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DHAMAAL
Director : Indra Kumar
Cast : Sanjay Dutt, Ritesh Deshmukh, Arshad Warsi, Sharman
Joshi, Tiku Talsania, Asrani, Javed Jaffrey, Aashish Chaudhary,
Murli Sharma, Sohail Khan, Aftab Shivdasani
UK Release Date : 7 September 2007 |
As
the name suggests, this is fun filled caper about four friends
Roy (Riteish Deshmukh), who belives that he is the best
detective in the world; Manav (Javed Jaffery), who actually happens
to be the biggest idiot in the world, but is blissfully unaware
about it and his elder brother, Aditya aka Adi (Arshad Warsi),
whose encyclopaediac half knowledge about everything only adds
to the great expertise of this group; the final component of which
is Mr Scared of everything, Boman (Ashish Choudhary).
These
four lovable idiots live and work together. Their idea of work?
Doing small time can jobs! The thought of earning an honest living
has never even crossed their minds. One day, while trying to save
a dying man. Bose (Prem Chopra), they get their big break. Their
life is made! Unfortunately for them Police Inspector, Kabir Nayak
(Sanjay Dutt) has been chasing Bose for the last ten years.
He
finally finds him. Only dead! Desperate for his promotion, he
questions the suspicious looking foursome he finds next to the
body. Inadvertently they blurt out the secret before managing
to escape. Now begins the mother of all chases! As one misadventure
follows after another, the five are thrown into hilarious situations
that has the audience in splits and quessing. Big Action. Big
Fun, Dhamaal!
'Dhamaal'
packed with mindless merry-making
Review By Subhash K. Jha
Rating: **
'Dhamaal'
is so silly and goofy that you want to reprimand the people who
are falling off their chairs all around you for laughing. Instead,
you find yourself joining the mindless merry-making in this all-boys'
film, with just two incidental female characters to avoid charges
of a gender bias.
For
the rest, 'Dhamaal' moves with the insistent clamour of a do-or-die
stag party. The economy of expression is admirable. Director Indra
Kumar hasn't even left any space for songs.
Dodging
over vulgarity, keeping the pace slick rather than sick, introducing
characters in the tradition of the whacked-out road movies in
1960s featuring Dean Martin and Sammy Davis Jr., 'Dhamaal' is
fun to watch, more than partially because of the chemistry that
the quartet of fun-seeking friends share with a flair for the
funnies. Throw in Sanjay Dutt as the most dishevelled cop, and
you have got a comic brew that bubbles over with broad satire.
The ongoing gags are like extended jokes from TV skits. But the
skits are never on the skids, even when the focus shifts from
the grownup kids to actual kids.
The
second half, when the foursome scampers to Goa, is especially
frenetic in pace. 'Fuel' marks to editor Sanjay Sankla for providing
energy to the gasbags in the Goan goings-on. And 'fool' marks
to the cast for getting so blissfully clued-in to the hi-jinks.
Riteish
Deshmukh, a little out of sorts in his last boys-will-be-noise
outing in 'Heyy Babyy', sparkles in earnest temptation - specially
in the scenes where he's chased by a droll dacoit (Sanjay Mishra).
Aashish
Chaudhary, as a goofy Parsi slapped incessantly by his father
Asrani, is also a delightful comic revelation. But what happened
to the habitually brilliant Arshad Warsi? He seems so disinterested
in the laugh riot! Too many crooks spoilt Arshad's broth?
By
the time the cast pants and puffs to the location of the intended
treasure in Goa, the narrative has just about run out of steam.
For
once, a boys' comedy knows where to stop. Freed of the raunchy
double meanings of Indra Kumar's 'Masti', 'Dhamaal' is the kind
of film where you can put your feet up and sink your teeth into
without wanting to wince with embarrassment.
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