Talaash - REVIEW THREAD - Page 4

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Posted: 12 years ago
#31
http://entertainment.oneindia.in/bollywood/box-office/2012/aamir-khan-talaash-opening-response-indian-box-office-101594.html

Aamir's Talaash gets a big bang opening at Box Office

Updated: Friday, November 30, 2012, 15:10 [IST]
Posted by: Shekhar
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BRAND NEW TRAILER OF AAMIR KHAN___S...

Director Reema Kagti's second directorial venture Talaash, starring Aamir Khan, Kareena Kapoor and Rani Mukherjee in leads, has hit the screens today (November 30) and received an overwhelming response at the Box Office in India. Trade experts say that this psychological thriller will surely break the first day collection record of Shahrukh Khan's Jab Tak Hai Jaan at the domestic business centres.

Aamir Khan was last seen in a full-pledged role in the movie 3 Idiots in 2009. His fans were desperately waiting for him to rock the screens from the past three years. Aamir mania seemed to be at its peak on the release day of Talaash, which has hit 2500+ screens in the country. The theatres across the country screening Talaash were overflowing with his fans in the morning and matinee shows.

Talaash had huge amount of advance ticket booking prior its release and remaining few tickets were being sold in black market, where one ticket cost was more than Rs 1000. In many places, disappointed Aamir Khan fans, who had come to watch the film in the first show on the first day, turned violent when they did not get tickets. Finally, the theatre owners had to call the police to control the mob.

Talaash has managed to drive unprecedented crowd outside both single screens and multiplexes across the country. The suspense thriller has registered 100% occupancy in both single screens and multiplexes across the country in the morning and matinee shows on the first day. As per early trends, its business is expected to cross Rs 20 crore mark at the domestic Box Office on the first day.

However, Aamir Khan had intentionally not promoted the movie Talaash prior its release and he was said to be following different strategy - "not-in-your-face promotional strategies". Many in the B-Town were keeping their fingers crossed about its opening. But Mr Perfectionist's new strategy has hit the bull's eye. The movie has received positive reviews from film critics and now, the word of mouth is expected to takes its business upwards over the weekend.

Stay locked to this space to known about Talaash first day collection at Indian Box Office.


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Posted: 12 years ago
#32
May contain spoilers

TALAASH Review

TALAASH

Reliance Entertainment, Aamir Khan Productions and Excel Entertainment's Talaash (UA) is a suspense drama. Film star Armaan Kapoor (Vivan Bathena) is killed in a freak road accident at the same spot where several others have died, all in inexplicable circumstances. While the earlier cases have been closed as 'A- Final' due to lack of headway in them, police inspector Surjan Shekhawat (Aamir Khan) is unwilling to close this case also as 'A-Final'.

Even as Shekhawat is fighting his own guilt for what he thinks was his carelessness which led to his only son, Karan's (master Jitesh) death by accident, he gets headlong into investigating the accident case. This keeps him away from home and, therefore, from his wife, Roshni (Rani Mukerji), too, for long hours. Even otherwise, their happy married life has been shattered after the death of their little son as Surjan is simply never in a mood to spend quality time with Roshni be­cause of the guilt.

Rosy (Kareena Kapoor), a call girl, comes as the most unlikely link in the chain which may ultimately help Shekhawat solve the Armaan Kapoor accident case. Rosy speaks to Surjan Shekhawat about Shashi (Subrat Dutta), his girlfriend, Mallika (Aditi Vasudev) and Temur (Nawazuddin Sid­diqui) among others. While Shashi dies as soon as the investigation begins, Temur dies even as the investigation is on. This way, two important people, who could've helped Shekhawat solve the case, are no more. Rosy also speaks about Armaan Kapoor and his two friends, Sanjay Kejriwal (Suhas Ahuja) and Nikhil (Prashant Prakash). One day while she is with Surjan, Rosy also talks ruefully about the death of her friend who belonged to the same profession as hers.

Who was the friend of Rosy whose death she lamented about in front of Shekhawat? How were Shashi, Temur, Sanjay Kejriwal and Nikhil connected with the accident case? Or were they at all connected?

There's also a track of Roshni Shekhawat trying to speak to her dead son, Karan, through the med­ium of Freny (Shernaz Patel). Surjan fires Roshni for believing in the concept of talking to spirits. Is Surjan right or is Roshni correct? Why is Rosy bent upon helping Surjan? Does Surjan solve the accident case?

Zoya Akhtar and Reema Kagti's story is quite unusual and their screenplay has many layers. The script has been written in a way that it involves the viewer in a guessing game and keeps his interest alive throughout. No doubt, the pace slackens a bit and the drama seems to be meandering at places but it comes on track before much harm is done. Also, some of the twists and turns are so shocking that the audience is left dumbfounded. The twist of another police van meeting with an accident at the same spot as Armaan Kapoor's car is so scary that the weak-hearted will scream in fear. The entire sequence of little Karan's accident is breathtakingly frightening. The sequence showing how Karan's accident could have been avoided is brilliant and shakes the viewer. Ditto for the scene in which a grievously injured Rosy alias Simran is deserted by Armaan Kapoor and Sanjay Kejriwal. The scene of Surjan and Roshni's fight right in the middle of the road and in front of Surjan's subordinate, Devrath (Rajkumar Yadav), is also wonderful. The climax sequence is emotionally brilliant.

On the minus side, at least for the orthodox audience, is the fact that Surjan fails to do much to alleviate wife Roshni's depression after their son's demise. Instead of spending more time with her and thinking in terms of having another child to help her (and himself) get over the shock, he avoids her. No doubt, he insists on her visiting the psychiatrist regularly but he doesn't think in terms of being her emotional anchor, which seems weird from the point of view of the traditional audience. This anomaly is even more pronounced because he blames him­self for the death and never his wife!

Dialogues, penned by Farhan Akh­ tar (additional dialogues by Anurag Kashyap), are lovely.

Aamir Khan lives the role of Surjan Shekhawat – a father reeling under guilt and a police officer who is exceptionally good in his work. He excels with a performance which will become a talking point among the audience. His acting is so extraordinary that one actually feels his pain at the loss of his young son. The way he uses his body language is outstanding. His last scene shakes the viewer. Rani Mukerji plays Roshni with a rare understanding, never once going overboard. She very intelligently underplays in a good part of the film because of which her outburst in her fight with husband Surjan has a superb impact. Kareena Kapoor is mind-blowingly excellent. Her look, her loud costumes, her dialogue deli­very and her body language, all go to add to her character. She makes Rosy so endearing that the audience actually ends up falling in love with a call girl. Nawazuddin Siddiqui is first-rate and shines as Temur. Rajkumar Yadav is a fine actor and he underlines this fact even in scenes in which he has minimal dialogues. Shernaz Patel leaves a wonderful impression. Suhas Ahuja is suitably restrained as Sanjay Kejriwal. Subrat Dutta is very natural as Shashi. Prashant Prakash is good in the role of Nikhil. Vivan Bathena (as Armaan Kapoor) makes his presence felt. Vivek Madan stands his own in the role of Surjan Shekhawat's senior. Aditi Vasudev is lovely as Shashi's girlfriend, Mallika. Master Jitesh is cute, as Karan. Master Vishesh, as Samar, is good. Shivani Tanksale (as Roshni's friend) and Sheeba Chadha (as Nirmala) lend admirable support. Gulfam (as Madame) and the rest provide able support.

Reema Kagti's direction is lovely. Not only has she handled the very difficult subject with a rare maturity but has also extracted great work from her actors, big and small. In a suspense film, the revelation of the suspense and its shock value are very significant aspects, and Reema has ensured that the suspense emerges as a very important part of the narrative when revealed. Having said this, it must be added that the film remains more a class-appealing fare than a mass-appealing one. Ram Sampath's music has a different feel like the film itself. Every song has its own beauty even though the songs are very class-appealing. The rendition of each song is also delightful. Lyrics (Javed Akhtar) are very appropriate. Sampath's background music is excellent. Ku. Mohanan's camerawork is superb. Sets (Sharmishtha Roy) are nice. Visual effects are very good. Anand Subaya's editing is sharp.

On the whole, Talaash has a novel suspense angle and is an engaging and entertaining drama with a good emotional undercurrent. It will, therefore, be liked by the public and emerge a paying proposal at the box-office. Business in the big cities and good multiplexes and single-screen cinemas will be good but the film won't find many takers in small centres, ordinary multiplexes and ordinary single-screen cinemas.

http://komalsreviews.wordpress.com/2012/11/30/talaash-review/

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Posted: 12 years ago
#33
http://baradwajrangan.wordpress.com/2012/11/30/talaash-35956-8967894/

"Talaash"… Water, water everywhere

Posted on November 30, 2012

5


At the beginning of Jab Tak Hai Jaan, we watched Shah Rukh Khan make his appearance while defusing a bomb as the people around him spoke admiringly of his heroism – but the film, it turned out, wasn't interested in heroics at all. Reema Kagti's Talaash similarly dismantles the halo around its hero Aamir Khan, who plays the dour Inspector Suri Shekhawat. (His dourness is doubled thanks to a thick moustache that curls downwards, resembling the emoticon for a frown.) As he drives up to the scene of an accident – a car swerved off the road and flew into the Arabian Sea, killing its driver – an awestruck subordinate tells him, "Bahut suna hai aapke baarein mein." This hint of far-reaching fame makes us expect another valorous saga like Sarfarosh – the film, instead, is an existential mood piece. Perhaps it's too soon to declare that the biggest Bollywood stars are playing their age, shying away from overt heroics, but consider this: the driver of the doomed vehicle is himself a big Bollywood star, whose heroism is reserved for the shooting spot, where he's seen guns blazing, in front of a green screen. Out on the streets, though, he's a coward who meets a most unheroic death. Coincidence or commentary?

The talaash of the title, at first, suggests the search for answers. Why did the car end up in the water? Was it suicide? If not, who was behind the accident? In short, we seem to be in for a nail-biting police procedural based on a "high-profile case." But gradually, that search takes a backseat to others – a father's search for peace, a wife's search for a husband who's vanished into a void of self-flagellation, and a forgotten victim's search for closure. Kagti brings this all together with a sure touch that her first film, the fitfully entertaining Honeymoon Travels Pvt. Ltd., never hinted at. Even if the resolution leaves you underwhelmed – and despite the artfully placed pointers to seediness, with ragpickers, po*n DVDs displayed proudly in stores, derelicts and druggies, some may feel Talaash is just classily dressed up crap – the film is so beautifully made and so atmospheric that several scenes stick in mind.

Like the one where Suri and his wife Roshni (Rani Mukerji, who really should stop slathering pancake on those freckles; she looks lovely here) go to a mindless Ajay Devgn entertainer – a world far, far removed from that of Talaash – to forget their troubles at home, only to find that life doesn't always work they way you want it to. Suri, instead of watching the movie, amuses himself by watching his wife laugh, but when they exit the theatre, they run into a living-breathing reminder of the source of their unhappiness. (And that goes back, again, to an accident that occurred in water.) Kagti sticks to an even tone most of the time, rarely turning up the volume except in the emotionally loaded songs, so the dramatic showpieces, when they occur, are a punch in the gut. The quieter moments are equally powerful, like the lingering nighttime scene between Suri and the prostitute Rosie (Kareena Kapoor), filled as much with silence as dialogue.

Watching Talaash is also a reminder of how a female writer-director (Kagti wrote the movie with Zoya Akhtar) can clue us into the nooks and crannies of a story or a character that we would not usually get from a male filmmaker. I am thinking of the undercurrents in the scene where Suri and Roshni witness a bunch of lively kids from their colony dance to Jhalak dikhla jaa on stage, or the alternate what-if scenarios that torment Suri's mind, or the time Roshni spends in unpacking things in her new home, or the character of Frenny (Shernaz Patel), a psychic who waltzes into Roshni's life bearing a cheesecake. She comes off, initially, as creepy or plain crazy, but she gradually becomes the eccentric anchor for the film's paranormal themes. (And what a relief it is that she's left out of the closing portions, with only her handiwork driving the final scene – again by the water.) There's also the grace bestowed on a couple of female characters, prostitutes both – Madhur Bhandarkar, rubbing his hands with sadistic glee, would have kicked them right into a sewer. Even the rug-pulling, at the end, isn't presented with a magician's flourish but as the quietest of epiphanies.

These touches elevate the material, which sometimes feels derivative, perhaps even silly – and all the actors do solid work. Nawazuddin Siddiqui, who seems incapable of appearing in a bad movie or delivering a bad performance, is especially good as the token comedian (insofar as a serious story will allow for comedy – he gets a big laugh out of the cell phone in his pocket, and even his name, Timur, sounds like wordplay. (Did I mention that he's lame?) I walked out of Talaash not so much exhilarated as thoroughly engaged, but (spoilers ahead) films like these have their own afterlife, inviting us to think back on how it all fits – the dog barking at the beginning, the leitmotif of flowers, the phrase "pehchaanein jhoothi hain" in the song that plays over the opening credits, Suri telling the streetwalking Rosie "Tum pehle se narak mein ho," Rosie's repeated knowing smiles, and even her name, which resembles Roshni's. The only thing that left me puzzled was the use of mirrors in scenes with Rosie, right from her introduction as a reflection on a glass tabletop. Isn't that…? Shouldn't she…? But how can…? The search continues.

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Posted: 12 years ago
#34
Talaash" was slow in the morning and except few high end multiplexes, film failed to draw crowds. But as the day progressed almost all multiplexes started doing roaring business though single screens still look bleak.

Friday, 30th November 11:40 PM IST

"TALAASH" Heads For Good Day One Numbers

"Talaash" was slow in the morning and except few high end multiplexes, film failed to draw crowds. But as the day progressed almost all multiplexes started doing roaring business though single screens still look bleak.

Film has almost no chance in single screens and even the responses of mass centers are not up to the mark. But mutiplexes are doing business close to 90% and it is better than "Ek Tha Tiger" in properties like Inox Bangalore, Pvr Saket and Ambience Gurgaon. This will ensure the good figure on day one.


But a film released in 2400 screens can not get record or huge numbers just riding on multiplexes and metros. Film has to improve in these places in order to register business in excess of 60 cr over the weekend.

As per early estimates, film should collect 12-13 cr nett on Day one which is a good start for a multiplex film. remember Ranbir's "Rockstar" and "Barfi!" collected less than 10 cr and Aamir's last release collected 13 cr.

"Talaash" looks to havelong run in multiplexes on the lines of other Excel Entertainment hit "Zindagi Na Milegi Doobara". Though film has good number ofshows late evening so figures will vary accordingly.

Keep-------------Smiling !!😊
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Posted: 12 years ago
#35

Cast: Aamir Khan, Rani Mukerji, Kareena Kapoor, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Shernaz Patel, Rajkumar Yadav, Sheeba Chadha

Director: Reema Kagti

Bathed in a noir-like moodiness, Talaash, directed competently by Reema Kagti, opens with a leisurely paced montage of Mumbai after dark. Wafting across the neon-lit signage of seedy bars, the camera pokes its head into the backrooms of brothels where prostitutes doll up before heading out to ply their wares. Crummy-looking pimps court prospective clients for their girls, an old destitute woman stares blankly huddled in a streetside corner, even as urchins tap hopefully on taxi windows. This is a side of a city we fleetingly encounter and yet it seldom registers in our lives. What Kagti conveys through Talaash is that this is a living-breathing strata of our society, and these people must matter - they deserve humanity and compassion.

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Director Reema Kagti employs a solid technical team to deliver a film that is rich in atmospherics and mood.

These ideas are nicely wrapped in a murder mystery, kicked off the night when a film star drives his car straight into a promenade and plunges it into the sea, killing himself. Inspector Surjan Singh Shekhawat (Aamir Khan) finds himself sucked into the underbelly of the city as he investigates this case that is evidently more complicated than it appears.

Himself straining under the burden of guilt since the death of a loved one, Shekhawat immerses himself in the investigation, even as his wife Roshni (Rani Mukerji) wrestles with depression and loneliness. As the cop spends long nights driving around the city's darkest corners in search of clues, he's befriended by a kindly hooker, Rosy (Kareena Kapoor), who helps him uncoil the maze of this case.

Kagti (with her co-writer Zoya Akhtar) tells a gripping tale that operates on more levels than one. On the surface it's a juicy suspense, but 'Talaash' is as much about grief and surviving great loss. It's about relationships and love, and at the same time it's a story that questions your belief in the paranormal. In spite of packing in many themes at once, the writers keep the film consistently accessible (and occasionally simplistic), but without 'dumbing down' the material. Not everything works, though. The twist in the end is cheesy, and isn't too hard to see coming, but mercifully Kagti keeps the journey leading up to the big reveal engrossing. What's more disappointing than the twist itself is the manner in which the writers recap scenes to explain it, as if spoon-feeding those who didn't get it right away.

Still, 'Talaash' benefits from its crisply written characters and the exceptional actors who play these parts. As Taimur, the limping odd-jobs guy in the brothel, Nawazuddin Siddiqui is terrific, inhabiting the role like a chameleon. Playing Shekhawat's junior officer, it takes Rajkumar Yadav just one scene - in which he's merely a spectator with a single line of dialogue - to show what a good actor can bring even to a small part. The same is true of Shernaz Patel who shows up as a kooky psychic, and Sheeba Chadha who appears as a past-her-prime sex worker.

Of the leads, Kareena Kapoor brings both oomph and heart to her role, despite the sometimes clunky lines she must mouth. Rani Mukerji shines as the cop's desperate wife, investing her performance with a gamut of emotions, never once reducing the character to a pathetic caricature. It's Aamir Khan, in the film's central role, who not surprisingly leaves the biggest impression. Shekhawat internalizes his emotions for the most part, and Aamir brings volumes of depth to this troubled man...that furrowed brow, the moustache, all adding to this remarkable performance.

Director Reema Kagti employs a solid technical team to deliver a film that is rich in atmospherics and mood. KU Mohanan's striking photography and Ram Sampat's haunting score lend a distinct texture to this film, as do the real Mumbai locations the film is shot on. But 'Talaash' doesn't feel nearly as tense or urgent as it ought to, and its plot simply isn't as deliciously complex as it could've been. As a result, it's a very watchable film, but not an unforgettable one.

I'm going with three-and-a-half out of five for director Reema Kagti's 'Talaash'. Its shortcomings notwithstanding, it's a good example of an entertaining commercial film that didn't need to be lazy or senseless. Don't miss it; easily one of the better films this year.

Rating: 3.5 / 5

Keep--------------Smiling !!😊
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Posted: 12 years ago
#36
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.

SPOILER AHEAD

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.
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Posted: 12 years ago
#37
Kareena Kapoor is mind-blowingly excellent. Her look, her loud costumes, her dialogue delivery and her body language, all go to add to her character. She makes Rosy so endearing that the audience actually ends up falling in love with a call girl.

^Love it :D Go Bebo!
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Posted: 12 years ago
#38
komalnahta
Early estimates TALAASH Day 1: Rs. 14.5 crore. Huge jump in evening, night shows
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Posted: 12 years ago
#39
Single Screens And Mass Belts Low For Talaash Talaash could not open well at single screens and multiplexes in mass dominated circuits and there was not much improvement in the shows after. The multiplexes are in urban cities are good but eventually there is a limit to how far these cinema's can take a film. The single screen opening is around 40% The first day will come out with a decent total but not the sort of number expected from a wide release Aamir Khan film after three years. The average business in many circuits will tell on the first day business despite big contribution's by metro multiplexes The business in the big circuits (Mumbai and Delhi/UP) is not optimum as if Mumbai city has good numbers, Gujarat has low figures. If Delhi city is good, UP is recording low numbers http://www.boxofficeindia.com/boxnewsdetail.php?page=shownews&articleid=5155&nCat
its like the opening will be much below the mark but its ok if the wom is good because this will give the film agood final result but lets wait to see people reaction here
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Posted: 12 years ago
#40

Talaash review: Quite slow and unsteady

  • Nov 30, 2012
  • By Khalid Mohamed

The tough cop's blue. Because he doesn't have a clue. A car being speed-driven by a Bollywood hero has just crashed, smashed and plunged right into the sea.

Was it a road accident? Or was there foul play? Alarmingly, there have been similar fatal crashes at the same spot but the traffic police hasn't constructed a railing, a road divider, nothing. Strange.

More bizarre events follow in Talaash directed by Reema Kagti who also co-authored the script with Zoya Akhtar. But instead of being engrossed in the whodunwhat mystery thriller, you're as flustered as the cop conducting the inquiry. Indeed, his scowl's contagious.

Like it or not, there are far too many loose threads, too many implausiblities and a deep dark atmosphere. Nothing wrong with being kept in the dark, but frequently events become so far-out (particularly the finale) that even Salvador Dali would have quivered with consternation. But surreally.

Quite clearly, the script's the culprit. Information is repeated, footage is expended on dangling conversations at a barren oceanfront (wish Mumbai had some), and the characterisations lack shades. They're either upset or extremely upset, except for a streetwalker who keeps smirking, while parading figure-flattering outfits of animal prints and floral patterns.

She goes meoww (inaudibly) and exudes globs of the glamour quotient. That's Kareena Kapoor, who brings in some relief to an otherwise drab, uninvolving affair. How you wish her role had been lengthier, stronger, sexier, a kind of Life of Pooh perhaps. Well, never mind.

In terms of the dramaturgy, there's a shard of Robert Redford's Ordinary People -- a long-married couple turn emotionally sterile after their little son's death by drowning, in this case on a picnic boat.

Then there's an echo of L A Confidential in which the murder of a young actor sparks the shenanigans, not to forget a partly-lame lumpen element who takes to a small roller-skateboard a la Mazhar Khan in Ramesh Sippy's Shaan.No point making a hoo-hah about originality. It's dead.

Move on then with the grim top cop (Aamir Khan), who commences the probe into the death of the B-town hero (Anonymous Kumar). Also described as an encounter specialist, the cop becomes a roving Sherlock Holmes in Mumbai's red-light area That means he meets up with a brothel madame wearing hair curlers so enormous that you worry about her head space. In addition, it starts baddies including the aforecited roller-skater(Nawazuddin Siddiqui), and a sad-eyed Mr Murugan lying on his death bed. No Quickgun, he!

Next: Since no headway's being made in the investigations, the top cop sulks around home with his fretful wife (Rani Mukherjee). When a neighbourhood sance expert (Shernaz Patel) pops up he doesn't like that either. So what does he like? Maybe, he'd like a wild and wanton relationship with Miss Glamour Kapoor. Wow. She even tempts him into a hotel boudoir but merely rustles his hair, as if checking for dandruff. Can't reveal any more: suffice it to say, oh oh, what on earth is going yawn?

A slow-tempo baffler was surely not expected from Kagti, whose Honeymoon Travels was sufficiently frothy and bouncy. For reels and reels, Talaash remains stationary as if it was stuck in traffic. The visual look strives for realism but that's about it – the red-light ambience has been seen to far more impactful effect in Dev D by Anurag Kashyap (who incidentally contributed some additional writing to this project). And the recurring use of Mumbai's skyline by night, as transition points, are annoyingly cliched.

Ram Sampath's song compositions are cool embellished by Javed Akhtar's sensitive lyrics but the background score jars. At the outset, jazz works but the later symphony blasts are excessively obtrusive.

Of the cast, Shernaz Patel is unusually unconvicing. Expectedly, Aamir Khan dominates the show but is much too studied and mannered. The actor needs to let go and get spontaneous. Rani Mukherjee is morose to a fault. It's a relief to see her actually easing up and laugh a couple of times.

Do yourself a favour then: see Talaash only if you believe that Aamir Khan can do no wrong. Otherwise you'll be left with a sinking feeling.

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