36 China Town Movie
Review
In a career spanning almost two decades, right
from their debut Hindi film AGNEEKAAL to their
last release AITRAAZ, director duo Abbas-Mustan
have handled thrillers proficiently. The mystery
element worked extremely well in films like
KHILADI, BAAZIGAR and HUMRAAZ.
The baazigar of thrillers now present yet
another whodunit, 36 CHINA TOWN. Naturally, the
expectations run high, also because the combo --
producer Subhash Ghai and director duo
Abbas-Mustan -- made a noteworthy impact in
their first outing together, AITRAAZ.
Like Abbas-Mustan's previous outings, 36 CHINA
TOWN bears a glossy look from scene A to Z, but
for any whodunit to strike a chord, it ought to
keep the viewer on the edge of the seat, making
him/her chew the nails till the penultimate
reel. Also, if the identity of the killer
catches you by surprise no sooner the mystery is
solved, it's a clear sign of victory. But if it
doesn't, the makers ought to realize that
they've missed the bus.
Unfortunately, 36 CHINA TOWN doesn't get the
grammar of whodunit right.
Suspense fares like TEESRI MANZIL, JEWEL THIEF,
MERA SAAYA and BEES SAAL BAAD or, for that
matter, even Abbas-Mustan's BAAZIGAR worked
because [i] The writing was foolproof, [ii] the
suspense quotient was intriguing and [ii] the
climax was the highpoint. 36 CHINA TOWN fails on
all the three counts!
To cut a long story short, 36 CHINA TOWN only
cements the fact that gloss can never substitute
for a spellbinding story. If the foundation
[script] itself is shaky, none of the support
systems [star power, music, exotic locales] can
salvage the show.
Sonia [Isha Koppikar] is the owner of a casino
in Goa. A successful entrepreneur, the only love
in her life is her son. When the toddler
suddenly goes missing, the lady is distraught
and distressed. She offers a huge reward [Rs. 25
lacs] to anyone who can trace her son.
Raj [Shahid Kapoor] and Priya [Kareena Kapoor],
two strangers from different backgrounds,
accidentally spot the child and decide to split
the reward money given by Sonia. But when they
finally reach Sonia's mansion late at night,
they find her murdered!
Raj and Priya panic and escape from the mansion.
In the confusion that follows, Priya forgets her
suitcase in the mansion. Soon, they are the
chief suspects in the murder. The cop [Akshaye
Khanna] realizes that this isn't an
open-and-shut case, since a number of new
suspects show up while the investigations are
on.
The suspects include two couples [Johny Lever-Tanaaz
/ Paresh Rawal-Payal Rohatgi], a playboy [Upen
Patel], a drunkard [Raj Zutshi] and the domestic
help [Dinyar Contractor, Roshan Tirandaaz].
Who's the murderer? And what is the motive?
36 CHINA TOWN has too many things crammed in
those 2.30 hours. Or, perhaps, the writer [Shyam
Goel] wanted to play safe and decided to add
every ingredient available on the shelf. The
pre-release promotions give an indication that
36 CHINA TOWN is a whodunit, but it comes across
as a regular masala movie, with emphasis
on songs, romance and comedy.
36 CHINA TOWN begins with a playboy wooing girls
of all shapes and sizes and breaking into a song
[filmed on Upen], which is immediately followed
by another song [Shahid's intro with Tanushree
Dutta]. That makes it two songs in the first
twenty minutes itself. No sooner do the songs
end, it's time to make way for some light
moments [Paresh, Johny, Payal, Tanaaz], followed
by a dream song [Shahid, Kareena] and some
romantic moments. In between, a pivotal
character is murdered and minutes before the
intermission, the focus is back on the murder.
Post-interval, you expect the writer to divert
our attention to the murder mystery alone. The
viewer is keen to know the suspects, the actual
murderer and the motive behind the murder. But
in the second hour too, the writer doesn't want
you to think of murder alone. So there's loads
of comedy [Johny Lever and the suitcase
portion], comedy during the cross-examination [Paresh-Payal-Upen
track] and a dream song in the prison cell [Shahid-Kareena].
Clearly, 36 CHINA TOWN is letdown by a sloppy
script. In fact, one wonders how the supremely
talented directors actually okayed such
sub-standard writing in the first place. The
biggest flaw is, without doubt, the climax of
the film. The identity of the killer is such an
anti-climax. What were the directors and writer
thinking when they came up with such a thanda
end? Seems like the end was penned by some
kindergarten kids!
Abbas-Mustan's direction is handicapped by an
apology of a script. Even otherwise, the film
lacks the by-now-famous stamp of the duo,
especially in dramatic scenes. Himesh
Reshammiya's music is the only saving grace. 'Aashiqui
Meri', '24 x 7' and 'Badi Dilchaspi Hai' are
foot-tapping and what acts as an icing is that
each track has been filmed exquisitely.
Cinematography [Ravi Yadav] is wonderful.
Dialogues [Anurag Prapanna] are poor. Editing [Hussain
Burmawala] is slick. The edit of both the
versions of 'Aashiqui Meri' track is
commendable.
Akshaye is, as always, proficient. His is the
only performance that stands out. Kareena
doesn't really get any scope. Shahid tends to go
over the top. He needs to control his facial
expressions. Upen Patel makes a fine debut. He
seems confident.
Paresh Rawal and Johny Lever contribute to some
good comedy. Isha Koppikar is wasted. Payal
Rohatgi and Tanaaz are mere props. Vivek Shauq,
Raj Zutshi, Viveck Vaswani, Dinyar Contractor
and Roshan Tirandaaz are gap-fillers. As for
Priyanka Chopra's surprise appearance, it's
insignificant and seems forced.
On the whole, 36 CHINA TOWN is high on hype, but
low on substance. Disappointing!
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