All is Well| Reviews - Page 3

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Posted: 10 years ago
#21
He has no script sense

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Posted: 10 years ago
#22

Movie Review- 'All Is well': Dead on arrival

Deccan Chronicle | Suparna Sharma | August 21, 2015, 19.48 pm IST

Rating: 1/2 star

Cast: Abhishek Bachchan, Asin, Rishi Kapoor, Supriya Pathak, Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub, Seema Pahwa

Direction: Umesh Shukla

We can't complain and we can't blame it on anything or anyone else. It's our fault, really. It's our own sins we are paying for.

We the people of India are guilty " of loving him so much, of hailing and feting him and spending so much money on him, at the expense of many others, that karma the b***h has come back to bite us in the ass in the form of his son.

We are also guilty of promoting, endorsing, practicing nepotism everywhere. We are cool with it. What is father's will go to the son. We are okay with star children sprouting on our screens, with or without talent, regularly.

So we can't really complain when Bollywood puts in money to reassure him, intermittently, that he too is an actor, a star. That he too is in the reckoning, that he can get a film centred around him. It's due to him because, well, it just is.

He was animated once. He even tried to act once in a while. In some films he was more than just bearable. He could be fun. He was never a great actor, or even a half-decent one. But, you know, he had that Bachchan-ka-beta charm. And he didn't carry this smug entitlement then. Now he does.

And that's one reason why it is absolute torture to watch the wooden Abhishek Bachchan for 126 minutes. You sit there waiting for one small, minute expression that won't make you either cringe or slap yourself with your own shoes. It never comes. He just goes from bad to very bad and then worse.

All Is Well is not so much a film as a torture chamber. A more all-encompassing incompetence and idiocy would be hard to come by.

The film has nothing, NOTHING that's worth even two minutes of your time. It's full of such asinine characters and such incredible inanities that calling it a film would be a criminal offence.

Its plot is more like a conspiracy by some halfwits to drag and stretch a non-story for over two hours. That it has supporting actors known for their acting skills seemed to have irked the director and the film's writers so much that they've gone out of their way to humiliate each one in such a painful way that it's a wonder they turned up for shooting after the first day.

If you think I'm hyperventilating, consider this.

Inder (Abhishek Bachchan) lives in Bangkok and is some sort of a singer with a band. He'd like to cut an album, but for that a repulsive Tikku Talsania says he'll have to pay. Inder has no money. He ran away from his home, in Kasol, Himachal, to be far away from his constantly bickering parents. His father was a meanie and his mother a whiner and a whimperer.

Just as Inder is thinking "kahan se laaon paisa", he gets a call from Cheema (Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub) who says, "Come to Kasol to sign away your father's bakery and take your share."

Off he goes, but with with one annoying, overly-madeup Nimmi (Asin), biting at his heels. She keeps pleading/threatening: "Are you going marry me? Please, marry me. Marry me, varma I'm going to get married. Marry me before I actually get married to another..." Inder's response to all this is a look of bored disgust. Yet she goes on, and on... making me feel so bad that I felt like saying, "Chal, I'll marry you if you wash your face."

Nimmi is actually to all set to get married to another. Her house, in Chandigarh, on route to Kasol, is full of Sikh mummy, papa and relatives, waiting for her arrival. But instead of going home, she just follows Inder to Kasol despite his same bored-cum-disgusted look.

In Kasol, Inder finds Cheema holding a gun and threatening his papa, Bhalla (Rishi Kapoor), to sign the papers. Some money is owed to him. Mother (Supriya Pathak) is nowhere to be seen. She's at an ashram as she is afflicted with Alzheimer's. Only in her case, Alzheimer's means standing around like a wilting potted plant throughout the film. Inder gets her discharged.

Shaadi house full of sardars is waiting for Nimmi the beti-bride to arrive and get married, but she hangs around Inder, mostly to prop up the potted plant so that it doesn't flop to the ground, and also to keep pestering him to marry her, varna...

Inder is busy, to somehow arrange money to pay Cheema. Only option is to get mummy's jewellery which is with their mamaji. There we meet Seema Pahwa who has grown Bugs Bunny teeth and turned into a chest-beating Punjabi Manorama. It was unbearable to watch her demean herself.

Cheema and his morons in a convertible Merc are chasing father-son-wilting plant and bhagodi dulhan who are in a cop car. At every stop the cars get swapped. Now this team is in the convertible and that one in the cop car... including at Nimmi's house where, as Cheema and his goons drag her away at gun point, in front of her full parivaar, this is the exchange :

Nimmi's mother: "Khyal rakhna, puttar."

Nimmi: "Fikar nahin karna. Mujhe kuch nahin hoga."

Tata, mummy.

There's more chasing, wilting plant intermittently sobbing, perhaps because Rishi Kapoor is so, like, absent from his own body, or because Cheema's fizzy, Afro hair is becoming more and more agitated, before we come to the end where all gets well because beta realises that he should be like Shravan Kumar and carry his parents on his shoulders and not run away to Bangkok. So he gives a bhashan that made me want to scream, "Arre, we are Shravan Kumars. We've been carrying you for so long, from one boring film to another... We should just stop now."

The other problem with Chota Bachchan's sermon was that Zeeshan was the film's real Shravan Kumar, carrying this dead on arrival thing almost entirely on his shoulders.

On paper I imagine the script may have sounded like it would be fun. And it does have a few moments that are so bad that they are good. But after suffering through it all, I'd like to see proof that Umesh Shukla was actually directing this thing. Because all through it seems that the actors and the cameraman were handed over the script and told to go do their thing.

I wish they had just rolled it and smoked it.

Edited by touch_of_pink - 10 years ago
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Posted: 10 years ago
#23

All Is Well Review

Aug 21st, 2015 by Surabhi Redkar
Shares : 3621 Comments ( 1 )

All Is Well Movie Poster

Rating: 1.5/5 Stars (One and half stars)

Star Cast: Abhishek Bachchan, Asin, Rishi Kapoor, Supriya Pathak

Director: Umesh Shukla

What's Good: It is actually difficult to find what is good in this film. I would just say I have never been so bored on a road trip before.

What's Bad: The script is crass. Nor funny, nor serious! I am quite confused as to why the film was made in the first place.

Loo Break: Yes! Sip on as much cold drink as you can, it will only help!

Watch or Not?: Absolutely not! Nothing is well in All Is Well. It is a complete waste of great actors like Rishi Kapoor and Supriya Pathak. Save your money and your soul; give this one a miss!

User Rating:

69 Votes

The film takes off with Inder (Abhishek Bachchan) performing (singing) in Bangkok where as in his flashback we see his troubled childhood. As a child, Inder has grown up with a lot of bitterness thanks to his parents having constant fights. Bhalla (Rishi Kapoor) is Inder's father who runs a bakery in Kasol. After Inder graduates, his dad expects him to join his bakery business but Inder is interested in music. Not being able to convince his dad, Inder leaves his house and returns 10 years later when he receives a call stating him to collect his share from the bakery ownership.

This is a trap set by Cheema who has lent huge sum of money to Bhalla and is now wanting to take over his house and bakery. In the meanwhile, Inder learns that his mother Pammi (Supriya Pathak) is suffering from Alzheimer's. If this was any less, there is also Inder's girlfriend Nimmi (Asin) who is hitched to someone else but is still coaxing Inder to change his mind and commit to her. For some reason, she is always seen trotting with The Secret (book) which seems to be the philosophy of her life.

Consider all these messed up characters taking a roadtrip that seems never ending. Eventually, will Inder overcome his phobia of seeing relationships in a bad light and get back with his family together is what is left to see.


Abhishek Bachchan, Supriya Pathak, Asin and Rishi Kapoor in a still from movie All Is Well'

All Is Well Review: Script Analysis

Umesh Shukla tries his hands at making a modern day tale of the mythological character Shravan Kumar but fails miserably. There are so many loopholes in this story that I don't know where to begin. In the first place Inder moving to Bangkok seems extremely illogical looking at his family background. Secondly, why do filmmakers take the issue of Alzheimer's so lightly. Pammi's illness strangely becomes fine in the second half which is medically impossible as she is suffering from the same condition since over 10 years.

The humor that is added in the film is so slack that you cannot even blip a little. Jokes at the expense of deaths and funerals are not funny and it extremely psychs me why they would be included by a director who has made a logical film like Oh My God. Casting too seems faulty since, Abhishek does not look like he may be in his 20s in the scenes where he is shown to be a graduate. Nimmi's character is getting married and weirdly her family is least bothered where the bride is roaming around with Inder and his family. Being a family drama, there is not one point in the film when you actually feel the bond. In the last scene, Inder gifts his dad a revamped bakery cafe which is impossible to be a surprise since they stay right above it.

Besides, renovations take months not two days. So the two hour yawn fest goes on without much sense in it.

All Is Well Review: Star Performance

Rishi Kapoor is one senior actor who actually performs no matter how badly written his character is. He does the same in All Is Well. It's just that an actor of his caliber is wasted in the film.

Abhishek Bachchan really needs to check what he is signing. All Is Well proves to be another dud in his career and he can't save it. This modern day Shravan Kumar act does not impress at all.

Asin is once again her over the top self. Her Miss positive character completely gets on your nerves and to top it all she expresses it in proportions that are way higher than what is needed.

Supriya Pathak is a completely under used actor in this film. Playing the Alzheimer's stricken mother, she has probably four dialogues in the film and it is unfortunate to see that. She is a powerful actress and we miss her charm in this one.

Zeeshan Ayub as Cheema tries to make his villainous act funny but fails badly due to the weak script. He is a actor with great potential but the script fails him here.

All Is Well Review: Music, Direction

Can you believe it, that Umesh Shukla is the same director who made Oh My God? I honestly can't. Why in the world would he show us such gravity defying logic. All Is Well falls flat in almost every department other than acting. After a boring script, Shukla plans to bore you even more with a completely neglected direction.

The characters are on a road trip and not once do you see a picturesque location. Sonakshi Sinha's item number pops up from nowhere in a Dhaba. Since the music album is already mediocre, there is little to look forward to in the film. The second half drags into an unnecessary detour and it is like we are roaming around in circles in the same plot.

Shukla wants to show us the importance of relationships but not one scene is captured in a manner to invoke those emotions. It tires you out in the first half itself and while you wait for a predictable climax, the end credits song Chaar Shanivaar pops up. The song is a good alarm for those who fell asleep during the last thirty minutes of the film.

All Is Well Review: The Last Word

All Is Well was supposed to be an entertainer with a social message, unfortunately it fails at both. Generation gaps causing problems in relationships also need logic to it and that is where All Is Well completely misses the point. I am going with a 1.5/5 for this film.

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Posted: 10 years ago
#24

agar seriously bol rahe to acha laga koi ek positive review mila
Agar sarcasm hai to thik hai😆
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Posted: 10 years ago
#25
really bad reviews :(
i wanted to watch it this weekend
i'll wait for some more reviews then decide..
umesh shukla made OMG and abhishek,supriya & rishi
are good actors what went wrong?
did masand, anupama, mihir and guha posted
their reviews?
Edited by kimi484 - 10 years ago
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Posted: 10 years ago
#26

Originally posted by: ChotaBheem


agar seriously bol rahe to acha laga koi ek positive review mila
Agar sarcasm hai to thik hai😆

paise lag gaye toh doosron ke bhi waste karwa rahe hain😆
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Posted: 10 years ago
#27

Originally posted by: mahatma123

paise lag gaye toh doosron ke bhi waste karwa rahe hain😆


😲 🤣
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Posted: 10 years ago
#28

All Is Well review: A mockery in the name of filmmaking, it's nothing short of a ride to hell

Friday, 21 August 2015 - 8:59pm IST | Agency: dna

All Is Well is a classic example of how a promising concept and talented actors can be ruined mercilessly by substandard writing/direction and a production house that cannot decide whether it wants to sell music or make movies. Even if you see the film in your most generous state of mind, there's very little you'll find to appreciate.

Film: ALL IS WELL
Starring: Rishi Kapoor, Abhishek Bachchan, Asin, Supriya Pathak and Mohammed Zeeshan Ayub
Directed by: Umesh Shukla
Rating: *1/2 (One and half stars)

What's It About:

Writer-director Umesh Shukla takes his inspiration from the mythological tale of Shravan Kumar who was known for his devotion towards his parents. Bhalla (Rishi Kapoor) owns a small bakery and wants his son Inder (Abhishek Bachchan) to continue his legacy. But the son has bigger plans. After an altercation with his father, Inder moves out and ends up struggling to realise his musical dream in Thailand. One day, he gets a call from Chima (Mohammed Zeeshan Ayub), a local hoodlum from his hometown. Inder is promised a lot of money, which is why he returns to his land; only to discover that it's all a set-up and his father, in fact, owes a lot of money to people around, including Chima. And thus begins a run-around with Inder having no choice but to join forces with the father he hates to get his family out of trouble. Joining the father-son duo is the Alzheimer-struck mother (Supriya Pathak) and Inder's love interest (Asin).

What's Hot:

All Is Well is a classic example of how a promising concept and talented actors can be ruined mercilessly by substandard writing/direction and a production house that cannot decide whether it wants to sell music or make movies. Even if you see the film in your most generous state of mind, there's very little you'll find to appreciate. The tiresome proceedings in the first half are somehow salvaged to some extent in the latter part but that's about it. This film, which is nothing but a sheer waste of talent and money, has to its credit some fine performers and they are the only consolation. Rishi Kapoor starts on an irritating mode only to settle down with his character as the film progresses. Mohammed Zeeshan Ayub continues his winning streak after Tanu Weds Manu Returns - he is the only one who lightens the screen every now and then. Supriya Pathak is completely wasted but shines in the scenes where she needs to. The film's driving force is Abhishek Bachchanand his sincere effort shows on screen. In a film filled with screenplay jerks and continuity issues (the director doesn't bother even when AB's hairstyle changes in the same scene), Abhishek plays his subtle act with tremendous dignity.

What's Not:

Director Umesh Shukla who had earlier made OMG-Oh My God seriously needs to enroll himself in a film school to understand the difference between stage plays and feature films. To say that his direction is childish, slipshod and tacky would be an understatement. His shooting style is outdated even when compared with the cinema of the 80s - repetitive block frames, unnecessary tight close-ups and over-dramatisation of emotions is all what he has to offer in terms of treatment. As far as the story is concerned, his characters and situations come out all garbled. Firstly, All Is Well is a colossal failure directorially. Secondly, producer Bhushan Kumar needs to understand that selling his music and making films are two different businesses. It happened in the disastrous Roy as well where songs just sprung out of nowhere and which had nothing to do with the film or the storyline. The same continues with All Is Well. In the middle of a car chase, an item song featuring Sonakshi Sinha has been added, which has no connection with anything that's happening. When you try to push a song down the audience's throats at the cost of a film's narrative, the result is bound to be catastrophic. And well, it's not that the songs are anything to talk about -In fact, the brilliant Ae Mere Humsafar from QSQT has been mangled beyond repair in Tulsi Kumar's screeching voice. All Is Well is a mockery in the name of filmmaking and it's just sad that a stellar cast has been completely wasted and let down in the process.

What To Do:

All Is Well is nothing short of a ride to hell. If you want to stay well, stay away from it.

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Posted: 10 years ago
#29

FILM REVIEW: ALL IS WELL

By Kunal Guha, Mumbai Mirror | Aug 22, 2015, 12.00 AM IST

Film review: All Is Well
Critic's Rating: 2/5
Avg Readers' Rating: 2/5
CAST:Abhishek Bachchan, Asin, Rishi Kapoor, Supriya Pathak Kapur
DIRECTION:Umesh Shukla
GENRE:Comedy
All is hell

Doctors in Hindi films have forever been a type. Their consistent unscientific advice on a range of conditions continues with this film. So, when a character in this film is diagnosed with Alzheimer's, the doctor points out that it's "hairy-ditry" and suggests, "Iska koi ilaaj nahin hain. But patient ko har haal mein khush rakhna." A strand of hair for every time a doctor has uttered these words in a film, and we'd be Anil Kapoor. But this is just one of the many cliches tucked into this excuse for a comic road trip film.

The film is about Inder Bhalla (Abhishek Bachchan), a man who ditches his father's dream of joining the family bakery, Bhalla and Sons " to follow his own " of being a rockstar in Bangkok. But the Bangkok here is largely a poolside with bikini-clad models surrounding a Punjabi music mogul, who only signs on talent willing to sponsor themselves. This is obviously something Inder can't do and his dream is limited to the opening song where he's strumming away on his unplugged electric guitar in malls and pubs (dream sequence or not, we can't tell).

When he returns to his hometown Kasol, he finds that his father Bhajanlal Bhalla (Rishi Kapoor) is in a financial pickle and the family is on the run to dodge their creditors. For some reason, Inder's clingy college friend, Nimmi (Asin) joins them. Insufferably coy, she finds novel ways to stick on with the Bhalla bunch, even if this means bunking her own wedding.

If you survive the first half, be warned that the second half packs in loud hamming and glycerine-induced drama that could be fatal for the faint-hearted. Fastforwarded chase sequences where people bump into each other and hurt themselves for comic relief may have worked in the 90s and in Tom & Jerry, but fails to be mildly amusing today.

Abhishek Bachchan seems smug in his mediocrity and unless his character was someone exceptionally uninterested in life, he hasn't put in much effort. Looking lost and comfortably plump, all that junior Bachchan has gained is some pounds around his waist. Asin's character is borderline annoying and across-the-border cliched (she's believes that the universe is bothered to constantly drop signs to direct her to her true love). But since her character is insignificant to the storyline, she can be ignored, if not tolerated. Rishi Kapoor does fairly well as a cranky papa, but sappy dialogues like, "Maine kabhi tere sapno ke baare mein nahin socha..." take away from his performance. It is upsetting to see an actor like Supriya Pathak Kapur being wasted as a character who hardly speaks or is of any consequence in any scene.

Director Umesh Shukla, known to most for his adaptation of a Gujarati play, Oh My God, fails on every count: in telling a story that demands undivided attention, crafting memorable characters or earning a laugh in a film that is supposedly a comedy.

The music is perfect to check out what's cooking in the cafeteria and Sonakshi Sinha's athletic-belly-bouncer of an item number, Nachan Farrate, is effective to help wean kids of ice cream. All is surely not well with the world if such films are being produced as mainstream entertainment.
Edited by touch_of_pink - 10 years ago
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Posted: 10 years ago
#30
All Is Well And Manjhi - The Man Mountain First Day Business
Saturday 22 August 2015 11.30 IST
Box Office India Trade Network
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All Is Well had a poor first day with collections set to be around 2.50 crore nett. The film has fared very poorly all over and there was not much of an improvement in the evening to suggest a big improvement today. It should grow but it's unlikely to be the sort of growth the film needs to get a decent run. The music of the film was pretty well promoted but it has not helped much at the boxoffice.

Manjhi - The Man Mountain also did poorly but this film did do a bit better in the evening shows. The film has collected in the 1-1.25 crore nett range but did get a good amount of screen time with most multiplexes giving it one screen and collections are low for the screen time alloted.

Still the film should show better growth than All Is Well on Saturday going by the trends on Friday and is actually looking the better bet out if the two films.

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