fanaa
– a re-review |
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Starring |
Aamir Khan, Kajol,
Rishi Kapoor, Tabu, Kirron Kher, Lillette
Dubey, Gautami Kapoor, Jaspal Bhatti
and Shiney Ahuja |
Screenplay |
Shibani Bhatija |
Dialogues |
Kunal Kohli |
Choreography |
Saroj Khan, Vaibhavi
Merchant |
Art |
Nitish Roy |
Action |
George Aguilar |
Editing |
Ritesh Soni |
Sound
Design |
Dileep Subramaniam |
Costumes |
Manish Malhotra,
Mamta Anand, Mandira Shulka |
Director
of Photography |
Ravi K Chandran |
Lyrics |
Prasoon Joshi |
Music |
Jatin-Lalit |
Produced
by |
Aditya Chopra |
Directed
by |
Kunal Kohli |
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Synopsis
Zooni (Kajol), a blind Kashmiri girl
meets Rehan (Aamir Khan), a local tour guide and
also an incorrigible flirt in Delhi. Her friends
warn her against him but she chooses to ignore
them and falls in love with him. Rehan too is
fascinated by Zooni. Zooni wants to spend her
last 12 hours in Delhi with him. Rehan promises
her that these 12 hours will be the most precious
in her life. Through Rehan, Zooni ‘sees’
Delhi. They decide to marry. Zooni is taken for
an eye operation which is successful. However
there is a terrorist attack in Delhi and Rehan
is thought to be dead… But Rehan is very
much alive and has another side to him, a side
he has never mentioned to Zooni…
The million dollar question – Kajol’s
back, paired with Aamir Khan for the first time
in a Yashraj Film with a hit director –
So, does the film live up to it’s hype?
The answer is a loud and resounding NO! In fact,
Fanaa is a shockingly inept film that
makes you wonder what attracted the actors to
it in the first place. Maybe the filmmakers themselves
understood the film might have no repeat value
and hence wanted to raise ticket prices to make
as much money they can in the first week of its
release.
A
faulty story and screenplay, laughingly archaic
dialogues, an excruciatingly slow pace and never
ending length of 3 hours all combine to make this
film a ‘turkey.’ The story starts
with us being introduced to blind girl Zooni (a
cute sequence as other girls laugh as her as she
is facing the other way while saluting the National
flag) in Kashmir. We follow Zooni to Delhi where
she falls for Rehan (a mite too easily and conveniently
especially as he comes across as a sleazy road
side Romeo rather than a true charmer) and then
suddenly towards the end of the first half out
of nowhere the terrorist angle is brought in for
the big twist in the interval. Now the story turns
neutral as focus shifts to the IKF, the Anti-
Terrorist Group Activities etc with Zooni conveniently
forgotten for 7 years. Perhaps if this element
had been ingrained earlier from the beginning
of the film, it would have worked much better.
Worse, key plot points are too, too predictable.
Of course the only house the wounded Rehan is
going to land up at is Zooni’s. Of course
she has had a son out of that magical night they
had together (an embarrassingly tacky love scene)
and of course the precocious supposed to be cute
brat is called Rehan. And of course cringe-worthy
sequences of father – son bonding follow
before a predictable ‘Mother Indiasque’
climax.
There are hardly any redeeming scenes or moments
you remember. If the first half is predictable
and repetitive in following the romance, the second
half ‘7 years later’ is the death
knell for the film. Though an intriguing situation
is thrown up in that Rehan recognizes Zooni and
that the other Rehan is his son, Zooni doesn’t
know he is the same Rehan she fell in love with
when she was blind. But the scenes played out
to the key scene where she recognizes him (an
awful antakshari sequence) fail to work or move
you. And yes, loopholes in the script are aplenty.
It appears for all the obvious 'affection' shown
that the parents are just waiting for someone
to come and take their blind girl away from them
so she's off their hands. How could they agree
to her wedding just like that without meeting
or knowing anything about Rehan? And Zooni too
comes across as having come to Delhi just to find
someone to latch on to. Later on when Rehan is
recovering in her house and if he is on such an
urgent mission and is trapped there only due to
bad weather, why does he continue to stay on even
when the weather has got better? And the less
said about the comedy track (Vrijesh Hirjee) or
the track between warring Anti-Terrorist Investigators
Sharat Saxena and Tabu, the better. The Anti-Terrorist
Squad in fact comes across as totally idiotic
and short on brains. By the time the climax comes,
you are too far out of the film and are really
just waiting for it to end.
The
two central actors are the only two real positives
of the film as they gamely rise above the script
and try to bring conviction to their characters.
Kajol, in fact, is the life of the film. She shows
us what the Hindi Film Industry has lost with
her self imposed sabbatical. She is spot on in
every scene and is able to switch moods with consummate
ease and breathe life into every scene she is
in. See her in the scene in the morgue where she
has to identify Rehan’s body or where she
turns on him for making her live with the guilt
that she was responsible for his death for 7 years
or the elated abandon with which she dances when
she’s told that Aamir has come to watch
the show! Aamir too is in reliably top form but
his age is now starting to show. Also, unfortunately
for him as the tour guide dropping cheap one liners
and shitty poetry and declaring he doesn’t
believe in love, his role is simply an amalgamation
of all that he has played in the past from Raja
Hindustani, Rangeela, Dil Chahta
Hai, Earth, Rang de Basanti
and Mann so in that sense you are seeing
nothing new in that part of his performance. Rishi
Kapoor lends able support but what were those
blink-and-you-miss appearances from Lara Dutta
or Shiney Ahuja? Surely if you utilize actors
in cameos, there has to be something interesting
in the role or something vital to the plot. These
walk on appearances serve neither purpose and
amount to nothing.
On the technical side, Ravi K Chandran’s
Cinematography though inconsistent has some splendid
moments. Locales of Delhi and yes, even parts
of Poland doubling for Kashmir have been captured
extremely well. The music by Jatin Lalit is hummable
(Chand Sifarish, Dekho Na) but by the
time Mere Haath Mein comes along in the
second half though well tuned and nicely picturized,
it brings the already faltering narrative to a
dead halt.
All in all, a major misfire from Yashraj Films.
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