*Shaandaar* REVIEWS & BOX OFFICE!! - Page 3

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Posted: 9 years ago
#21
Krk
#Shaandaar will collect approx 7Cr today means 5Cr of Alia Bhatt n 2Cr of Shahid Kapoor alias machine of flop films.
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Posted: 9 years ago
#22
Indicine Review:

The trailers of Shaandaar have promised a fun romantic comedy with a quirk. Shahid Kapoor gained a lot of respect for his performance in Haider, Alia Bhatt has been swiftly rising as a dependable star, Vikas Bahl has garnered admirers after delivering the semi classic Queen in his last film. So when all three of them come together for one single project then curiosity is sure to be raised and so are expectations. Do the makers do any justice to our expectations? And is the film any good?

Story: The elder daughter of the scion Vipin Arora (Pankaj Kapur) is about to get married and the wedding takes place in a castle in England. She is about to marry the son of the super rich Harry Fundwani (Sanjay Kapoor) which Vipin secretly hopes will save his floundering company. In comes Jagjinder Joginder (Shahid), the wedding planner who becomes like a prince charming of sorts for Vipin's younger daughter Alia (Alia Bhatt). Will the two fall in love? Will the Aroras be able to save their business empire? To know, watch the movie.

Screenplay and Direction: First things first, Shaandaar is a disappointing film. When you expect so much from a film, it gets hard for the director to deliver so much but the tragic thing about Shaandaar is that even if you have very few expectations from the movie, even then you are sure to be disappointed. Shaandaar is a convulated, weird and frankly very boring tale for a movie which seemed so fresh and quirky. Vikas should have been responsible enough to not let it become weird. There are many points in the movie which are sleep inducing but you tend to forgive the writer-director because of the apparent promise in the quirks of the movie. What doesn't work, just doesn't work and what works only works to the bare minimum.

Shaandaar is technically a very finely shot movie with a lot of grandeuer and class. The production design is top quality and the costume design is fantastic. The editing is also very crispy although it is let down by the proceedings on screen. The music of Shaandaar is another disappointment. You expect a lot more from Amit Trivedi. Even though none of the songs are bad, the quality of the soundtrack is below average. The only song which makes a mark is Gulaabo.

Acting: Shahid Kapoor and Alia Bhatt continuously shine through the staleness of the movie and give very good performances which somehow salvage the movie to an extent. Shahid is looking fresh, and emotes well. His comic and romantic timing is spot on. Alia Bhatt looks sensational and keeps getting better with every movie. She is getting more expressive by the day and in Shaandaar she explores her comic side a lot more with limited results. Pankaj Kapur is at his normal best. Sanjay Kapoor makes a surprise comeback in the movie and is decent.

Conclusion: Shaandaar held a lot of promise because it was the coming together of drastically different styles of filmmaking (Karan Johar and Anurag Kashyap style). It invariable ends up being neither and sets itself up for a death trap. It doesn't entertain, doesn't enlighten and doesn't even make us laugh. A big festive release should do the bare minimum of keeping the audience entertained. Shaandaar is salvaged somewhat by the last few minutes and by the spritely fresh pairing of Shahid Kapoor and Alia Bhatt who give it their best show and rise above the film itself. Shaandaar is hardly a Shaandaar piece of movie-making.

Pros:

  • The quirk of the story
  • The in form lead actors Shahid Kapoor and Alia Bhatt give it their best
  • Shaandaar is technically fantastic

Cons:

  • Doesn't spark a lot of laughter and fails to entertain much
  • The story is too derivative for the normal audience
  • Is neither a good Phantom film nor a good Dharma film
  • The music doesn't stick with you
  • The pace is too slow which makes the film boring

Rating:


jibber-jabber thumbnail
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Posted: 9 years ago
#23

Film review: Only the title is magnificent in Shandaar'

Vikas Bahl's wedding-themed comedy, starring Shahid Kapoor and Alia Bhatt, is too wrapped up in itself to connect.
Nandini Ramnath Today 02:30 pm

Vikas Bahl's hopefully titled new movie is about as tidy as a jigsaw put together by an attention-deficit child: some bits fit together while others don't, and the whole thing has patches of colour and brightness but an overall messy appearance.

Some of the unruliness is presumably deliberate and a result of the have-cake-will-also-eat approach that marked Queen, the filmmaker's big hit from 2014. Queen was a formulaic coming-of-age story that coated its populist elements - song and dance sequences, slapstick comedy, identifiable middle-class characters - with the honesty and emotional heft that is usually found in indie productions.

The wedding-themed Shandaar also tries to tie a knot between indie sensibilities and Bollywood compulsions. Bahl and co-writer Chaitally Parmar present a grand wedding cake and then proceed to lather it all over the faces of their guests. Shandaar is supposed to be a wicked, sly, irreverent and subversive stoner comedy that celebrates as well as sends up wedding movies, but like the characters who get intoxicated on a combination of actual brownies and actual mushrooms, it suffers from a literal-minded and often infantile treatment. The dialogue has the welcome quality of casual banter, and Bahl creates an improvisational feel in several sequences, But he also makes ill-judged stabs at magic realism. The opening sequence, a clunky animation sequence fit for a children's cartoon network show, sends out an early warning sign that this fairy tale doesn't ever want to grow up.

The plot revolves around the nuptials between a Punjabi bride and a Sindhi groom, which is being held in one of those English castles that probably hosted nobility in the past and now has to suffer the ignominy of serving as yet another location for a Bollywood destination wedding. The Arora clan's matriarch (Sushma Seth) has decreed that her plump granddaughter Isha (Sanah Kapoor) will marry the permanently bare-chested Robin (Vikas Verma), the scion of a stereotypical bling-addicted Sindhi family. Not that the Aroras can be mistaken for classy. The wedding is actually a business deal, and Isha's put-upon father Bipin (Pankaj Kapoor) has no choice but to go along with the arrangement.

Bipin has another daughter Alia (Alia Bhatt), a foundling he adopted many years ago, but who never found favour with her grandmother or foster mother. Shed no tears for Alia, since she has been modelled on air-headed and plastic characters played by Zooey Deschanel and Kirsten Dunst in Hollywood and is therefore carefree, Bohemian, and incapable of expressing real emotions.

Alia's reaction to the truth about her parentage is telling. "This is so cool! I'm illegitimate. It's better than being adopted!" she exults. Quite.

One big in-joke

The real contest is between Bipin and wedding organiser Jagjinder (Shahid Kapoor), who has fallen for Alia, and the frequent verbal jousts between the real-life father and son add sparkle to otherwise shopworn material. U-rated flickers of desire also fly between Jagjinder and Alia, but although he catches her skinny-dipping and they bond over their common problem of insomnia, their romance is about as controversial as a blank sheet of paper.

The 146-minute movie proceeds in a jerky and slapdash fashion, and only a few sequences hit the mark. Most of the comedy seems to be in the form of one big private joke that does not travel beyond the borders of the set. In a meta sequence featuring one of Shandaar's producers, Karan Johar appears as a guest at a pre-wedding ceremony who conducts a mock conversation between Isha and Robin. The "Mehndi with Karan" sequence is supposed to send up Johar's popular television chat show Koffee with Karan as well as his own grandiloquent movies. A clever idea but clumsily handled, like so much else in Shandaar.
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Posted: 9 years ago
#24
King of FLOPS : SHAHID KAPOOR
He should retire, because of him many people are bankrupt.
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Posted: 9 years ago
#25
When a film flops,the hopes of so many waiting for their next film crashes to the ground.Budgets are tightened,for other projects.

and when a talented director lets the audience and industry down,it is worse.I couldnt believe my eyes when I saw the Shaandaar trailer.

I am so glad Shahid has Udta punjab..or it would have given all of us post Kaminey Deja vu😒
NowEna thumbnail
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Posted: 9 years ago
#26
Shaandaar movie
review: Shahid
Kapoor and Alia
Bhatt's film is shiny,
flashy and it
ends there!
If gleaming faces and designer wear is
your thing... This should absolutely be on
your watch list this weekend...
Karan Johar's extravagance meets Fox Star
Studios' opulence with a bit of Disney
sprinkled over it and Shaandaar materialises.
But in all this indulgence, Queen's King Vikas
Bahl got lost. How? Let me explain that:
What's it about:
Alia (Alia Bhatt) is an orphan whom Bipin
(Pankaj Kapur) takes home but his oppressing
mother and snooty wife are against it. Alia is
least concerned about their hatred towards
her since she just wants her Bips (as she
fondly calls her father) and his daughter Isha
(Sanah Kapoor) to herself. But there is
something about her that worries Bipin, Alia is
an insomniac and he prays for a person who
can make her sleep. But when that man
arrives in the form of Jagjinder Joginder
(Shahid Kapoor), he doesn't like it at all. Bipin
keeps an eye on him. While its love at first
sight for JJ, Alia takes time to fall for him.
But there is more to this story. JJ is here as a
wedding planner for Isha's matrimony which is
nothing but a deal between Bipin and Fadwani
(Sanjay Kapoor) so that the latter can bail
them out of bankruptcy. But Fadwani is
oblivious about it and is also bankrupt. Both
are banking on the wedding but a self-
obsessed groom makes Isha wary of the
wedding. In the meantime, yet another secret
tumbles out of the bag threatening Alia and
Bips relationship!
What's good:
Were you missing the magnificence of Kabhi
Khushi Kabhie Gham? Blindingly rich people
wearing designer wears dancing to literally
every tune? By the way those rich people are
bankrupt! Yes? Well, then Shaandaar will be
shaandaar for you. It's a visual delight.
There's Karan Johar written all over it. It's
about family, gays, love, wedding, bitchy
guests, bimbos and much more. But there are
two outstanding features about Shaandaar.
The comic strip that narrates the story about
Alia's entry in the house and her origin which
is reminiscent of Hum Tum; narrated by
Naseeruddin Shah. Only difference being it is
amazingly done; guess the credit for that goes
to Fox Star Studios. The second best thing is
Alia's adorable relationship with Pankaj
Kapur. It seems like a real father-daughter
relationship. Even Shahid and Kapur's
bickering connection isn't so engaging. Sanah
is a good performer. Sanjay Kapoor's Sindhi
jokes are really hilarious, although he got
much less time to crack the jokes. Vikas Bahl
is sourly missed but he tries to break free
towards the climax when fat-shaming by
people get shamed and that will make you
clap.
What's not:
It's tad amusing to say that don't expect
anything beyond ordinary from the film. It's
also a bit hurtful to say such a thing about a
Vikas Bahl film since Queen mirrored many
girls from across India. The film hardly has a
story. It's just an ongoing process where a
few subplots are added to heighten excitement
but after some time you just don't care. It
drags in the first half as well but a deliciously
hot Shahid saves the day but how long can
the shine blind you. The second half stretches
frighteningly, threatening to exhaust you.
That's because by then the shine wears off
and you want more. But nada! You get more
bling, gold and jokes that fall flat. Shahid and
Alia's chemistry was more evident at the
promotions than in the film. Even Karan
Johar's cliched cameo couldn't put it on the
right track. Songs are beautiful but drags the
film unnecessarily.
What to do:
Despite all that, watch this film this festive
weekend because it's been sometime since we
saw a KJo embellishment onscreen.
Rating:2.5 out of 5
http://www.bollywoodlife.com/news-gossip/shaandaar-movie-review-shahid-kapoor-and-alia-bhatts-film-is-shiny-flashy-and-it-ends-there/
Sillycone thumbnail
Posted: 9 years ago
#27
Another flop ka? poor my aloo baby😭. Shahid na..grrr😡
swati82 thumbnail
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Posted: 9 years ago
#28
Miss Malini's Review:

Movie Review: Shaandaar Is Surprisingly Underwhelming

At Team MissMalini, we've got a fair number of people who want spoilers of films - they want to know what happens and what the movie is about beyond the stuff you see just in the trailers. So when I returned to the office after watching Shaandaar, I was asked the usual question: "So. Tell us everything. What's the movie really about?"

And that's where I faltered, because truth be told? I'm still unsure what it's really about. That's mainly because Shaandaar seems like a fairly pointless film. Right from the trailer, you know the basic premise - a destination wedding that's the merging of two super rich families (the Fundwanis, anyone?), and a love story featuring the sister-of-the-bride and the wedding planner.

But that's the thing: what you see in the trailer is pretty much what you get - there's very little depth to the story beyond that. Not that there's anything wrong with fun, frothy, exaggerated cinema. But it is a problem if you feel like you're just consuming a string of over-the-top, trippy, W*F moments that ultimately seem to serve no purpose at all. Which is not to say that the film is all bad. There are some good moments too - Shahid Kapoor and Alia Bhatt deliver a few smiles in their scenes together, but it's not a standout act for either of them because they don't have a lot to work with. Pankaj Kapur is in ace form as always and the scenes between him and Shahid are definitely amongst the most watchable. Sanah Kapur is a natural, and particularly impresses in the climax scene. Vikas Verma is likable with his intentionally buffoon-like behaviour. Everyone in the supporting cast is good, too, and they all do their best to inject a little more into the film - with varying degrees of success.

So yes, you will, at some points in Shaandaar, let out a few chuckles. The problem is that there aren't enough of those to pull off the wacky trip Vikas Bahl imagined. You can see where he wants to go with this movie, which is why it's even more disappointing when it doesn't work out. Instead, the film ends up feeling nonsensical and rather lacklustre - which is exactly what you don't want a film called Shaandaar to end up looking like.

Rating: 1.5 stars.
NowEna thumbnail
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Posted: 9 years ago
#29
Shaandaar review: There is no
Shaan' in this Shahid Kapoor,
Alia Bhatt starrer?
Shaandaar review: Costumery may work with
other actors, but it's wrong for Alia Bhatt,
while Shahid Kapoor suffers from a badly-
written character.
Written by Shubhra Gupta | New Delhi |
Updated: October 22, 2015 4:02 pm
What Shahid Kapoor , Alia Bhatt starrer
Shaandaar' is trying to do is clear: reinvent
beloved fairytales with the help of winsome stars,
but ends up being a blinding mix of everything
with nothing of its own to boast of.
Take a blank canvas. Daub some Orphan
Annie' paint on it. Add a little dash of
Cinderella'. Come closer home and borrow
from that old durable Hum Aapke Hain Kaun',
and the much more recent Dum Laga Ke
Haisha'. And gild the whole with glitter and
gold. What Shaandaar' is trying to do is clear:
reinvent beloved fairytales with the help of
winsome stars, but ends up being a blinding
mix of everything with nothing of its own to
boast of.
One day, little Alia (Alia Bhatt, going by her
own name) is brought home by Papa (Pankaj
Kapur), a man ruled by his money-grubbing
mommy (Sushma Seth) and wife. Alia grows
up not knowing where she came from, not
knowing how to sleep and perchance to
dream. And then her Prince Charming (Shahid
Kapoor) rides into her life, and everything
changes.
There's enough in this premise for it to have
turned into a delightful concoction, given that
Vikas Bahl's last was Queen'. But so much
else is so relentlessly piled on- a big fat
wedding, no, make that a Big Fat Sindhi
Wedding, a grand mansion somewhere in the
UK (or is it Scotland?), the standard jibes-at-
gay-people, fat girl shaming, sorry stabs at
whimsy- that very soon into the film, you are
left groaning under the double assault of
bling and blather.
The film is bloated with excess. Songs dressed
up and going nowhere, saying nothing.
Sequences meant to showcase actual planes,
and flights of fancy, but looping no loops.
Costumery and puffery may work with other
actors, but it is wrong for Alia. Underneath it
all, she knows she is real, and she can't help
letting us in on her. But here, she's been made
to play so determinedly cute that she sinks
into a set of mumbled mannerisms. And using
her own name so soon in? There's a problem
right there.
Shahid suffers from a badly-written character.
He can be such a natural charmer, but here
the charm offensive is not allowed to stop,
and finally just overtakes him. It doesn't help
that he gets into a similar loop with the
scenes he has with his real-life 'papaji', and
there are several. Shahid and Alia look good
together, but there's not very much else they
manage between the two of them.
The only one who leaves an impression in this
crowded-yet-slack film is Sanah Kapur, the
real-life half-sister of Shahid, who plays a
bride being used as part of a 'deal' between
two business famiiies. She has a couple of
strong scenes, and wears her weight well. The
rest of it is a non-stop barrage of stereotypes
being played for laughs: rich Sindhi men and
their love for living life large, grooms
obsessed with their eight-and-a-half packs,
limp-wrists and fat waists.
Where's the shaan' in all this?
Cast: Shahid Kapoor, Alia Bhatt, Pankaj
Kapoor, Sanah Kapur, Sanjay Kapoor, Sushma
Seth
Director: Vikas Bahlhttp://indianexpress.com/article/entertainment/movie-review/shaandaar-review/
Edited by NowEna - 9 years ago
TheRager thumbnail
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Posted: 9 years ago
#30
From the reviews it seems like this movie is Vikas', Shahid and Alia's Besharam.

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