Friday, 26 November 2010

Break Ke Baad

I had predicted 2 successful flops for Deepika in the current week with Break Ke Baad (BKB) and then next week with Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Se (KHJJS). The rushes didn’t enthuse any confidence in me. But I am pleasantly surprised and happy to have been proven wrong in the case of BKB. But in the same breath, I wasn’t too far off. Its not a very good movie but it isn’t too bad either. And this doesn’t come from the soft spot I have for RomComs.

Aaliya Khan (Deepika Padukone) is a rebel without a cause. Her core motive in life seems to be to do something that the world doesn’t want her to do. OR not to do what the world expects her to. As a child she doesn’t do her homework and actually convinces her teachers that she cannot because her actor mother, Ayesha (Sharmila Tagore – Coincidentally Ayesha is Mrs. Pataudi’s name after marriage), doesn’t have the time to pack her lunch box. She is more into movies than anything else and her only dream is to be an actor one day. Always on tenterhooks and living life on the edge, her pillar of support is Abhay Gulati a.k.a. Gulati a.k.a Gelato who is her exact opposite. Calm, composed, stable head on his shoulders, petrified of adventure sports and 100% dependable. Although he doesn’t quite know what he really really wants to do in life, he is currently biding his time helping in his father’s business as Vice President of Jeet Cinemas. No points for guessing that Abhay’s father is Jeet Gulati (Naveen Nischol)

All seems to be going well other than the fact that for a couple who has been seeing each other for nearly 10 years and has known each other for over 10 years before that, there seems to be little or no chemistry between them. I mean the only kiss they share is also very bland. But as expected, there has to be a break. I mean whats the point in calling the movie BKB if there is none right. Aaliya decides to pursue her acting ambition through a University in Australia. But has disguised it as a course in Mass Communication instead. However, mum is smarter and sees through the ploy. All hell seems to break lose. But with the Gelato’s support, she makes her way to Oz under the condition that she will focus only on mass com. Now how does a couple manage a long distance relationship. They go about it under the garb of just a break from each other and not a break up. Easier said than done as our leading couple finds out soon enough.

BKB is Danish Aslam’s first directorial venture. There is definitely some talent there but there are also some obvious faux pas. Like Mr. India and Tezaab seemingly released in the same year. Or if it is around midnight in India, it cannot be broad daylight in Australia. And how in the blazes does one get to Australia overnight – has getting a visa become that easy or is Oz Visa on arrival (I hope so considering I am travelling next month). Obvious to the movie buff like me but may not be for the not so particular right? Although Danish keeps it fairly compact throughout it does drag towards the end quite a bit. Luckily the movie is under 2 hours and the drag lasts for only about 10-15 mins.

The support cast is fairly decent. Shahana Goswami (Nadia) continues where she left off from Rock On. Strong performance but again a very cynical role. Sharmila Tagore is as ethereal as ever. Pleasantly surprised to see Navin Nischol back on screen doing what he does best – play understanding daddy. DJ Yudi plays the role of the over excited, promiscuous Cyrus (Nadia’s brother) and should probably stick to only VJing. But even there he would be too old for it. The star of the support cast is however Lilette Dubey who plays Pammi Gulati and gives a 100% to her role as the supporting Aunt for our hero and has excellent crude and crass dialogues to back her up as well – chief among them includes referring to our heroine as a “Chudail” (Witch for those who are unfamiliar with the local lingo). The music is way below Vishal Shekhar’s best. Just about makes par. The timing of the songs also is fairly awry. Something that young Danish can look at. But overall BKB is an average movie. Average Songs, Average Story, Average Direction, Great Titling, Average acting from the lead cast, some strong performances from the support cast, Decent editing – AVERAGE – 5 on 10.

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