Humko Deewana
Ker Gaye
Movie
Review
Raj Kanwar has an impressive track record. A
majority of his films have worked at the
box-office, including his last release, ANDAAZ.
Expectedly, the expectations from HUMKO DEEWANA
KAR GAYE, his new film that teams him with
ANDAAZ hero Akshay Kumar again, are humungous.
Also, since the head honchos of music company
T-Series, Bhushan Kumar and Kishan Kumar, are in
the producers’ seat with Kanwar, the
expectations only mount further.
HUMKO DEEWANA KAR GAYE had all the trappings
that make a memorable love story: A good-looking
cast, melodious music and dazzling locales of
Canada. But something’s missing…
For any love story to strike a chord, it ought
to be embellished with moments that make you
fall in love with the characters. Most
importantly, the sequences should march into
your heart through the eyes. Unfortunately,
HUMKO DEEWANA KAR GAYE is all about great
visuals, while the emotional side [that should
be the hallmark] is superficial.
Simply put, HUMKO DEEWANA KAR GAYE is body
beautiful, minus soul.
Inspired by director Bronwen Hughes’ Ben
Affleck-Sandra Bullock starrer FORCES OF NATURE
[1999], which was remade by Mehul Kumar as KITNE
DOOR… KITNE PAAS [2002; Fardeen Khan, Amrita
Arora], HUMKO DEEWANA KAR GAYE is a good
opportunity gone amiss.
Aditya [Akshay Kumar, an automobile engineer, is
engaged to Sonia [Bipasha Basu], a fashion
designer. As individuals, Aditya and Sonia are
not on the same wavelength. For Sonia, career
comes first. And as much as Aditya tries to
overlook those facts, they keep coming in the
way.
Though the marriage date is fixed, Aditya has to
leave for Canada to learn about the technique of
a new car model, to be launched in India; while
Sonia has to leave for Paris for a fashion show.
Aditya arrives in Canada where his sister Simran
[Bhagyashree] lives. He meets the family, but
cannot live with them as the company has given
him an apartment close to the workshop. But he
makes it a point to meet the family on weekends.
He bumps into Jia
[Katrina Kaif] more than once. Jia, daughter of
business tycoon Yashwardhan, has come to Canada
to shop for her wedding. Her marriage has been
fixed with business giant Karan Oberoi [Anil
Kapoor].
Jia is a simple girl with simple needs. She had
everything she desired in childhood, but yearns
to spend time with her ever-so-busy father. Now,
the man her father has chosen for her hardly has
any time for her. Aditya and Jia manage to spend
time with each other and as time passes, the
friendship thickens.
However, a misunderstanding with Aditya makes
Jia return to India to get married to Karan.
Aditya also returns to India to get married to
Sonia and does not attempt to meet Jia ever
again. But fate makes them meet for the last
time -- at Jia’s wedding!
The problems with
HUMKO DEEWANA KAR GAYE are manifold –
The story borrows
heavily from Yash Raj’s successful films, mainly
D.D.L.J. Yes, the basic premise is borrowed from
FORCES OF NATURE, but the film gives you a
constant feeling of déjà vu.
Take for instance
Anil Kapoor’s introduction [he is told Akshay is
from the room service department and Anil tips
him]. The entire sequence is a straight lift
from the Julia Roberts-Hugh Grant-Alex Baldwin
starrer NOTTING HILL. Even the scene when Anil
reprimands Katrina is straight out of TITANIC,
when an overtly possessive Billy Zane reprimands
Kate Winslet.
There are too many
songs in the narrative. Whether or not the
situation warrants a song, there’s one after
every 15/20 minutes.
The story refuses
to move in the first hour after the characters
are established. All that the lead pair does is
talk, talk and more talk. In this age of love
and lust, the couple don’t even own up to the
fact that they’ve developed feelings for each
other.
At the intermission point, with Anil Kapoor
making a dramatic entry, you expect some
movement in the story. Again, nothing happens.
The climax is the weakest link of the
enterprise. Not only has it been stretched
endlessly, even the culmination to the story is
powerless. First Anil catches Akshay and Katrina
red-handed, then Anil shows his displeasure,
then the car accident, then Anil re-unites the
lovers [even after Anil and Katrina have wed]…
the last 25 minutes give you the impression that
the writer doesn’t believe in short-n-sweet
endings.
Given the fact that director Raj Kanwar is
saddled with a lifeless script, he tries to
compensate with breath-taking visuals and gloss.
But let’s get one thing right: No amount of
gloss and glitter can actually compensate for a
sound story. The viewer yearns for a
spellbinding story at the end of the day!
Editing is another area where the film falters
badly. Either the editor must’ve fallen in love
with the product and he forgot all about
editing/trimming or he doesn’t know his job. The
film should be trimmed by 30 minutes at least.
Anu Malik’s music is decent, but you remember
them less for the tunes and more for the snazzy
picturization. ‘Fanah’ and the title track do
leave a mark, but it’s the Himesh Reshammiya
rendered/composed title track that stands out as
the best piece in the enterprise.
Cinematography [Vikas Shivraman] is magnificent.
The ace lensman has done complete justice to the
eye-filling locales of Canada as also the lavish
sets. The styling and the sets are top class. In
fact, the producers need to be complimented for
leaving no stone unturned when it came to giving
the film a spectacular look and also for
promoting the film to the optimum.
Akshay Kumar does reasonably well, although he
looks too mature for these lovey-dovey
characters. Katrina Kaif is a complete
revelation. Taking giant strides as an actor,
she is, without doubt, the star of the show.
It’s her magnetic presence and dependable
performance that you carry home once the show
has ended.
Anil Kapoor is okay, but why does the corporate
tycoon sport an unshaven, untidy look all
through? Bipasha has two songs and few scenes,
which she carries off with panache. Bhagyashree
is up to the mark. Helen is wasted. Vivek Shauq
is alright. Gurpreet Guggi and Upasna Singh
don’t get any scope. The remaining characters [Puneet
Issar-Anju Mahndroo-Delnaaz Paul, Ranjeet-Neena
Kulkarni, Mahesh Thakur and Manoj Joshi] are
hardly there.
On the whole, HUMKO DEEWANA KAR GAYE is body
beautiful, minus soul. At the box-office, the
film has some scope thanks to the fantastic
promotion, but a poor script is its biggest
flaw. Below expectations!
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