Movie Review-Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal - Page 2

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Posted: 17 years ago
#11
Bollywood stars claim race abuse
By Dil Neiyyar
BBC Asian Network

Arshad Warsi
Arshad Warsi says the incident shocked him

Two of Bollywood's biggest stars say they were racially abused while filming in west London.

A group of white men in a car are said to have hurled insults at Bipasha Basu and Arshad Warsi as they shot the film Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal in Southall.

Arshad Warsi told the BBC Asian Network of the incident in May: "I was shocked. I'm not used to this sort of thing."

The area saw racial violence in the 1960s and 1970s but community leaders say such incidents are now rare.

Mr Warsi said the experience shook him and his fellow actors.

"A car stopped with a couple of white guys. They just lashed out at us and totally gave us their point of view.

"It's the first time I've experienced this."

The actors had been recording a scene close to Glassy Junction, the area's famous Indian themed pub.

"For me it was an alien thing. It was like, do people actually think like that?" Mr Warsi added.

'Absolutely disgusting'

Fellow Bollywood star Jonathan Abraham was also on the set of the film, which was released in the UK on Friday.

"When you come into London and you're shooting, its the last thing you expect," he said.

Locals were angry that two of the Indian film industry's stars were abused by racists.

"It's disgusting, absolutely disgusting," said 19-year-old student, Preety Johal.

Racial violence was common in Southall in the 1960s and 1970s.

The area has also witnessed race riots.

In 1979 there were street battles when the anti-immigrant National Front held a meeting in the town hall.

Bipasha Basu
Bipasha Basu is one of the stars of Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal

This resulted in the death of anti-racist campaigner Blair Peach.

Two years later there were further troubles after a far right skinhead band played a controversial concert in the town.

It is a different picture today.

The town's Indian and Pakistani communities for the most part live happily alongside Somalis and the newest immigrants from eastern Europe.

Campaigners such as Janpal Basran from Southall Community Alliance say racism is rare.

He said: "We're now known as a very mixed, vibrant town. It's usually very tolerant, very welcoming town."

It is not the first time that a Bollywood star has been verbally roughed up in Britain.

Shilpa Shetty made international headlines when fellow contestant Jade Goody was verbally abusive to her on the Big Brother show on Channel 4.
43685 thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
#12

Critics Rating: (2.0/5)
Language: HINDI
Director: Vivek Agnihotri
Producer: UTV Motion Pictures
Cast: John Abraham, Bipasha Basu,Arshad Warsi,Boman Irani
Music: Pritam Chakraborty


By Ashok Nayak
Sport based films are in fashion. Barely 3 months after the hockey based Chak De India we have Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal, a movie based on Football. Directed by Vivek Agnihotri (Chocolate - 2005) Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal stars John Abraham, Arshad Warsi, Boman Irani and Bipasha Basu in the lead.

Southall United Football club is in a major crisis. The team has no sponsors, no quality players, no spectators, no physio and no coach. Yet they dream of lifting the cup. The head of the city council collaborates with Johnny Patel (Dalip Tahil) to acquire the stadium that belongs to the club. Together they highlight the football club's lackluster performance and threaten to take the ground away from them, unless they pay off the dues. Shaan Ali Khan (Arshad Warsi), the captain of the Southall United, hopes to bring in a celebrated ex-player to coach them. Then we have Sunny Bhasin (John Abraham), a star player, who dreams of playing for the national team. Will the coach manage to pull the team together? Can the club win the match and save the ground? Does Sunny agree to be part of the Southall United Team?

The story is similar to Chak De India, of an underdog team achieving the impossible. The first half is good and absorbing. The whole scene shot at the Manchester United Stadium is one of the highlights of the movie. It literally gives you goose bumps. The second half is dull and drags endlessly. The item number and an additional 15 - 20 minutes should be edited out from the second half for better impact. The supporting characters aren't well defined, something that worked so well in movies like Chak De India and Lagaan. There is not one character other than the lead characters that stands out. A few dialogues are good, but it does tend to get preachy. Barring the Goal title song the music is average.

Arshad Warsi has the meatiest role and he is brilliant throughout. Girls will love John Abraham in Goal. Performance-wise he is above average. His football scenes have been choreographed and performed well. Boman Irani as the football coach delivers an intense performance. Bipasha Basu has no role, just eye candy. Dalip Tahil plays his part well. The rest of the supporting actors are below average.

Overall, Goal isn't a bad movie. Watch with low expectations and you might enjoy it. Football and John Abraham fans are sure to love it. For the rest go find out whether Chak De India is still running in a nearby Cineplex, else just purchase a DVD.

Rating - 2
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Posted: 17 years ago
#13
Foul play
Indu Mirani
Friday, November 23, 2007 21:00 IST
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A still from Goal

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Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal
Cast: John Abraham, Bipasha Basu, Arshad Warsi, Boman Irani
Direction: Vivek Agnihotri
Rating: **

It may be called 'Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal' but unfortunately nothing happens dhan dhana dhan… neither does the film move so nor do the goals happen dhan dhana dhan. In fact, one word to aptly describe Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal would be laboured.

Much water flows in the Thames before the individual characters of a motley football team in Southall, captained by Shaan Ali Khan (Arshad Warsi) are established. Southall United, a team high on enthusiasm and aspiration but painfully low on resources, and without either gear or coach, is in dire straits.

Their lease on their stadium land is up for renewal and is already being eyed by sharks led by the council head called Anne whose most used word is 'shit' when things aren't going her way. In cahoots with her is commentator Johny Bakshi (Dalip Tahil). Not surprisingly, the team has to win the league if they are to keep their playing field.

Meanwhile, there is a confused Sunny Bhasin (John Abraham) born and brought up in England who keeps getting rejected by his club because he is not white. He is not quite English and by inclination not quite Indian. He eventually joins the club when the team's coach Tony Singh, a failed hero himself, challenges him. The stage is thus set for this till-now loser side to make a try for the highest accolade the game can offer.

Like the recent 'Chak De' and to some extent 'Lagaan' it's about the underdog facing all sorts of trials if not downright humiliation to come together to claim victory. Sports is the medium for redemption whether at a personal or team level. It's all about the triumph of the human spirit.

But 'Goal' fritters away so much time in needless back stories and basic preparations for the game that interest in the story wanes considerably in the first half. It is only in the latter part of the film when the team is playing better and winning matches that the speed of the film picks up but by then it is a little too late. Thankfully, the story does not meander much in the direction of the love story between Sunny and the physiotherapist on the team Rumana (Bipasha Basu).

'Goal' belongs to the men, and despite some stereotyping (the Sardarji on the team has a garage, the Muslim has a butcher's shop and so on), they support the main players well. Boman Irani has a tendency to ham, especially in emotionally charged scenes.

John Abraham suits the role of a footballer and with his shorn locks and lean physique looks the part. He doesn't have much emoting to do and gets by ably. But the film is really Arshad Warsi's who is wonderfully adept both on and off the field, proving once and for all that there is much more to this under-appreciated actor than Circuit and comedy.

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Posted: 17 years ago
#14
Movie Review : Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal

Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal

Director :
Music :
Lyrics :
Starring :
Vivek Agnihotri
Pritam Chakraborty
Javed Akhtar
John Abraham, Naveen Andrews, Bipasha Basu, Arshad Warsi, Boman Irani.
By Martin D'Souza, Bollywood Trade News Network Send to Friend



View Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal Movie Stills

View Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal Movie Stills

It's simple logic thrown to the winds. You can't put your creative energies in a sports movie, get your actors to do some grueling drills to fit the part and when it comes to the crux, think the audience is a fool. What were you thinking of Mr Vivek Agnihotri?

The League Championship is entering its final stage and Southall Football Club is in a strong position to win the three million-pound prize money, which will see them through the lease of their ground for the next 30 years. Those who want the ground, use unfair means by dangling a carrot in front of their star player, Sunny Bhasin (John Abraham), whose presence in the team can make a difference between a win and a loss.

Sunny goes for the carrot. There's a much bigger pay packet, a mansion to live in a sports car and other perks offered to professional footballers which he can never imagine to make playing for Southall. This transfer takes place two games before the league comes to an end with Southall second on the points-table tally. A win in the penultimate game will suffice to take Southall to the Trophy while a loss means a must-win situation in the final league game. The penultimate game is lost and it all boils down to the final. Sunny settles in a pub to watch the game and his dad's friend recognizes him.

Well, to cut the long story short, his dad's friend tells him how the Senior Bhasin was a huge Southall fan and how in 1985, a day before the Championship Final he came between the white man trying to beat Tony Singh (Boman Irani) the then star of Southall Football Club, and now their coach. Sunny wants to now play the match; he rushes to the stadium while the National Anthems are on, and links shoulder with Shaan (Arshad Warsi) the skipper.

Download Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal Wallpapers

My question is this? Did Southall go with 10 men to the ground for the final hoping Sunny would return? Even if it's a yes, it's not done. Secondly, and more importantly, Sunny is no more a Southall team member; so how is he allowed to play? My guess is, there is no governing body for this particular league being enacted on screen. Bad move Vivek. If you are making a movie on soccer, first understand the game. This move is a huge irritant in the entire movie. The apt expression of a viewer would be that of a striker who has just missed an easy goal… shiiiitttttt! It's also like scoring a self goal!!!

Otherwise, the movie entertains in bits. It's about Asians living in Britain and how they are subjected to racial abuse within the clubs they play. The photography is good and there have been pains taken to shoot some good on-field action shots.

John Abraham's stock will rise after this flick. His cool dude Brit approach to life is superb, so are his on-field histrionics. With Bipasha Basu he forms a potent pair. Thankfully, Bipasha's role as that of the physiotherapist is not over the top. Its very subtle, so is their romance. Boman Irani, as the defeated player who ignites his passion for soccer yet again in the form of the coach is brilliant. Well, he is Boman and no role is far-fetched for this talented actor. Arshad Warsi as the skipper who wants to save the club is just about Ok. There's no fire in his performance.

Actually, it's all about Johnny Gaddar! John's betrayal of the team and his heroics!!

If you are willing to forgive the obvious error, go ahead. If not, troop in for CHAK DE INDIA, if you have not seen the film yet. Better still get a DVD of the 1986 England-Argentina quarter-final match. There's the Hand of God goal, Diego Maradona, Peter Shilton and the colourful Mexican crowd.

Ratings : 2 / 5
43685 thumbnail
Posted: 17 years ago
#15

Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal

By Subhash K Jha
Directed by Vivek Agnihotri
Rating: **

John Abraham has met his match. And I don't mean Bipasha Basu with whom he here forms a truly endearing match.

No, the match he meets is the one on the field. Spectacularly filmed, the green vistas of Agnihotri's London locales fill the screen with a vigour vim and virility that go well with the mood of this sporty slick and sometimes spoofy always spiffy tale of sportsmanship, racism, brotherhood and victory against all odds.

You get the picture. Look….let's face it. There's just this much that a director can do with a sports film. It has to be about a bunch of semi-losers facing up to all odds to emerge winners in the climactic game.

There have to be warring groups and a burnt-out disgraced coach….Shah Rukh in Chak De India and Boman Irani here are in spirit the 'won' and the shame, though not necessarily in that order.

The spirit of Chak De India haunts Goal, though not in any damaging or ridiculing way. While in essence the two films shake hands on many occasions, there are several interludes and episodes in Goal that take a route away from the mellow meadows embraced by Chak De India.

Here the line of action is eternally aggressive. The war between football teams and among members of the same team, are aligned with acidic remarks and barbed comments that bring into notice the slanted racist slurs that operate beneath the spirit of sportsmanship in a country that has many kinds of cultures and people co-existing uneasily under the prosperous veneer.

The ideas on inequality and on-field aggression occupy centrestage in Vivek Agnihotri's film. He doesn't bite more than he can chew. The director is in splendid form here, letting the characters grow from the theme as naturally and vivaciously as the gamely narration allows.

Yup, Agnihotri knows his football far better than he knew the noire genre in his first film Chocolate. The matches on the field are played with a restrained gusto and the conflicts off-field have an air of casual spontaneity about them.

Attarsingh Saini's camera searches for the root-cause of every character's stress-level, and then gives it a visual rendering.

This is easier said than done. Luckily for us, a lot of what's said reveals the characters' inner world. The outer world with its jagged edges and baffling contradictions takes shape willy-nilly.

The John-Bipasha relationship here is more fun that the sexual frisson in Jism or the psychological tangles in Madhoshi. Watch Bipasha make space for herself in this boys-will-be-boys tale of triumphant sportsmanship. She finds her mtier without jostling or over-acting.

John Abraham in the author-backed role holds his own, instilling a sense of averted peril in all his rugged scenes and a softening –down in his romantic scenes. The rhythm is preserved with endearing ferocity.

The film's back bone is the John-Arshad rivalry. Arshad once again proves himself the unstoppable scenestealer. Displaying wrath and cynicism, he plays the field in Goal with consummate aplomb.

The performances add considerably to the film's fine sense of a team spirit. But finally it's the director who like the conductor of a slightly off-key orchestra manages to hold the film's sur in place without sacrificing the spontaneity that comes with the territory in all sports films.

Leave aside Chak De India and watch Goal for its neat blend of bite and bark in a game where the ball says it all.

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