Dil Hai
Tumhaara Movie
Review
Tips, Kundan Shah and Preity Zinta – the
combination worked earlier on a progressive
theme in KYA KEHNA. The results were extremely
heartening.
And now the team comes together yet again in DIL
HAI TUMHAARA – a film that is sure to pull your
heart strings. The outcome is overwhelming!
Tips Films' DIL HAI TUMHAARA, directed by Kundan
Shah, tells the story of a woman and her two
daughters.
It tells the story of an influential widow
Sarita-ji (Rekha), who has everything – wealth,
power, political acumen and two lovely
daughters, Shalu (Preity Zinta) and Nimmi (Mahima
Chaudhary).
It tells the story of two sisters who are
dramatically different from each other, yet
totally devoted to each other. While Shalu is
spirited and full of mischief, Nimmi is feminine
and gentle.
Shalu makes friends wherever she goes and nobody
is immune to her spontaneous vivacity. Yet, for
Sarita-ji, this lovely child is a thorn embedded
in her heart. She smothers the quiet Nimmi with
her love, while ignoring and undermining poor
Shalu.
Enter Dev (Arjun Rampal), the sophisticated
Harvard-returned son of a business tycoon (Alok
Nath), who comes to close down the factory that
is the lifeline of the local people and ends up
becoming their saviour.
There's Samir (Jimmy Shergil), an ace
ventriloquist, who can express his feelings only
through his craft. And when he finally finds his
voice, he discovers it's too late.
DIL HAI TUMHAARA is about a vivacious girl who
has two wonderful men vying for her love, while
all she yearns for is her mother's love.
This is not the first time that we have
witnessed a theme on such relationships. Two men
(Arjun, Jimmy) falling in love with the same
girl (Preity) have been witnessed umpteen times
in the past. Ditto for two sisters (Mahima,
Preity) falling for the same guy (Arjun). But
what makes DIL HAI TUMHAARA different is the way
the age-old plot has been handled.
The initial reels set the ball rolling. After
establishing the plot and the main characters,
the story then diversifies to the two sisters (Mahima,
Preity), the men (Arjun, Jimmy) in their lives,
the factory issue, the villains…
It is only towards the interval point that the
story actually picks up from where it began. If
light moments (a few interesting, a couple of
them mind-numbing!) dominate the first half, the
second half tilts towards drama and emotions.
And the drama is maintained right till the
finale.
Director Kundan Shah is an uncomplicated
story-teller. The plot is simple and so is the
technique while executing the scenes. But a
couple of dramatic sequences are exemplary.
Notable among them being when Rekha confronts
Preity and reveals the murky past. Or, for that
matter, when Preity reveals the reality to Alok
Nath in the pre-climax. Even the culmination of
the love story is just right and well treated.
The treatment succeeds in making your heart
reach out for the protagonist and that's where
the director scores. The sensitivity with which
Shah has handled the sensitive mother-daughter
relationship deserves full marks.
But as the co-writer (he shares the credits with
Rajkumar Santoshi), he should've avoided
concentrating too much on the factory issue in
the first half. Even the villain's track (Govind
Namdev) seems totally unwarranted.
Nadeem-Shravan's music is among the USPs of this
enterprise. The film has soulful music that is
sure to remain etched in your memory for a long,
long time. 'Mohabbat', 'Kasam Khha Ke Kaho', 'Dil
Laga Liya' and the title track are the pick of
the lot.
The film has some of the most talented names in
the business and it is Preity Zinta, in an
author-backed role, who steals the show with a
sterling performance. Her scenes with Rekha
(second half) and Alok Nath (pre-climax) are
simply outstanding. Here's a performance that is
sure to win accolades from the junta and critics
whole-heartedly.
Rekha is simply outstanding in a role that seems
tailormade for her. Mahima Chaudhary is
excellent, delivering the right expressions. Her
expressive eyes convey a lot in the 'Dil Laga
Liya' number.
Arjun Rampal doesn't get much scope in an
enterprise that's dominated by women, but he
does leave an impression whenever he comes on
screen. Jimmy Shergill gets less footage, but
does reasonably well. Alok Nath is first-rate.
Govind Namdev, Anjan Srivastava and Vivek Shauq
support well.
On the whole, DIL HAI TUMHAARA has dollops of
emotions to make the viewers shed buckets of
tears and enough merits to make the distributors
laugh all the way to the bank. Excellent music,
an impressive face-value and fantastic promotion
by Tips should result in the film winning the
dil of cinegoers.
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