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April 19, 2001
5 QUESTIONS
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Priya Ganapati Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai was a film that catapulted Bollywood's current hearthrob, Hrithik Roshan and his costar Amisha Patel to stardom. It was a dream debut for the duo and bestowed on Roshan star status and a gargantuan fan following.
A lead pair whose chemistry set the box-office on fire once, a story that offers ample opportunities for song and dance and a director who is one of the hottest properties in Hindi cinema today after the success of Raaz [starring Dino Morea and Bipasha Basu]. Yet AMALL fails miserably. It stumbles, stutters, stops and then hurtles into disaster with appalling speed. Purported to be a love story against the backdrop of Navratri, the festival that is celebrated for nine nights in Gujarat in Western India with much song and dance. Underworld don Dholakia (Kiran Kumar) has a strange way of caring for his daughter Sapna (Amisha Patel). To protect her from his enemies he virtually imprisons her in his house, not permitting her to go anywhere or meet anyone. Not surprisingly, Sapna thinks it is more fun to run into the enemy than live in her boring cage. Gangsters pounce on her, only to run into Rohit (Hrithik Roshan), who rescues her from a posse of heavily-armed, trigger-happy bad men. Even before he can ask her name, her bodyguards whisk her away, leaving Hrithik forlorn, an expression he is to wear with monotonous regularity through the film.
The wafer-thin plot is really as bad as it sounds. Its execution only makes it worse. A love story against the backdrop of the colourful Dandiya Raas sounds exciting, but what appears on screen is atrocious. The sets are tacky, the costumes shabby and the dialogues so cliched they seem to have been written by someone with a passion for the mundane. Above all, the pace of the film is at fault. Like a stubborn mule, the story refuses to move. And by the time the protagonists go from exchanging soulful glances to confessing their love, you are exceedingly fidgety. Romance, supposed to be the highlight, appears in soulful looks, fluttering eyelashes and heaving bosoms, harking back to the 1970s' style of filmmaking.
AMALL is uniformly bad. For a film that set amidst the revelry of the festival of nine days, Rajesh Roshan's music leaves much to be desired. The colourful ghagra-choli, the traditional costume during Navratri, is surprisingly missing, to be replaced by mutants with no resemblance to the original. What marks the downfall of AMALL is the terrible performance by its lead actors. Amisha Patel, considered a fairly competent actress, turns in a howler with exaggerated mannerisms, affected dialogue delivery and heaving bosom. Quite inexplicably, Amisha wheezes through every teary sequence. She is especially terrible towards the climax.
Hrithik Roshan, one of Hindi cinema's biggest stars, is a letdown. His sinewy biceps and drop-dead looks don't salvage his nonexistent characterisation or lack of credible dialogues. Director Vikram Bhatt's inconsistency takes you by surprise ge most. After the slick Ghulam [starring Aamir Khan and Rani Mukherji], the passable Kasoor [with Aftab Shivdasani and Lisa Ray], and the reasonably spooky Raaz, Bhatt comes up with a disaster. Just reiterates one thing --- AMALL is best left AWOL (absent without leave).
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