these kids to showcase their proficiency in dance, athletics and fashion.

All three -- Varun Dhawan (strumming a guitar in a shirtless avatar to flaunt his chiseled torso), Alia Bhatt (playing the young fashionista to the hilt against a Gulabi aankhen remix) and Siddharth Malhotra (ramp walking on the campus, anyone?) --receive a smashing introduction befitting of star kids.

While Dhawan is the quintessential neglected, black sheep of a filthy rich family who whiles away his time aimlessly, Siddharth is a go-getter, small-town boy with the single-minded goal of nabbing the Student of the Year trophy. As for Alia, she's just an affection/attention-hungry kid with a wardrobe that could put Cher [ Images ] Horowitz to shame.

Alia has a striking innocence and is an absolute livewire in her introductory scene exhibiting the screen presence of a star. Somehow the script itself doesn't have too much for her. She's not expected to convey anything beyond a wide-eyed, slow-witted campus diva.

Siddharth looks like a younger, leaner Sudesh Berry and exudes terrific confidence. Although the film covers up his stiffness quite a bit allowing his swagger to take centre stage but who knows? With time and effort, he too could polish up and grow into someone like Akshay Kumar [ Images ]. The guy sure is easy on the eyes.

Especially memorable is that quiet 'moment' between him and Alia during a wedding sequence with just some delicate motions and a melodious piano playing in the background. This is the part where you smell -- promise😳.

Of the three, Varun is assigned the most fleshed out role and best lines. His equation with Siddharth is a greater focal point in their coming-of-age than that of either of them and the girl. And the upshot of this bromance is a tad awkward because Varun doesn't have the conviction to pull off a complicated, free-spirited boy with a wry sense of humour.

Even if these characters never go beyond essaying recognisable stereotypes, it's the supporting circle of friends played by Manjot Singh (the adorable whimsical, wish there was more of him), Sana Saeed (the impish central figure of Kuch Kuch Hota Hai sportingly steps into the slot of the hot 'n' phony seductress), Mansi Rachh (sparkles as Alia's feisty best friend), Sahil Anand (plays the sycophant with admirable wit) and Kayoze Irani (Boman Irani's [
Images ] son is endearing as Dilton Doiley in Moose's body) that generate a true sense of warmth and camaraderie.

The real piece of acting comes from Rishi Kapoor [ Images ], of course. As the queer faculty head with designer tastes, assorted brooches (in response to Boman Irani's eclectic ties in Main Hoon Naa?) and part-standoffish, part-smooth temper, Kapoor plays a potentially loud figure with an elegant exuberance that's both sweet and side-splitting whether he's gently caressing John Abraham's [ Images ] bare upper body on a magazine cover or scoffing at the idea of sharing the object of his infatuation -- the robust coach (a fit, dignified Rohit Roy in a fairly small role) with his thepla-offering wife (Prachi Shah) or breaking into an impromptu Dafliwala jig, RK is a class act in every conceivable scenario.

Unlike Kuch Kuch Hota Hai, which was distinctly coy in temperament, the young folk of SOTY shoot expletives with tact, lock lips with elan and parade their gym-toned bodies in skimpy beach wear.

While there's no way it can match the volume of emotions with the one that proclaimed, 'Pyar dosti hai,' it does reveal the director's fondness to film outdoor games. Basketball is replaced by football (and a triathlon of swimming, cycling, running) and dumb charades makes way for a treasure hunt accompanied by riddling, filmi clues.

It could all fall flat and look very silly but KJo's gift for timing scenes maintains a finger-snapping pace to pass off flippant as fun.

Often it is this hold on the viewer through constant influx of escapism and pomp with magnificently choreographed songs, razzle dazzle of colours/style/design, appropriate dosage of humour and ritzy production values that distracts one from Student of the Year's brash celebration of superficiality and obvious lack of depth.

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Posted: 12 years ago
#22
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Movie Review : Student Of The Year

Fresh and zany. Popcorn entertainment at its best!
More on: Filmfare, Sidharth Malhotra, Varun Dhawan, Alia Bhatt, Rishi Kapoor, Ronit Roy

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Movie Review : Student Of The Year

Director: Karan Johar
Cast:
Sidharth Malhotra, Alia Bhatt, Varun Dhawan, Rishi Kapoor, Ronit Roy, Ram Kapoor

Think of a quintessential Karan Johar film and opulence, grandeur, style and candy floss emotions come to mind. Not to forget, the song-and-dance extravaganzas with a lavish sprinkling of stars. And Student Of The Year is just that albeit the stars. But that doesn't seem to affect the film because Karan manages to engage you from the word go with the right dose of humour, emotions and drama.

Student Of The Year (SOTY) traces the life of Abhimanyu Singh (Sidharth Malhotra), a small town boy with a big ambition, Rohan Nanda (Varun Dhawan) – a rich kid, who is emotionally messed up because of a complex relationship with his father (Ram Kapoor) and Shanaya Singhania (Alia Bhatt), the girl every boy is in love with and every girl aspires to be in high school – popular, rich and gorgeous.
Rohan and Shanaya are childhood sweethearts in a tricky relationship (Rohan has quite the roving eye) and among the popular students of St. Teresa's High School or St. T's as it is fondly called. But things seem to awry for all when Abhimanyu enters and ego clashes between the two boys play havoc. But after a series of verbal spats followed by a few practical jokes and some heartwarming moments, the two become thick as thieves.
Amidst all this, the much coveted Student Of The Year competition, founded by gay Dean Yogendra Vashisth (Rishi Kapoor, who's track with coach Ronit Roy is amongst the highlight of the films), keeps everyone busy. But things get messy when Abhimanyu falls for Shanaya and she reciprocates to his feelings. Healthy competition turns into revenge as Rohan and Abhimanyu grapple with their emotions.

Even though SOTY is a high-school drama, at no point in the film does Karan offend the audiences intelligence. Every scene in the film engrosses you. Though he takes familiar material, it's his modern take that makes SOTY a special film.
Among the performances, Sidharth, Varun and Alia do their best not to seem like newcomers and they emerge triumphant. Sidharth's restraint is impressive. Varun is charming; his brilliant dancing skills deserve a special mention. And Alia definitely has what it takes to be a star. The three make confident debuts.
Vishal-Shekhar's foot-tapping compositions keep you in your seats. You're not going to want to buy popcorn during these songs! Kajol's cameo in Disco Deewane is sure to get the whistles. The cinematography and styling make this one helluva good-looking film.
A few scenes deserve special mention – the nail-biting climax of the competition, a silent sequence with just music playing in the background, Rishi Kapoor drooling over John Abraham's six-pack body and his fantasizing moments with Ronit Roy.

Karan deserves brownie points for a brilliant supporting cast. Kayoze Irani (Boman Irani's son) stands out. Ram Kapoor does a fabulous job as the selfish businessman and bad father. His performance makes you feel sorry for Rohan, who subconsciously craves his dad's approval through most of the film.

All in all, Karan's SOTY world is surreal and spectacular yet it has moments that will bring you back to reality and warm the cockles of your heart. This is escapism at its best. Oh and girls, there's enough brawn to keep you drooling!

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Posted: 12 years ago
#23

Student Of The Year Review

October 19th, 2012 by Roshni Devi

Student Of The Year Movie Poster

Rating: 2.5/5 stars (Two-and-a-half stars)

Star Cast: Sidharth Malhotra, Alia Bhatt, Varun Dhawan, Rishi Kapoor, Sana Saeed, Ram Kapoor, Kajol (guest appearance).

What's Good: The performances; the direction; the humour.

What's Bad: The unbelievable portrayal of students; the hamming; the ridiculous explanations in the climax.

Loo break: None.

Watch or Not?: If you're a fan of Karan Johar's fare, you'll definitely enjoy all the dance-drama. Otherwise it's just like a re-hashed version of Kuch Kuch Hota Hai.

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Student Of The Year makes no qualms about being an "escapist" movie. One of the characters introduces the school where all the action takes place – St Teresa – as "…not a normal school. A world in its own."

This is Karan Johar's fantasy land on his canvas, so you have the rich douchebag Rohan Nanda (Varun Dhawan) who (predictably) has daddy issues. With his father (Ram Kapoor) being one of the donors for the school, he has a posse of guys who hang on to his every word. While his rich, hot and spoilt girlfriend Shanaya (Alia Bhatt) hankers for his attention, he still keeps wandering to the other hottie Tanya (Sana Saeed).

When poor-orphan-with-a-scholarship, Abhimanyu (Sidharth Malhotra) joins the school, he threatens Rohan's fiefdom. But soon the duo warm up to each other and become good friends. Heck, Abhimanyu even helps Rohan win back Shanaya after she throws a hissy fit, though Abhimanyu loves her!

Then dean Yogendra (Rishi Kapoor) announces the Student Of The Year competition and all hell breaks loose. Friendships are threatened, fistfights follow and there is lots of love lost.

Watch the movie to find out who wins.

Sidharth Malhotra, Alia Bhatt and Varun Dhawan (Student Of The Year Movie Stills)

Student Of The Year Review: Script Analysis

The story for the movie is very rudimentary: two guys in love with the same girl and the same trophy (note: aforementioned girl and trophy aren't the same.) Even if you make many exceptions for the story – with all the repeated stereotypes – nothing disappoints you like the pathetic explanations in the end. The outburst at the climax deserved to be much stronger. Maybe St T's (as we're supposed to call this institution) is based in some wonderland where everyone comes to school in designer clothes (including Abhimanyu, whom we are led to believe belongs to the lower economic 'Bata' club) and Mercedes Benzs to school, but this la-la-land also doesn't require a minimum age for a driving license or for drinking alcohol in clubs/discos. Then there are the parts which are just for the sake of making you go "Aww…" like Abhimanyu's grandmother's illness. But the humour quotient is bang on.

Rensil Dsilva's screenplay is alright but Niranjan Iyengar's dialogues are pretty good.

Student Of The Year Review: Star Performances

With three big debutantes in the movie, it is a bit difficult to pick and choose, but my vote goes for Sidharth Malhotra as Abhimanyu. He's the sweet charming boy who steals your heart with his sighs. Varun Dhawan does very well as the spoilt brat but there are a few places where he needs to buck up. Alia Bhatt ends up with a very dumb-blonde role who has to do standard ramp poses for the camera but she performs ably. Undoubtedly, Varun is the best dancer among all three.

Rishi Kapoor is perfect as the closet-gay dean. Sana Saeed only gets to pout and flaunt her body as Tanya. Ram Kapoor is very good as the latent villain. Kajol's guest appearance is a pleasant surprise (though I would have loved it if Shah Rukh Khan had a special act as a guest teacher or something).

Student Of The Year Review: Direction, Music & Technical Aspects

Karan Johar's direction is very good but flounders with the script. Cinematography by Ayananka Bose is sleek. Deepa Bhatia's editing is very good. The lyrics are pretty lazy; Ishq Wala Love gives you an idea that there's not much effort into it. Vishal-Shekhar's music is very youthful, and sometimes nuanced.

Student Of The Year Review: The Last Word

Student Of The Year has some really earnest performances and entertaining comedy scenes. Other than that it's a staple Karan Johar affair: ridiculous in parts and dramatic in others.

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Posted: 12 years ago
#24
Movie Review: Student Of The Year
(Drama)
Saibal Chatterjee
Friday, October 19, 2012


Cast:Sidharth Malhotra, Alia Bhatt, Varun Dhawan
Music: Vishal & Shekhar
Director: Karan Johar
Producer: Hiroo Yash Johar and Gauri Khan

The teen spirit that runs through Student Of The Year should have lent the film a bright and fresh feel. It doesn't.

Every little element here, from the story and the setting to the music and the packaging, is an acknowledged nod to mothballed Hindi cinema conventions. Student of the Year reeks of overwhelming creative vacuity.

But Karan Johar's latest film is zestful and frothy enough to appeal to an audience that does not seek much more than some harmless fun from two-and-a-half hours in a darkened hall.

It offers nothing new or inspired and yet, for those that delight in fluff, it might even feel like a breezy entertainer.

Student Of The Year is an updated rehash of Kuch Kuch Hota Hai, the mushy love triangle that KJo made his directorial debut with a decade and a half ago. To tailor it for the times, he throws in mild twists (including stale gay gags borrowed from Dostana and the like) for good measure.

Set on a campus that is as rooted in reality as snowfall would be in the Sahara, this high school musical, sports film and candy floss love story rolled into one is about two buddies whose ties of friendship are stretched to snapping point by the small matter of a shot at the student of the year trophy and the wavering affection of the most popular girl in the institution.

Saint Teresa High is like nothing you would ever see in the real world. The institution's motto is 'Academics, Art and Athletics', but its teaching faculty is rarely seen and textbooks are the last thing on the minds of the pupils.

The batch of 2012 is armed with the latest gizmos, drives flashy Ferraris and two-wheelers and sports the latest designer outfits. The girls wear the skimpiest of clothes and the boys do the shirtless act at the drop of a hat.

They jive, rap, sing, prance around the place and hunt for partners, sexual orientation no bar, to the accompaniment of remixed retro film music.

And when they aren't doing all that, they swim, bike, play football and go gaga over a treasure hunt to stay away from the one thing they should logically be focusing on – their studies.

Cast your mind back to the trio of Shah Rukh Khan, Kajol and Rani Mukherji and compare the shenanigans of the students of Student of the Year with what you saw in Kuch Kuch Hota Hai. The only difference you might spot here would be in the faces – and of course the sculpted bodies of the two male leads.

The two new hunks are Siddharth Malhotra and Varun Dhawan and the object of their passion is Alia Bhatt. An eager bunch of students these, they are unlikely to set new benchmarks for those that will follow them into the business of selling dreams that begin with a robust song, meander through miles of woolly-headed dreams and end with sweet nothings.

One of the two guys, ambitious middle class boy Abhimanyu Singh, squares off against his campus foe-turned-pal, Rohan Nanda, an incorrigible philanderer who has no interest in his industrialist-dad's riches and wants to be a rockstar. The latter's childhood sweetheart, Shanaya Singhania, is a girl who is easy to fall in love with. And therein lies the rub.

Abhimanyu develops a soft spot for Shanaya, who appears to reciprocate. Many recriminations later, the two boys realize that there are more important things in life to take care of. So they dance some more.

In terms of natural screen presence, neither Malhotra nor Dhawan is a patch on SRK. Nor is Alia Bhatt a replica of either Kajol or Rani as far as natural flair goes. So every time they appear on screen, they need the support of heightened physical gestures, ear-splitting music and elaborate dance routines to make their presence felt.

Be that as it may, the first-time actors are enthusiastic enough to make a fair fist of carrying the thin storyline forward without letting the effort weigh them down too much. If only the screenplay wasn't quite so devoid of imagination.

The members of the supporting cast, led by Rishi Kapoor as a gay and garrulous high school principal who nurses a secret yearning for the school's married coach (Ronit Roy), do their best to bolster this bubblegum romance, but given a screenplay loaded with runaway inanities, they are left puffing and panting without getting anywhere.

That is Student Of The Year for you. It definitely isn't the film of the year. But if you like your entertainment to be served up with glitzy but pulpy garnishing, pirouette your way to the nearest screen by all means. If you don't, go for it only if your life depends on it.


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Posted: 12 years ago
#25

STUDENT OF THE YEAR Review

Posted on October 19, 2012by KOMAL NAHTA
STUDENT OF THE YEAR

http://komalsreviews.wordpress.com/2012/10/19/student-of-the-year-review/

Dharma Productions' Student Of The Year (UA), set in a high-school campus, is a story about friendship, with the romantic angle thrown in. St. Teresa is a prestigious high school where there are, basically, two kinds of students ' spoilt kids of the rich and famous, and the intelligent children from middle-class families. Rohan Nanda (Varun Dhawan) is one such student studying in the school. Son of one of the richest Indian men (Ram Kapoor), he is arrogant, brash and has a glad eye. He doesn't get along at all with his father who misses no opportunity to ridicule him because of what he thinks are his son's middle-class pursuits including his dreams of becoming a rockstar rather than toeing the business line. Rohan loves Shanaya Singhania (Alia Bhatt) who is affluent and wears only designer labels. She, too, hates her parents. She loves Rohan but is unhappy about his proximity to other girls, especially school-mate Tanya (Sana Syed) who lusts for Varun.

Abhimanyu Singh (Sidharth Mal­hotra) joins the school. He hails from a middle-class family and lives with his grandmother (Farida Jalal), paternal uncle (Akshay Anand) and aunt (Manini De) as his parents are no more. He is focussed and wants to study hard so that he can become a big man.

At first, Rohan and Abhimanyu can't see eye to eye but an incident changes the equation and they become best friends. Abhimanyu even advises Shanaya on how to ensure that her boyfriend, Rohan, does not stray. However, Abhimanyu soon finds himself being attracted towards Shanaya. Shanaya, too, falls in love with Abhimanyu. Or does she?

All hell breaks loose when Rohan senses that there is something between Abhimanyu and Shanaya. There develops a rift in their friendship.

Even as all this romantic drama is unfolding, Rohan, Abhimanyu, Shanaya and the rest of the students are all competing for the Student Of The Year trophy which would go to the best student. There are several rounds of tests and those emerging successful in test after test are Abhimanyu, Rohan, Shanaya, Tanya, Shruti (Mansi Rach), Jeet (Sahil Anand), Sudo (Kayoze Irani) and Dimpy (Man­jot Singh). The competition is like a do-or-die one because Dean Yogend­ra Vashishth (Rishi Kapoor), year after year, makes his students compete fiercely with each other to bag the trophy. The dean is gay and has a soft corner for the sports coach (Ronit Roy).

Who wins the Student Of The Year cup? And how? Do Abhimanyu and Rohan become friends again? Whom does Shanaya settle down in life with?

The film begins a decade after the high school days of the children are over. Dean Yogendra Vashishth is battling for his life in a hospital in Dehradun, and Sudo decides to have a reunion of sorts in the Dehradun hospital. Do all the school friends meet there? Do the old grudges resurface?

Karan Johar's story has entertainment as its catchword. It may have traces of 3 Idiots, Dil Chahta Hai and Jo Jeeta Wohi Sikandar but elemen­ts from these films have been so intelligently incorporated that the audience doesn't mind the inspirations as what is served to them is a masala fare full of fun and frolic. Rensil D'silva's screenplay is beautifully written. Rensil doesn't for a moment lose sight of Karan's vision for providing entertainment and writes scenes and sequences which entertain the audience continuously. If the first half is light and fun-filled, the post-interval portion has more drama. What could probably have been a little more pro­nounced was the emotional content. The drama does touch the heart but it does not evoke tears, something which could've made the film more solid! However, it must be reiterated that Karan and Rensil deserve kudos for giving a cent per cent engrossing fare to the viewers, keeping their interest in a drama starring three rank new­comers alive throughout. For instan­ce, the various phases of the Student Of The Year competition are very exci­ting and they involve the audience while entertaining them to the hilt. The tracks of romance and friendship are also superb. Aiding the story and screenplay greatly are the dialogues penned by Niranjan Iyengar. It would not be incorrect to say that Iyengar's dialogues are extraordinary and very appropriate. Note, for instance, how Rohan, who lives with his parents, asks the orphaned Abhimanyu if he misses his parents and when Abhi­manyu answers in the affirmative, he (Rohan) says, "I, too, miss my par­ents." It is not just the intense dialogues but also the bitchy and fun dialogues which have been superbly penned.

All the three newcomers make absolutely dashing debuts and will become stars overnight. Sidharth Mal­hotra looks very handsome and does a splendid job in his maiden film. He is camera-friendly and performs uninhi­bitedly, connecting instantly with the audience. Varun Dhawan is also handsome and performs excellently. This doesn't at all look like his first film. He carries off the character of a rich, spoilt brat with the right attitude. Both the heroes are good dancers but both need to improve their performan­ce in emotional scenes. Alia Bhatt is cute, confident and a good performer. She plays Shanaya Singhania with understanding and she, too, is a fine dancer. Rishi Kapoor deserves full marks for playing the gay dean with full conviction. He is such a reservoir of talent that it's a delight to watch him give that special something to every scene of his! Ram Kapoor plays the ruthless, heartless father fabulously. Kayoze Irani excels in the role of Sudo. Sahil Anand (playing Jeet) has his moments in the second half. Mansi Rach leaves a mark in the role of Shruti. Sana Syed is also good as Tanya. Manjot Singh is lovable. Ronit Roy lends the dignity needed to the character of the sports coach he plays. Farida Jalal is oh so endearing. Manini De lends wonderful support. Akshay Anand is appropriate Gau­tami Kapoor is restrained. Prachi Shah leaves a mark as the sports coach's wife who is hated by the dean. Sidharth Sharma is alright as Rohan's elder brother. Boman Irani stands out in a special appearance. Kajol lends star value in a tiny special appearan­ ce. Farah Khan and Vaibhavi Mer­chant also provide star value as judges in the dance competition. Sushma Seth and the others lend good support.

Karan Johar's direction is splendid. First of all, he has extracted great work from so many newcomers! Secondly, he has adopted a narrative style which keeps the audience engrossed and involved and actually asking for more. His brilliant directorial touches and marks of excellence are visible all through the film. Vishal-Shekhar's music lives up to the fun and romantic mood of the film. 'Radha', 'Ishq waala love' and the remixed 'Disco deewane' song are the standout numbers. The other songs are fast-paced and entertaining. Anvita Dutt's lyrics are excellent. Song picturisations are eye-filling and the choreo­graphy ('Radha' and 'Ishq waala' by Farah Khan; 'Disco deewane' by Remo D'souza; 'Kukkad' and 'Shan­aya' by Vaibhavi Merchant; 'Vele' by Bosco-Caesar) is extraordinary. Background music (by Vishal Shekhar) is wonderful. Ayananka Bose's cinema­tography is outstanding. The cameraman has excellently aided the director in presenting his vision. Amrita's sets are just too beautiful. Deepa Bhatia's editing is fantastic. Production values are as grand as grand can be. Tech­nically, outstanding.

On the whole, Student Of The Year is a supremely entertaining and enjoyable fare which will do hit business all over. Not just in the multiplex­es but also in the single-screen cinemas, it will strike a chord in the audience's hearts. It will be adored by the youth (which has ensured the lovely initial) and loved by the families which will start patronising the film soon. It will give the industry three new stars who will shine brightly for years to come!

Released on 19-10-'12 at Regal (daily 2 shows), Eros (daily 3 shows) and other cinemas of Bombay by Dharma Productions thru A.A. Films. Publicity: outstanding. Opening: excellent. ''.Also released all over. Considering that it stars newcomers, the opening can be termed outstanding everywhere!

Edited by you2 - 12 years ago
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Posted: 12 years ago
#26
it has taken a good start...25cr opening weekend atleast
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#27
Super Cinema ?@supercinemaent

#SOTY's initial numbers coming in predicts it will do 8.5 cr+ business. Almost double than previous opening days for a newcomers film.

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#28

B.O. update: 'Student Of The Year' proves KJo's BO power, opens BIG

By Taran Adarsh, October 19, 2012 - 15:51 IST
STUDENT OF THE YEAR is all set to be renamed 'Surprise Of The Year', what with the film embarking on a tremendous start at multiplexes and single screens. As per early trends, it's the biggest opening ever for a film starring newcomers.

Despite no 'star names' to lure the audience, the opening of STUDENT OF THE YEAR was at par with several biggies that starred A-listers. In fact, the film fetched a remarkable start from its first show itself, thus emphasizing on the BO power of Karan Johar and the clout he enjoys amongst the movie-going audience. The stupendous start also reiterates the fact that KJo's movies can open big on the sheer strength of his name alone. Its business is expected to touch the zenith towards the evening/night shows and is sure to record solid numbers in its opening weekend.

DELHI SAFARI got completely eclipsed by the STUDENT OF THE YEAR wave and opened to a shockingly low start.
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#29

Titanic-Size Opening For SOTY

by Soumita Sengupta (October 19, 2012)

The much-anticipated Student Of The Year (SOTY) directed by Karan Johar and featuring newcomers Varun Dhawan, Sidharth Malhotra and Alia Bhatt, has opened to a gigantic, near-100-per cent response in multiplexes all over India. Having taken an astonishing opening across the country, this Dharma Productions venture is expected to enjoy an extravagant first day. And it's not just multiplexes that are doing big business; the opening in singleplexes too is heartening.

In Mumbai, Rajesh Thadani of Multimedia Combines says, "SOTY took an opening of 98 per cent and it's also housefull in many centres across India and in Mumbai as well. The film has opened with excellent numbers and we expect a very good report for the evening shows as the morning shows have shown a fabulous response."

In Delhi-UP, Sanjay Ghai of Mukta Arts adds, "The response to the film is spectacular despite featuring newcomers. It has opened to 100 per cent response in Delhi-UP, and being a youth-centric film, it will do wonders during the weekend too. Karan Johar has proved he can make a super-hit not only with big stars but with new faces too."

Arun Mehra of Aum Moviez remarks, "SOTY has opened to 100 per cent occupancy in most centers in West Bengal. Since there is a huge holiday coming up, even post-weekend, the film will continue to gain momentum. Such a phenomenal response is superb for a film that features debutants."

In CP, Sarang Chandak of Shri Rang Films reveals, "Karan Johar is back with his larger-than-life movies and this time, with SOTY, he revisits our school days with new actors. The film has opened to 65 to 70 per cent and we are expecting business to grow by the evening shows. Word-of-mouth is very positive and hence it is going to be a sure-shot hit."

Ravi Machchar of Sahyog Films in Nizam says, "It's a super-hit film, without a doubt. We haven't had a film that's both stylish and entertaining for a long time. SOTY opened to 80-per cent occupancy in Nizam but the second show is almost house full. We expect the movie to garner fabulous numbers by the end of the day."

In Rajasthan, Sunil Bansal of Yash Raj Jai Pictures concludes, "SOTY has opened to an outstanding response in Rajasthan. The film has garnered a 100-per cent opening and has impressive advance bookings for the evening shows as well. Karan Johar will create history with his new-found talents."

However, the numbers were not all that big in East Punjab, where Swaraj Pal Singh Siddhu of Sunny Moviez 01 says, "Though the morning shows opened to 60 per cent in Punjab, I am expecting the collections to grow by evening as the reports of the film are really good. SOTY has already generated a huge buzz as it is a Dharma Productions' film and the publicity has been extravagant."

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Posted: 12 years ago
#30
Indicine ?@indicine

The first day collections of SOTY is likely to be 10 crores+. At places, the afternoon shows had better occupancy than Barfi!

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