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TheekThaak thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago
Please don't get me wrong but it would be better if somebody makes a different thread for the climax scene instead of spamming this topic. 😛
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Posted: 7 years ago
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/entertainment/hindi/movie-reviews/dhadak/movie-review/65061189.cms
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3.5/5
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Synopsis

With all its strengths and weaknesses, Dhadak attempts to highlight some shocking truths about our society and for that it makes a worthy watch.
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Cast & Crew

  • Shashank KhaitanDirector
  • Ishaan KhatterActor
  • Janhvi KapoorActor
  • Ashutosh RanaActor
  • Kharaj MukherjeeActor
  • Aditya KumarActor
  • Ankit BishtActor
  • Karan JoharProducer
  • Apoorva MehtaProducer
  • Somesh ShivrajProducer
  • Hiroo JoharProducer
  • Sujay KuttyProducer

DHADAK MOVIE REVIEW

  • TIMES OF INDIA
  • NAVBHARAT TIMES
  • MUMBAI MIRROR
Rachit Gupta, TNN, Updated: Jul 20, 2018, 03.08 PM ISTCritic's Rating: 3.5/5
Dhadak Story: Madhukar (Ishaan) and Parthavi (Janhvi) fall head over heels in love with each other, but the fact that they belong to different castes of society, becomes an obstacle in their romance. The lovers dare to go against societal norms and battle all odds for the sake of love.

Dhadak Review: The strength of Dhadak lies in its brimming freshness and innocence. That this film presents the new faces of Ishaan (one film old) and Janhvi (who marks her debut in Bollywood) works in the favour of its narrative. Like its original inspiration, Nagraj Manjule's Sairat, the facet of love trying to survive the cruel world of politics and ruthless societal pressure, makes Dhadak engaging. The film follows the Sairat template for most part, but what is lacks is the grit and detailing of Manjule's original.

Set in Udaipur, the story begins with young love blossoming in the midst of politics and a dominant class system. Parthavi (Janhvi) is the daughter of a local politician Ratan Singh (Ashutosh Rana), while Madhukar (Ishaan) is the son of a restaurant owner who comes from lower economic strata. Against societal norms, Madhu and Parthavi fall in love, and when her influential family finds out, they tear the lovers apart. The spirited young couple still find a way to elope. The film moves from Udaipur to Mumbai to Kolkata, which is a departure from the original. It's an engaging journey, but the treatment isn't consistent throughout.

With Dhadak, Shashank Khaitan steps out of the Dulhania' mould for the first time. Yet, his third outing has a lot of visual similarities to his earlier films. Owing to the source material, Dhadak is without doubt, his darkest film. He presents the nave romance with sensitivity, even while fusing the story with ample dramatic highs. Oddly, for the subject at hand, the film looks a little too polished and slick. Even while the lead pair is struggling to make both ends meet, their fashion quotient always remains high. They rent a cramped, one-room house, but they step out looking prim and propah in almost every situation. For a film that stems from harsh reality, this glossed over aspect makes it unbelievable.


When it comes to the performances, Ishaan's personality has the energy and zest of a newcomer, while his performance displays the cool confidence of a seasoned actor. He is pitch perfect in dramatic scenes and his puppy eyes keep the innocence of this love story alive. Janhvi looks radiant and beautiful, and her innocence catches the eye. Well, she does come across a little too raw in comparison to her co-star, especially in dramatic scenes that demand a powerful performance. It's her first film, so she's still rough at the edges, but it's a good start. Shridhar Watsar, who plays Inshaan's vertically challenged friend, is a laugh riot, and Ashutosh Rana as the menacing father and political figure is perfectly intense.

The music of the film is a definite highlight. Ajay-Atul pulls the right strings for this one, two tracks from Sairat have been reinvented, one of which is the huge hit Zingaat. The background score of the film (John Stewart Eduri) is designed interestingly and it blends in with the setting of this story. The film also has some stunning cinematography by Vishnu Rao, who makes a pretty picture out of the landscapes of Udaipur. While the editing is crisp in the first half, the pace slackens a bit in the latter parts.

While Parshya and Archi's love story in Sairat was made with great honesty, realism and depth, giving us a perspective of the deep rooted prejudices in our society, Dhadak touches upon them too, but it merely skims the surface. Perhaps more attention to detail and delving a little deeper into the subject, would have given the film an edge. The lead up to the climax creates palpable tension, and the ending is hard-hitting, leaving you with enough to think about. With all its strengths and weaknesses, Dhadak attempts to highlight some shocking truths about our society and for that it makes a worthy watch.

In-depth Analysis

Our overall critic's rating is not an average of the sub scores below.


3.5/5
Dialogues:
3/5
Screenplay:
3/5
Music:
3.5/5
Visual appeal:
4/5

Aashima. thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago

Originally posted by: ZanduBaaM


phir you will not watch movie if you know the climax 😆


If you know the climax kindly PM it to me too.😊


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Z-Gen Zest

Posted: 7 years ago
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Posted: 7 years ago
what i feel is people should just forget sairat and instead of comparing let the movie and the lead actors get a chance to perform.obviously sairat is a gem, and since I have not watched it, i was curious about Dhadak more.
Would like to say the caste system, crimes against interfaith marriages based on religious views are extremely painful and heart breaking, talking from personal experience. These movies should be an eye opener for many, the only problem is Dharma, but i am glad that Janhvi and Ishaan got a popular debut, these two impressed me in the trailer and songs.
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Posted: 7 years ago

Originally posted by: guftagoo

Please don't get me wrong but it would be better if somebody makes a different thread for the climax scene instead of spamming this topic. 😛


Can someone please tell me what is the climax of the film? Have you watched the film guftagoo? Can you help me with the ending? 😊
707793 thumbnail
Posted: 7 years ago

Originally posted by: Aashima.


If you know the climax kindly PM it to me too.😊



check PM 😉
TheekThaak thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago

Originally posted by: rogerrocks


Can someone please tell me what is the climax of the film? Have you watched the film guftagoo? Can you help me with the ending? 😊


The heroine gets married to someone else, hero goes crazy, few years later when the heroine is busy romancing her husband she finds the hero on the streets and is devastated. She narrates the entire story to her husband and is super guilty, now both of them take the hero with them to help him get cured.
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Z-Gen Zest

Posted: 7 years ago

Caste away

Dhadak

Rating: 2.5

July 20, 2018

Cast: Ishaan Khatter, Janhvi Kapoor, Ashutosh Rana, Kharaj Mukherjee, Shridhar Watsar, Ankit Bisht,

Director: Shashank Khaitan

A young fellow, having worked his way through a shared snack with his female companion, drinks from a mug of water in a plastic drum at the roadside food vendor. She crinkles her nose when he offers her the mug for a sip, prompting him to buy her bottled water instead. It's a seemingly innocuous moment from Nagraj Manjule's Sairat, but oh, so telling the couple, their backs against each other, both drinking water. Yes water, that great leveler; required by both the rich and the poor, by those belonging to every caste and class, and yet the very clue in this moment that points to the yawning divide between this pair.

That scene like many others has been left out of Dhadak, the Hindi remake of Manjule's excellent Marathi film from 2016 about the intensely gripping and ultimately tragic romance between a lower-caste boy and an upper-caste girl in rural Maharashtra.

Caste is a thorny, complex issue with a history of deep-rooted prejudices, injustice, and far-reaching consequences. When honestly explored, we get extraordinary stories like Sairat, Masaan, and Manjule's own previous film Fandry. But the caste angle, evidently too hot to handle in a mainstream Bollywood film, is largely swept under the rug in Dhadak.

The story, which is robbed of texture and nuance when relocated from Bittergaon village in central Maharashtra to a tourism-brochure version of Udaipur, is centered on the romance between Madhukar aka Madhu (Ishaan Khatter) and Parthavi (Janhvi Kapoor). She is the daughter of a rich, influential father who owns a hotel and has political ambitions. He is the son of middle-class parents who run a modest restaurant. Her family will have none of it. The young couple must flee.

Director Shashank Khaitan is faithful to the beats of the original film but makes some questionable decisions. The hero's friends, so crucial to the plot in Sairat, are reduced to stock caricatures here, particularly a vertically challenged fellow exploited strictly for laughs. With the caste narrative reduced to a mere footnote, the villain too Parthavi's father (Ashutosh Rana) is at best your standard disapproving parent, a role the actor already played in the director's previous film Humpty Sharma Ki Dulhania.

In the original film the action shifts to Hyderabad and the couple (Parshya and Archie) are put through the wringer as they go about building a life together. Madhu and Parthavi in Dhadak land up in Kolkata, but their struggle, relatively sanitized, can be best described as the Dharma Productions version of a hard life.

There's also the matter of the film's climax, a different one from the original. It's chilling and devastating, not unlike Sairat. But again, given that the caste narrative is never integral to the story, it doesn't feel suitably earned. Ultimately you could interpret it as the final move in a revenge plot.

But wait, it's not as if Dhadak is entirely a waste of time. There's something especially refreshing about watching young, raw newcomers discover their craft...witnessing the unpredictability of a performance, a new approach to a familiar emotion. Ishaan and Janhvi have a winning, charming chemistry, and they're both extremely watchable even if they have contrasting styles.

Ishaan, who was especially impressive in his debut film Beyond The Clouds, once again radiates warmth and innocence, and reflects both the grappling and the growing maturity of a boy on the cusp of adulthood. Janhvi, meanwhile, has less to work with, because Parthavi is never as well-defined as Archie in Sairat. But Janhvi, who's making her debut here, has a fragility that makes her instantly endearing, and a soulful quality that makes it hard to take your eyes off her on screen.

The director utilizes them well, giving them scope to perform drama, the odd bits of comedy, and really puts their dancing skills to test in the madly infectious Zingaat number, which composers Ajay-Atul and lyricist Amitabh Bhattacharya successfully refashion in Hindi.

Dhadak is ultimately a homogenous Karan Johar production that offers comfort in the familiar...for those seeking it. For the rest of us, it's just baffling why the folks involved would choose to remake a film about the horrors of caste supremacy, but erase practically every mention of caste from the film.

I'm going with two-and-a-half out of five. The kids make it worth your time.

(This review first aired on CNN News18)

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Posted: 7 years ago
Pm the climax. I am just curious.

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