FEVER movie reviews

shrikrishna thumbnail
13th Anniversary Thumbnail Voyager Thumbnail Engager Level 1 Thumbnail
Posted: 9 years ago
#1
Fever review: Real suspense is how Rajeev Khandelwal, Gauhar Khan chose this film
Udita Jhunjhunwala Aug 5, 2016 12:43 IST
0 0 0
Pitched as a film that will keep you 'suspensed' (not my word, but the words of the makers), Fever will not have you at the edge of the seat but keep you suspended -- in disbelief -- that stories like this get funding and actors agree to work on them. Perhaps Gauhar Khan and Rajeev Khandelwal fancied an extended stay in Switzerland, which is where Rajeev Jhaveri's film is located and shot.
I was intrigued to watch Fever to understand what a former Italian Bond (Casino Royale, 2006) girl Caterina Murino and a British TV star (Gemma Atkinson) were doing in this low budget 'suspense' written and directed by Jhaveri. By the end of the two hours or so, I was no clearer.
The film opens with numerous disclaimers and a definition of fever as a feeling stoked by passion. In other words none of the principal characters is running a high temperature although Khandelwal's character is recovering in hospital after a car accident and suffering from memory loss.
All he recalls is that his name is Armin, he's from Paris and that a woman called Rhea is important to his life story. With flashes of memories of a murdered woman and the recurring appearance of another woman who introduces herself as 'Kavya' (Gauhar Khan), Armin begins to piece together his past.
Turns out Armin (if that's his real name) plays a contract killer with a penchant for scarves and costumes. He's a bit Bond-like - smooth with the ladies, quick with the gun. Except he's a hired hand, a contract killer, an assassin. This is explained to us many times, in case it was not clear the first (or second) time.
Kavya's role remains hazy, but we do eventually find out why she's lurking around Armin. At the risk of giving away too much of the plot, suffice to say there's a writer and there's confusion between fact and fiction.
Murino's presence is so limited she hardly makes an impact while Atkinson is surprisingly stilted and awkward. Khandelwal spends most of the film posturing and being pensive, speaking with painfully long pauses and engaging in numerous scenes of seduction where the women look like they are desperately waiting for the director to call 'cut'. Khan tries her best and shows some sparkle, not least because of a distracting diamante 'Monroe' (beauty mark) above her lip.
Within the tedious script, and the convoluted storytelling, Jhaveri slips in a few bizarre allusions to celebrated storytellers. If you do decide to risk a mild weariness that might accompany a viewing of
Fever, look out for the his-and-hers coordinated Alfred Hitchcock T-shirts and Wim Wenders and Fritz Lang's names on a name board.

Created

Last reply

Replies

5

Views

733

Users

4

Likes

6

Frequent Posters

shrikrishna thumbnail
13th Anniversary Thumbnail Voyager Thumbnail Engager Level 1 Thumbnail
Posted: 9 years ago
#2
Cast: Rajeev Khandelwal, Gauhar Khan, Ankita Makwana, Caterina Murino, Gemma Atkinson
Director: Rajeev Jhaveri
Genre: Thriller
Duration: 2 hours 8 minutes
STORY: A man (Rajeev Khandelwal) wakes up in the hospital with sketchy memory of his past life. All he knows is that his name is Armin and he is from Paris. And then, he starts getting visions of a murdered woman. As he tries to put together pieces of this jigsaw puzzle, he meets Kavya (Gauahar Khan), who becomes his confidante. Soon, another murder happens. Is someone trying to frame Armin?
REVIEW: If you've watched Rajeev's earlier film Samrat & Co., Fever will feel familiar. It is just as amateurish and convoluted. It fashions itself as a thriller but is too mind-numbing to make a mark. You'll figure out quite early which way the film is headed, long before Armin makes the revelation.
It is hard to forgive good actors when they reduce themselves to such parts. Rajeev, who was mesmeric in Aamir, still remains a one-time wonder in Bollywood. Gauahar isn't half bad (though the diamond stud on the mole above the lip was distracting). Bond girl Caterina Murino and Gemma Atkinson were wasted.
But in this case, Rajeev Jhaveri's incoherent and cliche-ridden script plays the spoiler. Added to that, he packs the movie to the brim with corny dialogues. Sample this, when an actress makes an entry, a song in the background goes - 'She is so hot, just like a tequila shot...' (We have eyes, let us decide!) Spouses break up because they 'colonise' each other's minds. When someone asks Armin, what can she get him, he replies, "My identity..." You get the drift?
Khandelwal is sincere in his desi Sherlock act (he apes Cumberbatch, making his deductions from the clues popping on screen) but has no support from the plot. You wish the writer-director had used some logic, the film wouldn't have been this silly.
The picturesque locales (snow-capped Swiss Alps?) could provide some respite but the deafening background score and overwrought storyline should be reason enough to skip this one. The aftertaste can be best described in a line from the movie, "Life is a hit-and-run. Everything happens by accident..." We assume, so did Fever.

http://m.femina.in/life/movie-reviews/movie-review-fever-15696.html
shrikrishna thumbnail
13th Anniversary Thumbnail Voyager Thumbnail Engager Level 1 Thumbnail
Posted: 9 years ago
#3
Rediff.com Movies
Review: Fever is not good at all!
August 05, 2016 17:17 IST
Fever may be a thriller but it does not have any edge-of-the-seat moments, feels Tista Sengupta.
If you are Rajeev Khandelwal fan, go watch him like a Bond-like character in Fever.
But if you like thrillers, this one will not impress you at all.
Fever does not have any edge-of-the-seat moments. Instead, you wonder why so many characters are wasted.
The intimate scenes seen in the trailer might get the movie an opening, but it will hardly bring in the audiences. Besides, those scenes look too forced.
Casino Royale's Bond girl Caterina Murino's presence was limited and English actor Gemma Atkinson looked very artificial in the film.
The story revolves around Armin Salem (Khandelwal), who's recovering in the hospital after a car accident and suffering from memory loss. All he can recall is his name, that he is from Paris, that there is a woman named Rhea Wagner (Gemma Atkinson), who is important in his life and a few strange memory flashes of a murdered woman.
It turns out that Armin was a contract killer and had a fetish for costumes and scarves. He's not only quick with his gun but also smooth with women.
It seems lame that director Rajeev Jhaveri keeps trying to portray Armin as an assassin in the film.
While Armin tries to put together his past, he meets Kaavya Chaudhary (Gauhar Khan), who plays a role that is quite mystifying. Even though she falls in love with him and wants to help him remember his past, her frequent appearances make us wonder why she's skulking around Armin all the time.
Our desi writers really need to work hard on their scripts. The story here seems too convoluted.
Unlike other thrillers, this one battles between reality and fiction, and makes the plot unappealing
http://m.rediff.com/movies/report/review-fever-is-not-good-at-all/20160805.htm
222149 thumbnail
Posted: 9 years ago
#4

Movie Review: Fever


WRITTEN BY
Rachit Gupta
Written By Rachit Gupta
Features Editor
Posted Sat, Aug 6, 2016


Rating: 2.5 stars


Quick take: Inconsistency kills a good premise

Just on the basis of the concept, you've probably never seen a Hind film like Fever. The story has some decent thrills and twists. You won't be able to figure out the surprise ending, even if you are a seasoned movie buff. But for all it's goodness Fever is also a bit of a letdown. It's emotional depth and some of its dialogue are jaded. It had all the trappings of a good psychological thriller, it just ruins its prospects by indulging in a little too much sentimentality, right at the end.

Fever makes its play on the inner rage of individuals. Armin (Rajeev Khandelwal) meets with a road accident in the hilly locales of Switzerland and the knock on his head gives him Amnesia. He can vaguely remember his name and that he's from Paris. He also has fleeting memories of a possible murder he might have committed. But he doesn't remember anything else. Things become a bit mysterious when Kavya / Pooja (Gauahar Khan) appears in his hallucinations along with Rhea (Gemma Atkinson) the girl who Armin thinks he's killed. Kavya starts stalking Armin around the quaint town of Champery. Things get a bit more curious when Rhea is revealed to be alive.

Back in 2004, there was a Johnny Depp movie called Secret Window. While Fever is distinctly different in its story, the basic concept does have minute similarities. The aspect of the protagonist losing his memory is also seen before in movies like The Bourne Identity and Shutter Island. Despite the many references, Fever is unlike any of these movies. Writer / director Rajiv Jhaveri, has done a more than decent job at conceiving the film. But where the movie suffers is its inconsistent execution and dialogue.

The pace of this thriller has been deliberately kept slow, to allow the solitude of the Swiss hills add an eerie mood to the proceedings. But the narrative is so pedantic, Fever does become a bit of a drag in the first half. The stellar visuals of the Swiss countryside though add to the experience. The pace does pick up in the second half, but it never quite becomes as racy as it should. The biggest flaw of the film is it's dialogue, which just does not do justice to its premise or its unforeseen conclusion. Once the big reveal happens, the film should have had an emotional punch, that's sadly missing.

The performances though are top notch. Rajeev Khandelwal and Gauahar Khan give this film their best shot. Rajeev's character goes through a sea of emotions and the actor gets every nuance bang on. Gauahar's edgy, mysterious and very enchanting role is the perfect opportunity to impress. And that's exactly what the actress does. British actor Gemma Atkinson brings in some added beauty and glamour to the movie. She even steals the show in a few scenes.

Despite the best efforts of its cast, and some really exotic locations on offer, Fever makes a meal out of its premise. The execution is the main culprit here. Some of the directorial choices are really poor, case in point, the Gauahar Khan swimming pool scene with garish music. What could've been a slick psychological thriller, turns out to be a bit of a damp squib.

http://www.filmfare.com/reviews/movie-review-fever-14954.html
Edited by MiniRulz - 9 years ago
priya185 thumbnail

Comedy Crew

Posted: 9 years ago
#5
tfs
where can watch this full movie online because it is not releasing in my cinema
so far only half the movie has been put online
-ajna- thumbnail
13th Anniversary Thumbnail Sparkler Thumbnail Commentator Level 3 Thumbnail
Posted: 9 years ago
#6
Sad as really wanted RK to have a successful release.

Related Topics

Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: oyebollywood · 12 days ago

https://x.com/filmibeat/status/1968397140549345682

https://x.com/filmibeat/status/1968397140549345682
Expand ▼
Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: oyebollywood · 13 days ago

https://x.com/varindersingh24/status/1955662282345808161 https://x.com/aavishhkar/status/1967618349535518917

https://x.com/varindersingh24/status/1955662282345808161
Expand ▼
Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: priya185 · 18 days ago

Movie has released worldwide 12th September and will release in India too...

Expand ▼
Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: oyebollywood · 2 months ago

https://x.com/vivekagnihotri/status/1946940660067803443...

https://x.com/vivekagnihotri/status/1946940660067803443
Expand ▼
Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: oyebollywood · 9 days ago

https://youtu.be/u_6o96K8QVg

https://youtu.be/u_6o96K8QVg
Expand ▼
Top

Stay Connected with IndiaForums!

Be the first to know about the latest news, updates, and exclusive content.

Add to Home Screen!

Install this web app on your iPhone for the best experience. It's easy, just tap and then "Add to Home Screen".