--TUM BIN 2 REVIEWS-- - Page 3

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1101595 thumbnail
Posted: 8 years ago
#21

Originally posted by: ZulekhaKhan


well in my opinion they are better than the couple in your dp (no offence)!


hahaha that was an expected jibe, no offence taken😛😆
1101595 thumbnail
Posted: 8 years ago
#22
It was with Tum Bin that director Anubhav Sinha got his start in Bollywood. It was 2001, the year the Mumbai film industry delivered two of the new millennium's most memorable films, Lagaan and Dil Chahta Hai.

Over the decade and a half that have elapsed since, Hindi cinema, romantic dramas and Sinha himself have undergone many an inevitable change. Hence it feels a tad odd that a sequel to Tum Bin has been be attempted in the year 2016.

Not only has Sinha written and directed Tum Bin 2, he has also produced it under his Benaras Mediaworks banner in collaboration with T-Series. He obviously believes the franchise has a future.

The film is staggeringly simple-minded: it has faith, in an old-fashioned way, in the healing power of love and the catharsis of pain. That might not necessarily be a drawback for a film seeking mass connect.

But the characters are airily conceived and presented, robbing them of any tangible, relatable emotions.


Neha Sharma, Aditya Seal and Aashim Gulati in Tum Bin 2

They eat lasagna, rustle up cakes, swig red wine, and sip cups of coffee as they hold forth on love, loss, pain, grief, the pursuit of happiness and doing the right thing no matter what.

The appeal of the exercise begins to wear thin as soon as the beautiful frames, the eye-popping locations and the wannabes who are in the drama begin to look and sound drably monotonous.

Tum Bin 2 is competently mounted, visually lush and musically strong. But in terms of substance, this sequel is too long and too bland to be able to recapture the dramatic traction of the original tearjerker, which, too, had no star power.

Tum Bin had struck an instant chord 15 years ago, but none of its lead actors - Priyanshu Chatterjee, Sandali Sinha and Himanshu Malik went on to make thriving big screen acting careers in Mumbai.

It would be surprising if Tum Bin 2 achieves the kind of commercial success that its predecessor did.

But, in the light of the frequency with which tales of young love hit the screens these days, chances are that Neha Sharma, Aditya Seal and newcomer Aashim Gulati will get ample opportunities to build upon this opening.

The problems that Tum Bin 2 encounters do not lie in the technical department. In fact, few Hindi films have looked as consistently gorgeous as Tum Bin 2, thanks to the picturesque Scottish locations and cinematographer Ewan Mulligan's adroit camerawork.

It is the content of the film that lends itself to mushy dreariness. A much-in-love Indian couple, who live in Edinburgh, are days away from their nuptials when a mishap interrupts their life.

Another young man, as suave and smooth-talking as the first one, enters the picture and the grieving girl is steadily dragged out of the trough.

Then, expectedly, the first guy returns and an inevitable triangle is created, leading to a maudlin love story in which every character is so shiningly spotless that they could put priests completely out of work.

The two male actors - Aditya Seal and television's Aashim Gulati (in his first big screen role) - compete with each other to be sugary sweet.

The object of their affection (Neha Sharma in a comeback of sorts) mourns the disappearance of her fiance until the new man in her life teaches her not to exist with her back to what life has to offer.

One ditty sums up the helpful exhortation: "Kahat Kabir suno bhai saadho/Man ko udhne doh na baandho".

The song plays on the soundtrack while the depressed lady gets drunk silly, rediscovers a fount of joy within her, and dances in gay abandon.


Neha Shrama in Tum Bin 2

Life, says one of the wise young men, is a summer vacation; even as you are making your grand plans, it's suddenly over, poof!

Sure enough, he isn't the sole philosopher here. Everybody in this film delivers pep talks to everybody else. So much so that at times the audience could be forgiven for wondering if they have strayed into an Agony Aunt show.

Kanwaljit Singh plays a character addressed as Papaji, is the elder statesman who pines for his deceased wife even as he advises his missing son's girlfriend to learn to surmount the anguish of separation.


Neha Shrama in Tum Bin 2Neha Sharma and
Kanwaljit Singh in Tum Bin 2

The heroine is the youngest of three sisters who bond big time and stand by each other through thick and thin.

Their exchanges yield one of the more interest moments in Tum Bin 2. The eldest (Mehar Vij) is dead against the second sister (Sonia Balani) plan to marry a Scottish-Pakistani boy.

Sceptical big sis is talked into paying a visit to the guy's place to check him out. He not only turns out to be Hindu, but also a successful doctor.

As the ice breaks, the doc's mom pipes up: Religion and culture are two different things. We are Hindu by religion, but Pakistani by culture.

There are times when Tum Bin 2 turns pretty corny. In one scene, one of the two men, in a particularly moony moment, admits to the girl: Tumhare bina mera kya hota? Thank God, I have you in my life!

In another scene, Papaji asks the girl: Tu khush hai. She replies without batting an eyelid: Nahin Papaji, main bahut dukhi hoon.

The audience might not be overly dukhi with Tum Bin 2, especially owing to its commendably sophisticated soundtrack. But this sequel is unlikely to have anybody asking for more.



Edited by NIKKII-KSG - 8 years ago
Novarieaa thumbnail
14th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 8 years ago
#23

Originally posted by: cougarTown

wait a sec

tum bin earned 99 cr in 2001

is this article authentic?



LOL just noticed...and that too coming from a reporter from HT
1101595 thumbnail
Posted: 8 years ago
#24

Originally posted by: Lilac_N_Maple



LOL just noticed...and that too coming from a reporter from HT


well according to wiki it is i guess they take wiki to be the GOD's truth lol😆
Novarieaa thumbnail
14th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 8 years ago
#25

Originally posted by: NIKKII-KSG


well according to wiki it is i guess they take wiki to be the GOD's truth lol😆





All Time Rank: 398

Footfalls: 30,15,000

Adjusted Nett Gross: 27,92,49,300



Adjusted net gross is 28 crores. From where the 99 cr figure came up!! 😆
1101595 thumbnail
Posted: 8 years ago
#26

Originally posted by: Lilac_N_Maple





All Time Rank: 398

Footfalls: 30,15,000

Adjusted Nett Gross: 27,92,49,300



Adjusted net gross is 28 crores. From where the 99 cr figure came up!! 😆


I agree, it is silly to believe 99 crores, even superhit movies like Gadar did not achieve that much, hey can u give me a link to this figure? I can update wikipedia then!
1101595 thumbnail
Posted: 8 years ago
#27
but regardless of how much the movie earned, doesn't change the fact that it was beautiful!
1101595 thumbnail
Posted: 8 years ago
#28

In between all the currency fiasco, the last thing on a person's mind given the current scenario is spending lavishly on watching a movie (read luxury).


And rather technically, the movie business has faced the brunt of it. Last week's big release Rock On 2 performed poorly at the box-office with its first week collection so far being a mere Rs. 12 crore approximately.


Today's ticket window clash is between Force 2 starring John Abraham, Sonakshi Sinha and Tahir Raj Bhasin and Tum Bin 2 starring Neha Sharma and Adtiya Seal.
While Force 2 boasts of its star power, Tum Bin 2 comes from a well-loved sleeper hit.


But overall both these films, despite being promoted heavily (especially Force 2) haven't created much hype and have opened to average occupancies overall.


The big question remains that the clash aside, is the common man really going to spend his money over the weekend visiting a movie hall post waiting in bank ques.


More on: Filmfare
Mages thumbnail
19th Anniversary Thumbnail Elite Thumbnail + 7
Posted: 8 years ago
#29
i don't think Tum Bin made 90 crores...maybe they combine it with overseas collection
well Tum Bin 2 opened with mixed reviews...there are good and bad reviews...

i have not seen the film becos its not release in my country and its weird becos Tum Bin 1 did release in my country in 2001...got highly disappointed...as i wanted to watch the film...

i don't go with reviews becos its an individual perspective...some like it...some don't...from many reviews i am glad that aditya is being praised and the chemistry of aditya-neha being praised...

people who tries to find Tum Bin 1 magic...its impossible...a cult classic can never recreate the same magic but it does have its own magic and charm...
Edited by Mages - 8 years ago
263437 thumbnail
Posted: 8 years ago
#30
DNA's full review: http://www.dnaindia.com/entertainment/review-tum-bin-2-review-this-one-s-not-as-good-as-the-first-film-2274766
Excerpts:

What's hot:

The cinematography for sure. It's an immaculately shot film. Everybody is filthy rich in this movie and the landscape makes you want to move to wherever in the UK this is. Aditya Seal comes off as the best of the newcomers. He's got a charm and niceness about him that's rare these days.

Shekhar's gay friends are not treated as caricatures, thankfully.

What's not:

It's almost the same movie as Tum Bin. Just better packaged. Same spiel. Not spoiling it for you, but if you've watched the first film, you get my drift. There are cosmetic changes in the script, with a little borrowing from a certain Raj-Rajendra film. As a musical, it works too well, just that nobody paid to watch a string of music videos. You're never clear about who's related to who. If Amar has two sisters and his father, why do the three live separately and why do they behave like Taran's roommates? If the sisters are not related to Kanwaljeet (he plays Amar's dad) and only to Taran, that would still make sense. But if that's the case, why is Manpreet closest to him. It's all very weirdly ambiguous.

Also, the female characters in the film are the same number as the male characters. While this is a good thing, they'd fail the Bechdel scale miserably. All they do is talk about their love lives.

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