Jawani Diwani Movie
Review
Comedy is serious business and to make
moviegoers laugh at the right places is nothing
short of a challenge. But not all comedies
succeed in their endeavor. For any comic fare to
strike a chord, it ought to be scripted well,
garnished with rib-tickling moments and most
importantly, star actors with an immaculate
timing to pull it off.
Unfortunately, JAWANI DIWANI is neither a
scriptural gem, nor does it boast of funny
moments. In fact, the screenplay is so childish
that you often pinch yourself, is this for real?
The writing is so sub-standard, so juvenile at
times that you often think, how was it okayed in
the first place?
JAWANI DIWANI belongs to the same genre as MASTI
and KYAA KOOL HAI HUM, since double entendres
and a liberal dose of skin show are merged with
the main plot. But in the absence of a cohesive
script, the best of garnishing fall flat. That's
exactly why JAWANI DIWANI fails.
In a nutshell, JAWANI DIWANI tries so hard to
make you laugh, but the humor, jokes, gags,
punches, light moments... fall like a pack of
cards.
Mann [Emraan Hashmi], a wannabe singer, is a
hardcore opportunist. He does not hesitate in
'choosing' Radha [Hrishitaa Bhatt] as his love
interest for a purely selfish reason: Radha is
the daughter of Umesh Jumani [Tiku Talsania], a
music company owner.
An agreement for Mann's music album is signed
and the marriage with the music baron's daughter
is confirmed. It's time to celebrate and Mann
heads for Goa with his two friends. But a
one-night stand with the Goan beauty Roma
[Celina Jaitley] lands him in trouble. He is
forced to marry her by the underworld don Chappu
Bhai [Mahesh Manjrekar], an admirer of Roma.
Roma respects the sanctity of marriage, but the
marriage means a ruined career and shattered
dreams for Mann. Only a miracle could get him
out of this mess, is what he believes. Roma
proves to be one. She frees Mann from the
relationship. Mann flies to Mumbai where Radha
and a shining career await him. Convincing Radha,
who is genuinely in love with him, is not really
difficult. But there's a twist in the tale
again.
Roma re-enters Mann's life: She is the chosen
model and Mann's co-star for his video. While
filming the video, Mann realizes his growing
concern for Roma. He also realizes his folly of
giving up true love for a career. But Roma
wouldn't let him give up his career for love.
She walks out of Mann's life for the second
time.
The marriage between Mann and Radha, scheduled
after two months, is now pre-poned to an hour
from then since a shocked Radha learns of Roma.
Mann decides to surrender himself to fate, but
there's a third twist in the tale.
JAWANI DIWANI is archaic in concept [writer:
Pradeep Tiwari] and execution [director: Manish
Sharma], both. Talking purely from the
screenplay point of view, Emraan's character of
a man with a roving eye isn't new anymore.
Latching on to the first opportunity to make it
big in life, Emraan uses Hrishitaa to realize
his dreams. But the way he goes about it,
without much effort, seems like child's play.
Then Emraan heads for Goa and indulges in a
one-night stand with Celina. Haven't they met
barely a few minutes ago? Okay, some men are
charismatic, but Celina, who is supposed to have
a holier than thou image, not only indulges in
pre-marital sex, but agrees to marry him the
very next morning because the underworld don
[Mahesh Manjrekar] insists on it. Is the woman
of today pea-brained?
Immediately thereafter, Celina signs the divorce
papers because Emraan feels caged in the
relationship. So why does she re-enter his life
later? Okay, the don plants her in the video,
but why doesn't Celina object to it, especially
since she herself had signed the divorce papers
at the outset? No explanations!
The climax is a complete downer. Hrishitaa's
decision to play the sacrificial lamb at the
marriage registrar's office is hackneyed and
outdated in concept. And all through the film,
Manjrekar comes across more as a buffoon than a
don.
If the screenplay of JAWANI DIWANI is lousy, the
direction is amateurish. The film is meant to be
a joyride, but the execution is such, it's
difficult to gulp the goings-on after a point.
Director Manish Sharma is not only ill-equipped
with a shoddy script, but even his vision of
cinema is of the 1970s variety. Music is
strictly okay, although the placement of songs
in the second hour gets on your nerves. Whether
or not the situations warrant a song, they do
pop up at regular intervals. Cinematography
[Rajeev Shrivastava] is alright. Dialogues are
witty at places, but the double entendres are
crude and indigestible.
Emraan tries hard to infuse life in JAWANI
DIWANI, but in vain. The actor is capable of
much more, but even a sincere performance from
him cannot uplift things. Celina shows
improvement in dramatic sequences, but needs to
work on emotional ones. Hrishitaa doesn't get
much scope. Mahesh Manjrekar just doesn't work.
He hams throughout. Tiku Talsania is loud.
Shehzad Khan does a takeoff on Anu Malik well.
On the whole, JAWANI DIWANI cuts a sorry
picture. At the box-office, a poor show all the
way!
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