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Saturday, March 10, 2018

Hate Story 4 

Revenge On The Rocks



If there is a Hate Story 4, there must have been three before it, but it would require a lot of effort to recall any of them—they are that watch-and-forget. All seem to have one thing in common, a woman’s use of her body and sex appeal for revenge.  Which means that they star women with ‘strippable’ figures and a camera that lasciviously zooms on their body parts. So it has its audience cut out to, the kind that needs Hindi subtitles for elementary English dialogue,  like “Hey Baby”  (Aye suno).  And then, the makers have the gall to quote crimes against women statistics at the end, with an anti eve-teasing message.

Hate Story 4 has Urvashi Rautela as Tasha, whose butt is seen before her face, as she dances in a nightclub to seduce rich dude Rajveer (Karan Wahi).  So hot is she that Rajveer’s older brother Aryan (Vivan Bhathena) also lusts after her. Their father Vikram Khurana (Gulshan Grover), also gives her a once over, but has to be hands off, because he is standing for the mayoral elections in London. Aryan already has a girlfriend Rishma (Ihana Dhillon), so his scheme to get Tasha into bed causes some major complications that involve murder, blackmail and revenge.

The brothers are unmitigated creeps with women, but somehow lose whatever little sense they have over Tasha, who wanders around in tight/short cleavage-revealing clothes. So one brother gifts her a mansion, another gives her a swanky car, while the father frets over elections.  In the one song she has, Rishma shows skin too, but Aryan keeps her around because she is good in the bedroom and boardroom (his words). Still, he is not above spiking a woman’s drink to “take advantage” of her.

The film is so hilariously bad, with such convoluted dialogue that merrily throws in references to the Ramayan and Mahabharat.  Even though it is set in London, the film cannot help looking tacky, and between the dozen actors with speaking parts, there’s not one half-way decent performance. Still, for all you know, there will be a fifth film in the franchise!








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3 Storeys  




Chawl Tales


The famous chawls of Mumbai are slowly vanishing from the city’s landscape. So Arjun Mukherjee’s portmanteau film, 3 Storeys, evokes a touch of nostalgia for a way of life that involved whole communities living in close proximity, and becoming like family to one another.

The three stories, narrated by a female voice revealed at the end, are woven around the chawl called Maya Nagar. They are unconnected, even though various characters living there saunter through all of them. The first—most interesting and most unconvincing too—involves a well-dressed Vishal Naik (Pulkit Samrat) willing to pay four times the price for a room in the chawl to the crabby Flory Mendonca (Renuka Shahane—artificially aged and padded).  As they make small talk over coffee after the deal is signed, the mystery of the overpriced room is revealed, and there is a just desserts kind of twist in the tale.

The other two stories are prosaic by comparison. One has unhappy, battered wife Varsha (Masumeh Makhija) and her broken heart; Shankar, the man she loved (Sharman Joshi), asked her to wait for a year  and never showed up. In the age of mobile phones, this contrived yarn about a tragic misunderstanding does not quite work.

In the third, a Muslim boy Sohail (Ankit Rathi) elopes with a Hindu girl, Malini (Aisha Ahmed), only to discover the shocking reason why their parents oppose their romance. In the background, is brightly-clad, siren (Richa Chadda) and her silent admirer, a burly cop, Ganpat (Himanshu Malik).

The cast is efficient, the film has a bearable running time, but it is not consistently engaging.  It’s set in a chawl just so that the narrator can look into the lives of the characters, since the somewhat open style of architecture encourages snooping; but the quaint Mumbai institution ought to have played a greater part in the narrative.  Think Jaagte Raho, Piya Ka Ghar and Katha among others.







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