| |
|
Starring:
Jaya Bachchan, Shah Rukh Khan, Saif Ali
Khan, Preity Zinta, Sushma Seth
Story and Screenplay - Karan Johar
Dialogues - Niranjan Iyer
Art Direction - Sharmishta Roy
Costumes - Manish Malhotra
Audiography - Anuj Mathur
Director of Photography - Anil Mehta
Lyrics - Javed
Akhtar
Music - Shankar Ehsaan Loy
Produced by - Yash Johar
Directed by: Nikhil Advani
|
|
Three
knockout central performances, eye-catching
cinematography, lush production values, some
well written dialogues, a couple of catchy song
numbers all combine to make Nikhil Advani's
debut film Kal Ho Naa Ho eminently watchable
but still by the end you cannot but help feel
that the film stops short of 'being there.'
A lose and scratchy screenplay with a thin central
core and too many thicker subplots thrown in
all come into the way of a film that could well
have delivered on all fronts.
The
film rumoured to have been inspired by Hrishikesh
Mukherjee's Anand and Asit Sens's Safar
is actually far more influenced by Farhan Akhtar's
Dil Chahta Hai attempting to capture
the same type of witty, casual urbane humour
and feel with the Indianness and family emotions
thrown in. While Kal Ho Naa Ho does have
its moments (the inspired Gujju community song
for one and the Gujju - Punju banters) of both
humour and tear jerking drama, it loses its
way by too many scenes of puerile humour (The
Shah Rukh _ Saif gay jokes, funny at first,
are overdone to death or the singing of Sushma
Seth, Shoma Anand etc. or the sex antics of
Lillette Dubey) and the absence of truly a knockout
climax at the end of the film leading to a totally
unnecessary epilogue of 20 years later at the
end of the film.
The
film does have its share of rich moments though
- Shah Rukh declaring Saif's love to Preity
(actually his own) by reading Saif's diary out
to her and then improvising as he finds the
next page to be blank, the scenes where Preity
realizes he loved her all along but kept her
away because of his fatal illness, all carry
an emotional wallop that one cannot be helped
but be moved by.
Shah
Rukh carries the entire film ably on his shoulders.
He is equally at ease and charming in the comic
sequences brightening up the lives of those
he comes in conact with and solid in the tear
jerking scenes where he comes to terms with
his illness and realizes he cannot ever have
Preity. Saif plays an extension of his role
in Dil Chahta Hai but like DCH, is completely
at ease and at home with the character and delivers
another heartwarming, likeable performance.
However it is Preity Zinta who is a revelation.
Going beyond the bubbly vivacious characters
she has been playing in film after film she
delivers a stellar performance. Right from the
grumpy young woman whose world is full of misery
to opening up thanks to Shah Rukh, from loving
and losing her first love, she is spot on handling
the mood changes with ease. That she has never
looked better helps! Of the supporting cast
Jaya Bachchan as Preity's Catholic mother, Jennifer,
gives perhaps her best performance post Silsila,
while Sushma Seth hams its up as the loud Punjabi
grandmother of Preity. The rest of the cast
is adequate and efficient.
The
film is lifted several notches by the fine,
evocative camerawork of Anil Mehta. Post Lagaan
he is now getting to be the hottest cinematographer
in Bollywood. Musically the film is a bit of
a let down considering it is a Dharma Films
Production but the title track is extremely
well written and tuned with Mahi ve, the
Disco song and Pretty Woman (yes, lifted
from the original!) basically playing to the
gallery - catchy but nothing outstanding.
The
film does have the odd technical flourish -
the way Preity introduces the characters around
her or the use of split screen at times but
the film could have done with more of those
because it is sequences like those which give
the film an attitude; But nevertheless all in
all a pretty satisfactory directorial debut
for Nikhil Advani.
|