Talaash - REVIEW THREAD - Page 2

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pathaka thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
#11
mini mathur ?@minimathur

Talaash is an edge of the seat thriller. Full of emotion. Brilliant cast. Rani Mukherji is outstanding. Must watch

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Kabir Khan ?@kabirkhankk

Just saw Talaash.. It's a tight edge of the seat psychological thriller with a strong emotional layer... Perfect combination

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Hansal Mehta ?@mehtahansal

Enjoyed #Talaash. Deftly handled, emotional, moody, restrained and nicely paced. Loved Rani and Kareena in the film. AK was very good.

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sai sudheer ?@iSaiSudhir

On the whole, TALAASH is an outstanding film. A taut psychological thriller that keeps you guessing till the end,... http://fb.me/1oTBPTzGu

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Kiaara Sandhu ?@KiaaraSandhu

My Review on TALAASH..Hatsoff performance by Aamir,,Kareena & Rani..Best Suspense Thriller of the Year..Excellent direction...4/5..

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Chetan The Hero ?@BoyChetan

Everybody is praising actors work in #Talaash.Kareena & Aamir's scenes together are to be the best scenes.

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Edited by pathaka - 12 years ago
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Posted: 12 years ago
#12
Reliance Entertnment ?@RelianceEnt

True that! "@Su4ita: Performance of a lifetime by nawazuddin siddiqui as Taimur. His eyes will haunt me for eternity. #talaash"

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Kiaara Sandhu ?@KiaaraSandhu

Kareena Kapoor is the Real Hero in TALAASH ...Hatsoff Performance by her this year after HEROINE.

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Edited by PigBenis - 12 years ago
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Posted: 12 years ago
#13
Sree Prasad Nair ?@i_spn

#Talaash Strictly OK!!! Targeted mainly for multiplex audience. Great acting from Aamir Khan Rani Kareena & Nawazuddin Siddiqui. Slow Paced!

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16m Shehzeen Rehman ?@shehzeenrehman

#talaash was really something else. the suspense was just it.

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Ravi Mansukhlal ?@ravi_speaks

I just watche #talaash and I don't know what to say, the end, the suspense ne film ki maa-bahen ek kardi: no further comments.

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Hisham ?@hishh

#Talaash - Terrific through out , but the suspense of d movie itself can damage d goodness of it. Perfomances- Top Class , Watch it - 3.5/5

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1h akshat dave ?@akshatdave

#Talaash is a film that doesn't happen all the time...it's an epic...It leaves you spellbounded...Salute the makers...Hail Aamir Khan...

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Premlal Kannur ?@premlalk1

#Talaash was awesome !! Rani Mukherji is outstanding... a must watch film !!



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Posted: 12 years ago
#14
Movie review: Talaash
(Suspense,Thriller)
Saibal Chatterjee
Thursday, November 29, 2012

Cast:Aamir Khan, Kareena Kapoor, Rani Mukerji and Nawazuddin Siddiqui
Director: Reema Kagti

By no means is Talaash the end of your search for the perfect whodunit. But there is so much going for this compelling, slow-burning, well-acted tale set in the dark, grimy underbelly of Mumbai that you can barely take your eye off the screen.

As a suspense thriller with a paranormal edge, it certainly isn't action-packed. Yet Talaash, which relies far more on the intricacies of psychological drama than on the disquieting impact of visceral shocks, is riveting all the way through to its surprising, if a tad dissonant, end.

From the moment director Reema Kagti and cinematographer K.U. Mohanan unveil the seedy side of the city's nightlife in a brief and evocative prelude (enhanced by a smoky Ram Sampath-composed number) that sets the tone, the film telegraphs its intentions quite unambiguously and sticks to its chosen tone and tenor.

This isn't your average heap of cheap thrills designed to project a superstar's crowd-pulling clout, logic and sense be damned. Talaash is a restrained, offbeat and occasionally beguiling shot at a genre that popular Hindi cinema seems to have abandoned to its own detriment.

The Mumbai that we see in Talaash isn't the Mumbai that Hindi cinema usually sells in Teflon-coated doses – a glitzy city of gilt-edged dreams, never-ending parties and extravagant fashion shows overrun by underworld dons who live life on their own terms, encounter cops who can do no wrong and models and molls that strut their stuff with abandon.

In Talaash, the city is devoid of all surface shimmer. In fact, the film takes the moniker of 'the city that never sleeps' quite literally and transfers the trait to its male protagonist. He is a man who stays awake all night as he scours the streets in his police vehicle, chasing law-breakers.

But this is an Aamir Khan film, so it is the demands of the script that determine the amount of time that the male protagonist is apportioned on the screen. Yes, the superstar does not hog all the limelight even though it is his strong and emotionally beleaguered character that is at the centre of the drama.

In fact, the only chase scene in Talaash – in the last quarter of the film – does not even feature Aamir. He does not fire a single shot from his revolver. Well, he does not even wave the weapon at anybody. He delivers only one physical blow – a punch to the face of a red-light district thug who tries to stop him from rescuing a girl from a brothel. That's all the 'action' that Talaash proffers.

Apart from the insomniac and workaholic police officer, his lonely and depression-prone wife (Rani Mukherji) and a mysterious and pretty streetwalker that he encounters on his nocturnal rounds (Kareena Kapoor) are the key figures in this often bewildering but always engaging drama about individuals grappling with loss, sorrow and a breakdown of relationships while clutching at straws in the hope of deliverance from their sorry plight.

The quality of the screenplay written by Reema Kagti and Zoya Akhtar – every frame is crammed with dramatic and spatial details and even when the film appears to be somewhat sluggish there isn't a single scene that comes across as superfluous – lifts Talaash well above the ordinary.

Admittedly, there are elements in the film that might not be entirely convincing to a questioning mind, but they all add up in the larger narrative design.

Talaash is intelligently structured – it goes back and forth in time as the investigating officer struggles to piece together the mystery behind an unexplained fatal road mishap involving a male movie star whose speeding car veers off a sea-facing road and plunges into the water.

The greatest triumph of Talaash is in the manner in which it delineates its gallery of intriguing supporting characters. None of them is a mere blur.

Certainly not the voluble Parsi widow (Shernaz Patel) who summons the spirits of the dead in secret sances or the lame and artless criminal (Nawazuddin Siddiqui) who works for a pimp and dreams of making it big one day.

The latter precipitates an eventual untying of the loose ends of the case but not before he is led horribly astray by blind ambition.

The other minor characters, too, leave a mark. Among them are a rookie cop (Raj Kumar Yadav) who is often left befuddled by his superior's ways and an ageing sex worker (Sheeba Chaddha) who is resigned to her fate until a lucky break sets her free.

The perfectly modulated performances by the lead trio give Talaash its frisson. Aamir Khan sinks his teeth into the cop act with effortless ease but underplays his hand to accentuate the introspective nature of the troubled man.

A deglamorised Rani Mukherji plays her role with finesse and a great sense of empathy, while Kareena Kapoor is at her seductive best.

Not to be missed.

http://movies.ndtv.com/movie_Review.aspx?id=763

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Posted: 12 years ago
#15
Aseem Chhabra feels Talaash is an intelligent film but falters towards the end.

Towards the middle of Reema Kagti's highly anticipatedTalaash, an emotionally and physically exhausted Surjan Singh Shekhawat (Aamir Khan [ Images ]) lies down on a bed in a seedy hotel. Next to him is a gorgeous hooker -- Rosie (Kareena Kapoor [ Images ]).

They had met early in the film. They are attracted to each other, but Shekhawat is a married man, although his marriage is going through a turbulent period.


As Shekhawat closes his eyes, Rosie gently strokes his forehead and his hair, until he falls asleep. It is a tender moment -- rare for a Bollywood film, where love and caring is never expressed in such a mature, yet delicate manner.

Much of Kagti's Talaash, which she co-wrote with Zoya Akhtar [ Images ] (it is the second writing credit they share after last year's Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara) is mature in the way it handles its adult characters -- conflicted, troubled souls who are searching for ways to get over their personal and professional turmoil.

On the surface Shekhawat is searching for answers to a puzzling car accident that resulted in the death of a movie star. As he gets a few clues, his investigation leads him inside the underbelly of Mumbai [Images ], the seedy world of hookers -- high class and otherwise, their pimps and the scavengers (a terrific Nawazuddin Siddiqui).

But Shekhawat has a deeper personal issue that weighs on him. He and his wife (a luminous Rani Mukherjee [ Images ], giving one of her career's best performances) are mourning the accidental death of their young son. The tragedy and the fact that the two do not talk about their loss, is slowly creating a rift in their marriage.

Shekhawat also carries this personal trauma to work. His life is surely hellish, except when he gets a chance for some tender moments with Rosie, who becomes his confidante and a much needed therapist.

In Talaash, Kagti weaves a complex web, and she colours it with the mood and the atmosphere she and her collaborators create. Talaash has the feel of a noir film -- a fine achievement for a Bollywood product, where the crisp cinematography by K U Mohanan (his credits include Ashim Ahluwalia's Miss Lovely, a dark exploration of the world of Bombay's C-grade films) and the haunting background score by Ram Sampath keeps us on the edge.

And then there are the terrific songs composed by Sampath -- the sexy jazz number Muskaanein jhooti hain(sung by Suma Sridhar), Vishal Dadlani's [ Images ] anthem Jee le zaraa, and especially my favorite Jiya laage naa, the lyrical duet by Sona Mohapatra and Ravindra Upadhyay.

Talaash is not a Hollywood style edge-of-the-seat thriller, but there is enough in the film to make us feel uneasy. At all times we feel the pain of our protagonists and sense a certain danger that lurks around them. There is the look, the knock on the door, the empty staircases, things that we see, but cannot explain, neon-lit signs of Mumbai's seedy bars and hotels, and the night shots of the city's empty streets.

Talaash makes Mumbai look like a moll -- dirty, used, but also thrilling and enticing.


Towards the end of the film, there is a big revelation. Obviously I am not going to spill the beans here. But at this point Kagti and Akhtar's script starts to falter. In anticipating that this revelation may confuse some sections of the audience, the film then starts to explain more than we need to be told, giving us hints, underlying situations.

Despite that one big flaw, Talaash satisfied me. But I wanted more. I wish Siddiqui had a bigger, meatier role. His character evolves brilliantly, getting engaged within the film's complex puzzle and he holds himself well against a cast of glamorous Bollywood stars.

I wish Aamir Khan would trust his instincts when it comes to acting. The star makes all the right decisions with the projects he undertakes. But then why does he sometimes hesitate in his performances? Khan is mostly believable in Talaash, a broken man, carrying the weight of the narrative on his shoulders. But then in a few scenes it appears as if he is thinking too much, showing signs that he is aware he is acting. In those few scenes Khan's performance is distracting.

And I wish Mukherjee and Kapoor would get more solid, intelligent roles. Talaash reminded me that these two stars are hungry for good work, and they can deliver, but they need a wise filmmaker like Kagti to bring the best out of them.

Rediff Rating:3.5/5

http://www.rediff.com/movies/review/review-aamir-khan-s-talaash-works/20121130.htm
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Posted: 12 years ago
#16

Movie Review: Aamir Khan's Talaash is where your search for a good film begins

by Rubina A Khan 27 mins ago


Talaash opens with a haunting musical track, Muskanein Jhoothi Hain, filmed in Bombay's red light district. Arresting visuals of Mumbai by night, lend themselves beautifully to the mysterious air that pervades the night. As you take it all in with the title credits rolling on to the screen, wondering what Aamir Khan's Talaash in the film will be, the languid pace is broken by a speeding car, that loses control and heads straight into the sea after hitting the promenade in the dead of the night.

Enter Inspector Surjan S Shekhawat, played by Aamir Khan at the scene of the accident the following morning. It comes to light that a film star, Armaan Kapoor (Vivaan Bhatena) was driving the car and drowned in the process as he was trapped in the car, underwater. The case is an extremely high profile one, given that a celebrity is involved and the media interest is high. The scene where Surjan admonishes his team for giving out information to the press is very entertaining and hilarious — one of the best scenes, out of many in the film.

Surjan is an earnest man working in the police force, married to Roshni (Rani Mukerji) for the past 12 years. They are a broken couple due to a personal tragedy that Surjan blames himself for and punishes himself by pulling all-nighters at work, even when he is not required to do so. Of course he does not realize it, but he needs the psychiatrist he sends Roshni to, more than she does.

to, more than she does.

In his night-rounds of the city, he meets Rosy (Kareena Kapoor), a hooker, and a smug one at that, who he turns to time and again to help him in the case.

Talaash's story and plot is such that to describe any scene would be to give away the suspense. The story is real, enacted by extremely able actors, who make the movie thrilling, in just the right measure. Every turn surprises you, shocks you even, and has you completely involved in the story playing out on screen.

It's not predictable in the least, and that's where Talaash scores high! In Bollywood, to make a film that has the audience on the edge of their seats is a huge achievement. And that's what Talaash does. It gets you in, as soon as the first reel rolls, and holds you right till the very end.

Rani Mukerji slips into the role of the anguished housewife with ease, as only an actress with her repertoire of films can. Kareena Kapoor plays the role of the hooker in her inimitably glamourous style, where she balances the flighty edges with a serious performance.

Aamir Khan adds another memorable character to his long list of celluloid avatars with an incredible performance as Inspector Surjan. In Talaash, Aamir's physical persona, especially his eyes, enable his performance far more than the sharply written dialogue. The scene where he breaks down and cries is heartbreakingly real, and my favourite scene in the film. Just that one scene is telling of Aamir's unprecedented and prodigious talent as an actor.

Having said that, I also wonder if Aamir is playing Surjan or is Surjan playing Aamir in the film? Aamir is such a meticulous personality on and off screen, and has risen to such heights in terms of expectations from the audience over the years, that it is hard to tell when he is what.

All the characters in the film are well-etched and work in tandem with the story, the credit of which goes to the writers – Zoya Akhtar and Reema Kagti, who is the director of the film. Every actor performs ably, length of the role notwithstanding. Talaash's thrills give you the chills, most of it with the evolving plot line and the dialogues, written by Farhan Akhtar and Anurag Kashyap that add to the drama as well as make light of it with lines like "Dukaan khuli nahi aur curfew lag gaya".

The realness of the story has not been compromised at all and the believability factor stays high throughout. Even some parts that need explanations are not handed out like sermons or with reams of unnecessary dialogue – they are dealt with, in the narrative with action, flash cuts and voiceovers that are worked seamlessly into the storyline.

Ram Sampath's music is wonderful, even though the background score sounds a tad like the Taj Group of Hotels' signature music. The other thing that could have been completely avoided in the film is the railway station scene picturised on one of the key characters in the film, which sees him "do a Mazhar Khan". It is very reminiscent of the classic Mazhar Khan scene in Ramesh Sippy's Shaan(1980) in which he, as a cripple, paddles his way through the city on a flat board with wheels. This "borrowed sequence" just takes away from the film's own pace and contemporary style. Other than that, Talaash is a markedly exciting film, possibly one of 2012's best.

Reema Kagti's search for a loyal audience for her kind of cinema ends withTalaash, which seems poised to make some serious cash at the box office as a sure fire winner. Her debut film, Honeymoon Travels Pvt Ltd (2007) established her as someone to watch out for, and now, Talaash confirms the expectations weren't off the mark in the least.

Rating: ****

http://www.firstpost.com/bollywood/movie-review-your-search-for-a-good-film-begins-with-aamir-khans-talaash-540626.html

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Posted: 12 years ago
#17
raja sen

Review: Talaash is a mild-goose chase

Make no mistake, Talaash is a Vikram Bhatt film.

Which isn't to say Bhatt actually made it (though he or Mohit Suri or Pooja Bhatt may well have at some point, who dare keep count) but that it has a story built on the exact same pulpy foundations. Just yank out the invariably catchy Pritam soundtrack, replace Emraan Hashmi or Randeep Hooda with Aamir Khan and throw in major heroines where Vishesh Films would have cast unfamiliar models. (The only key character in Talaash who isn't a top actor is, actually, the one who plays a top actor.)

To give credit where due, director Reema Kagti and her crew show significant flair in terms of creating atmosphere. Cinematographer Mohanan has always dealt strikingly well with shadows and darkness, and the film emerges as a fine looking mood-piece. It's a somber, well-assembled film in contrast to the quick and flashy schlock that would have been doled out by the aforementioned merchants of middlebrow masala, and while the film's craft ' and the acting chops shared by its considerable cast ' can't at all be denied, it must also be said that perhaps the trashier approach may have worked better for this material. Or, at the very least, made for more fun.

Allow me to make my case, then, without once discussing the film's plot. No spoilers here, folks.

There are a few essentials for a police procedural film, all rather basic: either the crime should be a stupefying one, one which raises many a "how in the world" question and flummoxes audience and investigator; or the suspects should be interesting and complex, those whose motivations become clearer only when the film gets less murky; or the investigator himself should be a compelling protagonist, someone who makes you either care about himself or the case, ideally rooting for his success. And if all else fails, then it should be thrilling enough to hide the lack of the above.

Alas, Talaash ticks none of these boxes. It starts off well, but simmers far too long before it gets to the boil. The case ' of an actor driving off the highway and into the sea ' is only marginally intriguing since the police never really explore its mechanics, and the suspects it throws up mostly insignificant. The cop Aamir plays from behind a Hulk Hogan moustache is doggedly dour, frequently unreasonable, and a really bad husband. Not the sort of man you want to celebrate, no. And, as said, the film gets more than a bit long in the tooth, hinging on a final twist that isn't too hard to see coming.

Which is all dashed exasperating, considering just how good this film could have been. It's great to look at, with brilliantly art-directed frames bursting with detail. The music's good, even if the songs sometimes interrupt the narrative when playing on too long. Nawazuddin Siddiqui and Raj Kumar Yadav are routinely excellent, Siddiqui effortlessly stealing most of the film. There are some deftly edited intercuts, most situated from the cop's point of view, effectively flashing back and forth within the realms of past and possibility. Aamir is as stoic as his character needs him to be, Rani Mukherji is plaintive but wasted, and much of the film's verve comes from Kareena Kapoor's streetwalker, who, like Anne Hathaway's Catwoman in the most recent Batman movie, thankfully doesn't ever seem to take the film or its clunky lines seriously.

And my lord, what lines. Even in good scenes, the dialogues jar, sounding either b-movie or trite or incredibly textbook. Given the film's unhurried pace, this often makes it play out like an old telefilm. Khan mouths the word "talaash" with promo-cutting heft, characters spell things out unbearably simply, and in a film about drowned people, lines like "dard mein doobe'" are used with great intent and disappointingly little irony. Indeed, the film is awash with obvious metaphor. (Sorry, couldn't help it.)

There is one good, true line about cheesecake, though.

It is also a film trying to be subtle while drawing attention to just how subtle its trying to be. To wit: a frazzled Shernaz Patel accosts Aamir on the street, grabbing his arm, something that confounds the indignant policeman, and this simple moment is broken down into her touching him, him looking at her, him looking pointedly at her hand on his arm, him stiffening, then reacting. A brothel-controlling Madam talks tough, but repeatedly backs down whenever glared at. Pimps meticulously change their SIM cards at the first sign of trouble but bigger fish use their personal cellphones for monkey business.

Ah, and odd visual cues: a big poster from the awful film Showgirls proudly displayed in the red-light area, advertising actual showgirls. Um, okay. A yellow rubber slipper floating by itself in the water ' meant to be an evocative memory, but probably nightmarish to fashionable women simply because its a Croc.

Am I being too cruel? Perhaps, but because of the wasted opportunity. Someone asked me if Talaash was a watchable film, and indeed it is. It's better put together than a lot of the films we see here, and definitely strongly acted, but ends up so, so much less enjoyable than it deserved to be. In the end, I didn't care about the case or the characters: not cop, wife, pimp, kid or hooker ' ah, I might as well pick the dead actor who kicked the whole story off; at least the poor guy had an Eraserhead poster in his room.

Rating: 2.5 stars


Edited by pathaka - 12 years ago
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Posted: 12 years ago
#18

Aniruddha Guha reviews: Talaash is a smartly put-together suspense drama

Published: Friday, Nov 30, 2012, 10:00 IST | Updated: Friday, Nov 30, 2012, 10:27 IST
By Aniruddha Guha | Place: Mumbai | Agency: DNA

A still from the movie Talaash

Film: Talaash
Director: Reema Kagti
Cast: Aamir Khan, Rani Mukherji, Kareena Kapoor, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Raj Kumar Yadav
Rating: ***

Talaash starts off with a delectably picturised opening credit sequence that shows Mumbai in the dead of the night, set to the jazzy Muskaanein jhoothi hai. The sequence is captured beautifully by KU Mohanan (whose work on Aushim Ahluwalia's Miss Lovely was among its redeeming qualities) in an attractive dark tint, a feature that remains admirably consistent throughout the film.


Talaash
, by and large, is an atmosphere-driven movie. It sucks you into a vortex of wh**e houses, night-patrolling cops, and into the mind of a troubled policeman. Surjan Shekhawat (Khan) is dealing with the death of his only son even as he tries to balance a fractured relationship with his wife (Mukherjee) and the high-profile investigation of a film star's death. Scoffing at the idea that his deceased son may be trying to communicate with him, Shekhawat finds solace in the companionship of an informant helping him with his case: the sex worker Rosy (Kapoor).

Reema Kagti and Zoya Akhtar's screenplay has various strands, some difficult to keep track of, but that's largely intentional. All its detours, and various sub-tracks, are part of a smart build-up to the finale. Will grieving parents deal with the loss of their only child? Will the mystery surrounding the accident of the film star be solved? Do ghosts really find a way to communicate with the living world? Kagti lays out her cards on the table from the word go, letting you put pieces of the puzzle together as you go along. It's a difficult plot to hold together and editor Anand Subaya must have had a tough task at hand. The effort shows in places.

To her credit, Kagti stays true to the subject matter, and keeps the mood sombre and the narrative moving. Humour is sparse and unexpected – like a bewildered subordinate stuck between a quarrelling husband and wife – but never forced. Ram Sampath's catchy score, Sharmishta Roy's deft handling of the art design and Nandini Shrikent's casting of all the right actors even in the small parts make all the difference.

I found Aamir Khan's portrayal of Shekhawat inconsistent, the actor best when playing a troubled father rather than a stern cop. However, you have to give him credit for taking on a film that hardly conforms to commercial norms. Khan's presence will help Talaash get wide reach, and give viewers a chance to experience a film that doesn't entirely take its audience for granted. Rani Mukherji is good in a small role, while Kareena Kapoor is likeable, even though she comes across as a bit too refined to play a commercial sex worker. The film's standout performance comes from Nawazuddin Sidiqui, who's had a cracker of a year so far (Kahaani, Gangs Of Wasseypur, Chittagong). As Temur, Siddiqui's character has a well-etched graph and his track complements the central plot well. Raj Kumar Yadav makes an impression in the role of Shekhawat's subordinate.

There are times when you feel Talaash might fall apart, but it thankfully comes together neatly in the last 30 minutes or so. As much as the story hinges on the final revelation – one that's supposed to jolt you – the journey itself isn't too bad either. It demands an investment of time and patience, surely, but the pay-off is rewarding. How much you like or dislike the film will largely depend on whether the final twist works for you. It did for me.


That would explain the somewhat mixed feedback.

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Posted: 12 years ago
#19

Talaash: Searching for the perfect whodunit

The worst thing to happen while watching a murder mystery is someone telling you the twist in the tale even before the movie began. The second-worst thing is when you figure out the twist yourself, halfway through the film.

Call it a result of watching too many whodunits as a kid, but the twist in Reema Kagti's "Talaash" was apparent an hour before it ended. After that it was just a matter of waiting to see how it plays out. No surprises there either. Kagti makes a stylised film, a murder mystery that also has an emotional undercurrent and borrows strongly from well-known Hollywood films of the genre (I won't say which ones for fear of revealing the plot).

Aamir Khan plays troubled police inspector Surjan Singh Shekhawat, who moves to Mumbai after his son's death in a freak boating accident. Wracked by guilt, he roams the streets of the city that never sleeps at night, leaving his wife Roshni (Rani Mukerji) to deal with the tragedy on her own.

Shekhawat is assigned the case of Armaan Kapoor, an actor who dies after driving his car into the Arabian Sea.

It soon becomes obvious Kapoor was being blackmailed by a pimp, but it is unclear for what. When the trail leads him to a brothel, Shekhawat enlists the help of Rosy (Kareena Kapoor), a prostitute who seems to know many of the players involved in the case. Kagti sketches a motley cast of characters, including a neighbour who talks to the dead (Shernaz Patel) and a crippled pimp who wants to make a quick buck (Nawazuddin Siddiqui).

Kagti also creates the right mood, and it is this that will suck you right in. Mumbai at night is a different city, and the director uses it well to tell her story. The slums, the police stations, the roads, the flickering lights — they add to the intrigue.

Halfway through, the magic wears off and you are left with a plot weighed down by an unnecessary emotional subplot involving Shekhawat's dead son.

Like many whodunits before, Kagti puts an "emotional core" at the heart of "Talaash", but it doesn't serve much purpose except to slow the film down. What should have been a taut thriller about a murder that doesn't seem like a murder becomes a film that isn't here nor there. The red herrings are obvious, and so are the motives, and the director has a tendency to over-state its plot points.

Kagti dwells on Shekhawat's personal tragedy far too long, with songs and flashbacks, taking away from the urgency of the mystery at hand. What is wrong with making a murder mystery just about the murder? Does it have to have an "emotional" angle?

It's a credit to Aamir Khan though that he carries off even these heavy bits flawlessly. Rani Mukerji, sans make-up and dressed rather shabbily, plays the part of the melancholy wife with restraint. Kareena Kapoor pouts, smiles and plays the mysterious girl on the street to the hilt, sometimes overdoing her act.

Despite its glitches and slow pace, "Talaash" is likely to keep you engaged for the 140 minutes you spend watching it. The trouble is, it doesn't stay with you much longer.

n.reuters.com/article/2012/11/30/bollywood-talaash-review-idINDEE8AT03820121130?

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Posted: 12 years ago
#20
Talaash Has Good Opening At Multiplexes

Friday 30th November 2012 11.00 IST

Boxofficeindia.Com Trade Network

Talaash opened well at multiplexes in its first shows in this morning. The opening ranged from excellent to decent depending on city and location. There were multiplexes that opened at 90% while others were at 50%.

On average it is a 70% opening at multiplexes. The film has a very heavy release at multiplexes with a huge number of shows at most properties across the country. The single screen release is more muted as the distributors did not give the film to single screen exhibitors unless they committed to a two week run.

The single screen opening will be lower as multiplexes in tier two cities have opened lower. The evenings at metro multiplexes tend to be strong for this type of a film so day one should could come out with a good total on the strength of multiplex business.

Edited by PigBenis - 12 years ago

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