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DHOL
Directed by: Priyadarshan
Starring: Sharman Joshi, Tusshar Kapoor, Kunal Khemu, Tanushree
Datta, Rajpal Yadav, Om Puri, Payal Rohatgi, Arbaaz Khan,
Murli Sharma, Rasika Joshi, Asrani, Tareena Patel, Tiku Talsania,
Farida Dadi
UK Release 21 September 2007 |
Synopsis
'Dhol'
is a hilarious tale of four boys Pakya (Sharman Joshi), Sam (Tushar
Kapoor), Goti (Kunal Khemu) & Maru (Rajpal Yadav) who want
to make it big in life with the least possible effort. They have
been doing all sorts of jobs with hardly any money. They decide
that the only way to get rich (without working too hard) is to
marry a rich girl. The four cannot believe their luck when Ritu
(Tanushree Dutta) shifts into their neighborhood.
All four of them try various methods to get close to the girl
including impressing her grandparents but somehow nothing goes
right. But the boys are persistent and end up discovering a spine
chilling truth.
Priyadarshan
brings you Dhol, a funny & thrilling story of
love, money, greed, crime, murder & suspense, woven together
by a number of funny & comic situations.
'Dhol',
an uninspiring slapstick comedy
Review By Subhash K. Jha (IANS)
Priyadarshan
used to be one of my favourite filmmakers... until he decided
to turn into a funny man and churn out comedies at the speed of
a roadside golgappa wallah serving up golgappas. Over-spiced,
utterly impure in intent and thoroughly suspect in execution,
Priyadarshan's comedies have gone from worse in 'Malamaal Weekly'
to worst in 'Bhagam Bhaag'. And his latest 'all boys-no brains'
comedy is unpalatable.
Losers
are a barrel full of laughs in Priyan's cinematic vision. Yeah,
Akshay Kumar and Suniel Shetty were a laugh riot in 'Hera Pheri'.
But the boys who followed the farce have gone to seed in rapid
succession.
Priyan's
comedies have a distinctly accentuated ambience... junior artistes
hover pretending to be casual in crowded street scenes. The bustle
is as real as contestants in a reality show pretending to be camera-oblivious.
The ambience here exudes a phoney functionalism derived from the
desire to manufacture a farcical facsimile of life's most uninspiring
moments.
In
making the ludicrous lucrative, Priyan has somewhere lost the
plot. The narrative in 'Dhol' is carpeted with corny one-liners
and gags picked up from stand-up comedies. The loud louts of 'Dhol'
are played by four of our talented young actors. But almost every
frame has the quartet out-talking one another, spraying water
and spitting in this ode to noise pollution.
The
idle chatter of a small town is created with some care for the
conventions of a narrative pattern, and full marks to Priyan's
steady art director Sabu Cyril for getting it right. The rest
of the ambience seems manufactured - jars of unopened bottles
of jam and pickle, and DVDs 'casually' thrown around to express
that touch of authenticity.
The
film opens with a Terina Patel music video as Arbaaz Khan tries
to act mysterious and macho... and then cut to the four slothful
heroes and their shrill landlady.
Elegance
and understatement in words and wardrobe are a primary casualty
in 'Dhol' and its clamorous ilk of comedies. Somewhere towards
the end, the film's title is recalled. Villain Murli Sharma starts
stalking Tanushree and Payal Rohatgi to retrieve a dhol (drum)
filled with money.
No
wonder Pritam's music comes out sounding so stilted!
Borrowing
a mean streak from cartoons, the villains slap and pound the heroes
to a pulp. Nobody comes to any grievous injury ... except the
audience! And poor Om Puri and his screen-wife Farida Dadi also
get slapped around. But that's the least of their worries in a
film that demands even the most talented of actors to get seriously
brain-dead.
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