= KICK = Reviews / BO Collections = #3 Thread - Page 16

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I_M_SultaN thumbnail
Posted: 11 years ago

Originally posted by: K.Sean

Watched it. Surprisingly, it wasn't all that bad. Script had many loopholes though.. so a lot of W*F moments for me. The lovestory of Devi and Shaina, it started of well but didn't get a proper ending. Besides, the second half made the first look irrelevant because of the whole "doing it for the poor kids" angle when it was supposed to be the break up that made him do wrong shiz.

I think the cast ensemble is what makes this film bearable. Randeep Hooda, he gave a very strong performance. I am glad I decided to watch it for him. Nawazudin, a terrific actor indeed. His villainous laugh was damnmn. Salman, I don't think he really had to act.. Devil = Salman. At least thats how I perceived it.

Was better than Ready and Bodyguard, but not as good as Wanted or ETT.

chalo good that atleast u like it in moments
so defo gaziilion time better then jai ho 😆

853244 thumbnail
Posted: 11 years ago
WARNING: Sallu fans (and other sensitive folks), this review will most likely offend you, so stop right now, and click on the back button. 😆

To the rest, if you want to enjoy a good laugh, read on. 😆

From one of my favourite reviewers, SearchIndia.com
🤣


Kick Review - Devilish Garbage

Ive never seen a spectacle so perverse, so utterly ridiculous as an Indian turning into a big-time robber (stealing millions both in India and overseas) merely to help sick orphans.

Get real, P-u-h-l-e-e-ze.

As anyone the least bit familiar with the subcontinent's ethos and culture will attest, our people are devils utterly bereft of the milk of human kindness.

Inflicting their logorrhoea about fictitious charity programs in every media interview, Indian devils' get their daily kick from murdering homeless people by running their cars over them, beating girlfriends, killing and barbecuing endangered deer, assaulting photographers and only the great Allah knows what other crimes these Shaitans commit behind closed doors.

A young orphan - sick or healthy - is the last thing on the mind of an Indian devil.

Devil's New Tricks

It's no secret that I loath rotten Indian films!

And by God, crappy Indian films are dime a dozen in Mera Bharat Mahaan.

So my first thought when I heard of Kick was - OMG, is it one of the dreadful Sajid remember Divya Bharati Nadiadwala junk or one of his stolen shits like Heyy Babyy?

I mean, what kind of a jackass calls an Indian film Kick. What's the next Indian movie? Panty, Boxer, Keyboard, Monitor?

My second fear - Has Sallu bhai stopped taking his medication and starred in another southern junk clone?

After all, the Chutiya is no stranger to South Indian drivel having thrust insufferably bizarre kichdi like Wanted, Bodyguard, Ready etc on us.

Right up to the end of Kick, when, eureka, we learn' the hero is robbing crooked politicians, callous doctors and amoral businessmen not to amass money but to help sick orphan children get medical treatment, the hero acts like he's got three screws missing in what passes for its head.

With not a single acting gene in his body, our hero is a robotic mass of muscle and bone. Even an attempt at a smile comes off awkward, more like a grimace.

Our tall, lissome heroine acts like an escapee from the local asylum, slapping her sister, pummeling the hero, smacking the comedian, kicking the hero and periodically making a face like Alia Bhatt on a quiz show.

Ah, did I tell you the hero looks older than the heroine's father?

And the hero's father looks like his younger brother. Incest anybody?

I swear on bhai the hero's mother looked like his former girlfriend.

Utter Bosh

As with a lot of Indian movies these days, the tiresome parade starts off on foreign soil.

Our reluctant heroine, now living abroad, is cajoled into meeting the not-hero bridegroom just arrived from India.

Heroine and the not-hero meet for the first time on a train.

Now the not-hero has gone overseas for two reasons - To meet the NRI girl chosen for him by his family and to nab theKick-hero who has taunted him into coming there. Not-hero is actually an Indian police officer smarting from being constantly on the losing side of Kick-hero's devilish robberies.

On the train, our heroine, she with the countenance of a Sri Lankan Red Slender Loris and the acting skills of a lifeless Jacqueline Fernandes, narrates her past encounters and love for the hero who has an addiction for "kick" related, adrenaline-surge activities.

After engaging in much vexing nonsense in Indian and foreign climes, and boring seen-it-all-before stunts using doubles, our heroine is finally enlightened with the truth about her Kick addicted hero.

With a heart of gold, all he wants in life is to help orphan children.

Dreadful Item Number

Since it's a big-budget Indian movie, an item number is de rigueur.

But the item song-dance featuring yet another aging flop-queen and a gaggle of frumpy emetics thrusting their collective udders in our face quickly got tiresome.

When we watch an item dance, we want to be impaled on the sword of our lust not yawn out of ennui.

Speaking of dancing, our hero does such a hopeless, hapless imitation of a dance that the horror of his elephantine moves left me numb.

Infernal Music

After watching Kick, I now know what the Devil loves to relax on.

Be it the songs picturized on snowy terrain or on bare earth, they were dreadful punishments to tender souls and aging ears.

Which duffer decomposed' the music for this dreadful nightmare.

Kick - Nightmare

I did not derive an iota of Kick from this Stygian nightmare.

Kick is a class-less, crude Indian monstrosity from beginning to end.

An atrocity of Brobdingnagian proportions, Kick is a negation of all art forms.

In any other country, such trash-peddlers would be quickly run out of town!

In Incredible India, they turn such drivel into hits. :(

SearchIndia.com strongly recommends you give this garbage Kick a mighty kick on its derriere.

Edited by Heisenberg. - 11 years ago
slumgod.. thumbnail
12th Anniversary Thumbnail Sparkler Thumbnail + 3
Posted: 11 years ago
Inflicting their logorrhoea about fictitious charity programs in every media interview, Indian devils' get their daily kick frommurdering homeless people by running their cars over them, beating girlfriends, killing and barbecuing endangered deer, assaulting photographers and only the great Allah knows what other crimes these Shaitans commit behind closed doors.

ISano thumbnail
19th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 3
Posted: 11 years ago
the movie is a nigthmare..
791198 thumbnail
Posted: 11 years ago
I love SI reviews. 😆 They are brutal on every movie and hilariously so. The guys there really know how to write. I'm a fan.
charminggenie thumbnail
17th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 11 years ago
Best review ever!! 👏😆
slumgod.. thumbnail
12th Anniversary Thumbnail Sparkler Thumbnail + 3
Posted: 11 years ago
I m waiting for Vigil Idiot review.
791198 thumbnail
Posted: 11 years ago
I love how he made that Alia Bhatt reference. Also, he said the same thing as Yellowflower, about the dad looking younger than the hero and the mom looking like the hero's ex. 😆

YF, are you on Searchindia's payroll? 😆
blue-ice. thumbnail
16th Anniversary Thumbnail Achiever Thumbnail + 4
Posted: 11 years ago
DAYUM...this is harsh😲 😆
slumgod.. thumbnail
12th Anniversary Thumbnail Sparkler Thumbnail + 3
Posted: 11 years ago
This one is also good

Shaina (Jacqueline Fernandez), a psychiatrist, is pining for her ex-boyfriend, Devi Lal (Salman Khan). Supercop Himanshu Tyagi (Randeep Hooda) is looking for the mysterious, masked thief Devil who goes around pulling of spectacular stunts.

Within the first half hour, the only ones who don't know that Devi Lal is Devil are Shaina and Himanshu. What follows for the next few hours is a procession of shots showing Khan walking, Khan driving, Khan dancing, Khan in a hoodie, Khan in a colourful kurta, Khan in black, Khan with a beard, Khan without a beard, Khan with tears in his eyes, Khan striding, and Khan's ass being kicked.

That's Rs 100 crore in Sajid Nadiadwala's kitty, apparently.

A Nadiadwala film starring Khan isn't expected to throw up surprise twists, which makes it easy to write a spoiler-free review of Kick because everyone knows who's going to win the cop versus robber game, when the robber is played by Khan. If Robin Hood and Mother Teresa had a lovechild and that child was raised by Mithun Chakraborty, his name would be Devi Lal Singh.

Salman Khan as Devi Lal

Devi Lal, is a genius and a daredevil, so much so that his back story has to be shown as an animated sequence. Real people can't do justice to his awesomeness (and no one is going to let any child do the frightfully dangerous and idiotic stunts that little Devi Lal pulls as a kid). There are even a couple of scenes in which we see Devi Lal grow up so that we are treated to an animated version of Salman Khan doing a few tricks. It looks more credibly real and has more expression than Khan himself manages, but maybe the cartoon was just being human. (There's something almost poetic about the animated Khan possessing expression and the human Khan looking like a statue stolen from Madame Tussaud's.)

Kick is supposed to be the story of an adrenaline junkie who's constantly looking for a new and better high. Instead, all we see Khan do is beat people up and dance badly, which may well be how he gets an adrenaline rush. In actuality, Kick is an attempt by Khan to show himself as a heroic good samaritan. Devi Lal in Kick doesn't enter the world of crime because of greed, but because he has a cause that is expected to make cherubs clap and angels weep with gratitude. In reality, it's a little creepy but we'll get to that later.

There isn't much by way of suspense in this film, but it does raise a few questions. Like, for instance, how much were the real actors in the cast paid for being in Kick? If they've negotiated well, then this is what we hope acting in Kick has earned the following:

Nawazuddin Siddiqui: a house
Randeep Hooda: a house and a car
Sanjay Mishra: a luxurious vacation
Rajit Kapoor: the right to demand a better wig.

Predictably, the only ace up the film's sleeve is Siddiqui, who manages to have some fun as Devil's arch nemesis. The one scene in Kick that has some crackle is Siddiqui's final encounter with Khan.

Ironically for a film about a guy who is bored and whose only ambition in life is to feel a heady rush of pleasure " yes, boys and girls, that's what Devi Lal means when he says he's looking for a 'kick' " Kick is a spectacularly dull film. Nadiadwala is clearly aware of this because why else would Salman Khan as Devi Lal make his grand entry and then, within seconds, remind us he's also Dabangg's Chulbul Pandey?

Devi Lal enters the film, driving a curious vehicle that is part bike, part car and completely ridiculous. He whisks a bride, groom and bride's friend out of a wedding, and as he is making his exit, one random member of the wedding band lands on the bike's bumper. Instead of howling in agony at the pain that one imagines follows a man's crotch hitting unyielding metal, the man sees Devi morph into Chulbul Pandey. HIs eyes glaze over and he plays the Dabangg tune.

That's basically what Nadiadwala expects audiences across the country to do: see their beloved Bhai (who is, helpfully, also called Bhai in the film) and not notice anything else, least of all how painfully idiotic the script, acting, stunts and twists in Kick are. No one expects the writing to be good in a Nadiadwala film, but Kick is just terminally lazy.

For instance, Himanshu grimly informs his team that Devil's three crimes show a pattern: Devil targets people who have made headlines and the robbery is done on holidays. Who's victim number four? A peon who hasn't made headlines. So much for pattern. More absurdly, Devil sends a handwritten note to the police along with a mug shot of the man he says he's going to rob. What do Himanshu and the rest of the police force do? They erupt in a frenzy of investigation to find Mr Mugshot. Why use the handwriting to catch the criminal when you can go hunting through the haystack of Delhi's population to find the man in the mugshot?

The worst part of Kick isn't that Nadiadwala and Khan take themselves seriously, but that they think their audiences are fools. The audience won't notice that the characters and plot twists make no sense. Devi Lal, who is supposedly a gold medallist engineer and has made headlines with inventions like hyper-real holograms, becomes a thief because he needs Rs 11 lakh for a medical emergency. Really? He couldn't get a loan? Sell his hologram technology? Or here's a radical thought: get a job.

The audience won't care that Shaina essentially kidnaps a patient from a hospital because he's her ex-boyfriend and she wants revenge on him because he's forgotten her. As far as she knows, he's got "retrograde amnesia", but why should she, a doctor, care about those details? He didn't recognise her. He must be punished. How? By "healing" him so that he remembers her, and then dumping him. She doesn't realise that all Devi Lal wants is to get into her home. Once she figures out she's been a pawn in his plan, you'd think she'd be doubly mad, but no. Shaina and her need for vengeance are conveniently forgotten. And of course the audience won't care about details like if a man jumps out of a building in Poland, it's highly unlikely he will land in London, the only city that has red double decker buses and a place called King's Cross.

Will the audience find anything creepy about the fact that Devi Lal feels a "kick" because a little girl, lying in bed, smiles at him? Only if they've read about Woody Allen. How does this girl end up in Devi Lal's care? She has a "chest tumour" and because her parents can't find the money for her treatment, they leave her in a children's home and jump off a building. How is getting orphaned supposed to help a sick little girl? Because their suicide note will waft to Devi Lal, naturally. So now this girl has the guilt of her parents' suicides and a guardian who gets a "kick" when she smiles at him. If that doesn't turn her into a violent psychopath, maybe she'll grow up to star in the Indian remake of Kick Ass.

But there are two wonderful, heartening and life-affirming things that one can take away from Kick. Early on in the film, you can see Khan being kicked on his bottom by Mithun Chakraborty. Unfortunately, we aren't shown Chakraborty's foot making contact, but the suggestion is plain and this is one illusion that we'll gladly buy. More importantly, this is the last time we'll see Salman Khan in a film in 2014.

That gave us a kick.

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