Insaan Music
Review
Ajay Devgan, Akshay Kumar and Tushar
Kapoor - the last time they came together in '
Khakee ', each of them won applause for
their bravura performance. They unite once again
in Khakee's producer Keshu Ramsay's yet another
action drama ' Insan ', that is
directed by K. Subaash (not to be confused with
B.Subhash) and stars Lara Dutta. Esha Deol,
Koena Mitra and Laila as the lead heroines.
Though the look of the movie is not as slick as
' Khakee ' and the promotion too is
solely aimed at the lovers of hardcore 'masala'
movies, 'Insan' seems to be one of those
reasonable budgeted actioners that guarantee a
safe return of investment. One needs to see if
the audience will be glad to lap up this movie
at the beginning of the new year 2005 when
classy movies like ' Kisna ' and '
Black ' would be lined up for release. Mr.
Consistent Himesh Reshammiya, who always comes
up (at the least) with a couple of hummable
tunes in every movie composes while his
counterpart Sameer writes.
Udit Narayan and Alka Yagnik come together in '
Chunri Re ' to oblige
Reshammiya ad Sameer once again with a chapter
on ' Chunri ' taking away someone's 'Dil'!
Well, enough seems to be enough and this time
around the audience's reaction would be of plain
boredom. After all for how long can one listen
to the same story in exactly the same setup,
time and again. You feel it's a quick skip but
then the 'Instrumental' comes up. So here we go
with a double 'skip'!
A routine duet follows next that is a continued
saga of an argument around 'O God! Why did you
make me fall in love?' in the form of '
Rabba Mere Rabba '. Udit
Narayan and Alka Yagnik are made to follow the
much-walked path. A stock tune for sure, the
only highlight of ' Chunri Re ' and '
Rabba ' is the emergence of Esha Deol
in a 'latak-jhatak' avtaar where she seems more
comfortable than before in a regular Bollywood
antic. Also follows a (but natural) sad
version of the same song by Alka Yagnik
and an ' Instrumental
'! And everyone thought we would be most pleased
to lend our ears to them! OK, so the songs so
far are definitely not bad or downright rejects.
But then you have heard these tunes so many time
before that you loose count.
Himesh Reshammiya and Shaan come on their own in ' Rain Rain
' that has the base music of '
Dilli Ki Sardi ' from Zameen . A
racy track, it has Sunidhi Chauhan giving
company to Shaan and designed as a youthful
song. Sorry, but things go awry here as well and
fail to impress. Another stock tune, another
case of predictability, another bore! And to
think of it, there is a solo of
the same by Sunidhi Chauhan too that follows
soon after.
Thankfully Sonu Nigam does some damage control
by singing a smooth melodious track '
Khwahish '. Hold on before you
think it may make a place for itself as one of
the Top 20 songs of 2004. No, that's not the
case but then the lineage of the songs before
this one makes it the best as far as this album
is concerned. Alka Yagnik is the female voice in
the song that inspite of being 'just another
song' manages to make you at least sit through
its duration.
Kunal Ganjawala and Sunidhi Chauhan gang-up to
heat up the scene in ' Is Tarah
Deewane '. While Ajay Devgan and
Koena Mitra make the best out of the situation,
the tune and the beats are so mundane that you
give a sigh of relief once the number is over.
Music of ' Insan ' is so very routine
that you wonder if rights of some other movie's
songs could have been bought straightaway
instead of any new compositions. Sales of the
album before or even after the movie's release
is never going to be earth-shattering and the
music would soon be forgotten. Chances are very
remote that even a select segment of audience
would really go gaga over the music and storm
the music stores.
Avoidable!
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