Hindi cinema's female actors rated on current form: 1. Kangana Ranaut 2. Deepika Padukone 3. The rest
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Hindi cinema's female actors rated on current form: 1. Kangana Ranaut 2. Deepika Padukone 3. The rest
i didnt like fukrey 😆 but i know i will love this movie cause i am half sold if there is north indian essence, biased always😳 and if performances is great plus songs then good. like many i remember hated bunty bubbli fr silly story but i loved tht movie😆Originally posted by: .krackjack.
For me, it's the opposite. 😳 It has a tremendous repeat value. This movie is more on the lines of Fukrey, where a certain section of audience would love it while the other might not really like it.
Originally posted by: .krackjack.
My two cents 😆
This movie is a RIOT. I don't remember the last time I laughed like crazy while watching a Bollywood film. I was in splits during the entire first half. The films starts with a bang and it only gets better. There's one scene where Manu and his dad are discussing about Marriage and Manu's mom is continuously cribbing/blabbering in the background. You won't even concentrate on the dialogues because you'd be busy laughing at the continuous murmuring. This is exactly the essence of the movie. The story is not anything exceptional, there's no intense love story or something, but the movie itself is SOO HILARIOUS that I didn't really care about the other obvious flaws of the movie. 😆
Pappi is a star, I mean Deepak is exceptional. His body-language, his expressions are just top-notch. I can't pin-point and say, so and so are his best scenes. But still, special mention to that scene where he fakes a heart-attack during a lecture in DU saying, 'Your question hurt me?' Oh God! 🤣 🤣
Kangana, what do I say about her? This lady is a fire-brand. She has come a looong way and is nothing less than TERIFFIC in this movie. Dialogue delivery has always been her weak point but with this movie, it has to become one of her stronger points. Kusum and Tanu, not even once will you find any similarity between the two portrayals. In the entire movie, you'll only see them as two different people with no connection whatsoever.
And Man! That North Indian essence. From little kids sleeping with their mouths open during the 'var-maala' ceremony to taking advantage of studying law and encroaching the kiraaye ka room. From the exceptionally funny dancing by the uncles on the dance floor to funny marriage videos with lame-ass edits. From that 'assi-tussi karke baat karna' to 'gaaliyan padengi twada-vaada karke'. 🤣 What awesome-ness man!
And Kusum. I love her. There's one scene where she says, 'Sharma Ji, sab bolenge ki Dilli gayi thi Indira Gandhi banne, par yeh toh jaake aashiqui mein pad gayi' Oh dear...Kangana is truly exceptional. ❤️
Needless to say, the supporting cast is mind-blowing as well. Madhavan, Kusum's brother, Zeeshan, Swara-Eijaz and many others. 😆
As I said earlier, story is kinda average but overall the movie is brilliant. My most favourite movie of 2015 (at least for now) 😆
Originally posted by: .krackjack.
@rogie: Hey...watch it na. You know...the climax is kinda predictable and cliched( as expected 😆). So I found it a tad bit underwhelming...however, after the climax, there are couple of other hilarious scenes during the end credits and you again start laughing. It's like, even though the story-line is flawed, the comic portions more than make up for it and you'll come out of the theater with a huge smile. So yeah, it's primarily a comedy movie and an amazing one at that. 😆
Originally posted by: .krackjack.
@iktaara : Me too. Biased4life. 😆 Hey, I think you'll really like the movie then. Himanshu's dialogues are enough for people like us, who crave to see rural north India on screen. 😆
@rogie: I agree. These days there aren't even good comedians anymore but Deepak is on a diff level altogether. It's actually him and Kangana who carry the movie on their shoulders. Maddy's is more like a supporting role. 😆 But if you watch the movie in theater and find it silly ( which is very much possible) don't kill me. Wokay? 😆
Tanu Weds Manu Returns is not merely superior to its predecessor but the flamboyance and fun it provides is an implication we're not quite done with this mad duo yet, writes Sukanya Verma.
Never judge a marriage by its wedding.
Once the dazzle of unrestrained celebration fades out and rose-tinted glasses fall off one's nose, stress of matrimony rapidly sets in leaving the best of couples struggling from disappointment and rancour.
Even the oddball couple of Tanu Weds Manu cannot escape this pressure despite their dramatic union in the frothy first edition.
In its follow-up five years later, they're married and settled in London but domestic bliss is nowhere in sight what with all the bickering about their relationship's monotony and expectations in a mental asylum.
Kangana Ranaut and R Madhavan aren't exactly Tanu and Manu as we remember them anymore. She looks miserable, disgruntled and bored. He looks exhausted, embarrassed and out of patience.
They haven't lost their definitive trait, though. She's still pungent. He's still polite.
Aanand L Rai's sequel doesn't delve into the space of how it got to this point but gives us a sense of what must have transpired through the nasty volley of accusations and insults they hurl at each other like only a husband and wife can.
His rollicking Tanu Weds Manu Returns explores the misadventures of a derailed marriage between two oddball characters and their conflicting temperaments through Himanshu Sharma's piquant, jaunty script and a soundtrack (Krsna, Tanishq-Vayu) that wears a voice not just sound.
While the first one moved fervently between cities and small-town ambiance, the action inTWMR, following a prologue in London, takes place primarily in Delhi, Kanpur and a Haryana village.
Accents, twangs and dialects of various North Indian regions infusing Sharma's zesty lines not only add punch and flavour in a conversation but humour too.
It's an exceedingly funny movie aiming for full-throated laughs -- predominantly thanks to the unstoppable riot that is Deepak Dobriyal (still giggle remembering him in one seminar speech scene) -- at its zany two-hour duration.
At the same time, director Rai doesn't take its titular characters' emotionality for granted or drastically alter their characteristics to forcefully spruce things up. No, it continues to revel in their irreverence, indecision and irrationality at a more chaotic, comical scale with some new (and old) faces to boot.
Kangana plays one of them but I would not believe that even for a moment if the credits wouldn't insist otherwise. The actress completely disappears into the feisty Kusum aka Datto, a Haryanvi hockey player studying in Delhi University under sports quota -- a detail she is proud to remind anyone who dare demean her. It's not a major physical transformation per se, mostly a pixie-hair wig to tell her apart from Tanu. Having said that, her body language, which alternates between assertive and serene depending on the surrounding, and the sureness with which she rattles off her mother tongue is nothing short of flawless.
Must say I haven't enjoyed big screen Haryanvi so much since Matru Ki Bijlee Ka Mandola.
And there's again Kangana reprising her firebrand Tanu.
All the refinement in her growth as an actress works favourably for Tanu and her London-acquired poise and eloquence. She's still arrogant, unsure and an unapologetic drama queen drowning her sorrow in drinks and Geeta Dutt. The talented star's calibre shines through in her understanding of a wife's thinly veiled manipulations that are but an attempt to restore what she haughtily believes to be rightly hers.
Rai plays off Tanu and Kusum as two unique facets of feminism. While one's an incorrigible rebel that equates liberation as acting on her wild wills and whim, the other's an underdog whose accomplishments are entirely based on hard work and determination.
Although Rajesh Sharma's (as Kusum's brother) sudden surge of wisdom on women empowerment and casteism to a Khap-inspired gathering, while well intentioned, comes across as consciously preachy.
Coming back to Kangana, the powerhouse makes it difficult to pick a side. I found myself bawling for both at alternate turns.
R Madhavan's Manu isn't as effortlessly likeable as the first time. What prompts him to react so callously and chase novelty is somewhat understandable even if extreme given that Tanu is not exactly holier-than-thou, so keenly established and then reiterated in both the movies. Fortunately, Madhavan's earnestness is tailor-made for forgive and forget.
Constantly bubbling with activity and jokes, Tanu Weds Manu Returns is vivacious in its myriad moods -- whether it's a local lawyer explaining the difference between divorce notice and plain notice, a party of Sardars dancing to dandiya in colourful kediyus, Jimmy Shergill tackling the always the bridesmaid never the bride' curse, Manu's father (excellent even in a brief role K K Raina) spilling sarcasm over how to make marriages last, Swara Bhaskar and Eijaz Khan continuing their domestic banter, Mohammad Zeeshan Ayyub adding to the mischief as yet another of Tanu's roguish hanger-ons, Kusum showing off her karata' skills or Tanu's whistle worthy adas when she tearfully admits abhi aur zaleel hona hai.'
Tanu Weds Manu Returns is not merely superior to its predecessor but the flamboyance and fun it provides is an implication we're not quite done with this mad duo and their quirky universe yet.
yes i got tht promo only.😃so u hated maddy's character? 😆Originally posted by: .krackjack.
@iktaara : Me too. Biased4life. 😆 Hey, I think you'll really like the movie then. Himanshu's dialogues are enough for people like us, who crave to see rural north India on screen. 😆
Seems like a good start and advance booking Hopefully it will sustain a good run in its re release...
https://www.indiaforums.com/article/kangana-ranaut-set-to-juggle-two-major-sequels-as-queen-2-tanu-weds-manu-3-get-rolling_226563
https://youtu.be/IcMUB8qY-qo?si=pnHVTju0p3v3eFzX
https://www.indiaforums.com/article/opinion-the-shaadi-sequel-no-one-asked-for-but-could-it-surprise-us_222103
Has any one seen this movie...
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