à¤िडियो हेर्न तलको बक्स à¤ित्र क्लिक गर्नुहोस
One fine day Shammi (Arshad Warsi) and Kedar (Jackky Bhagnani) get in order to a cruise ship. The next thing they know, they are washed up on the seaside in Karachi, to find themselves falling to send and receive of a group of scrapes. This isn't the kind of film where logic prevails, so please don’t bother by using these pointless queries as ‘but how’? Why? Along come packs of gun-wielding types-colourful locals, mujahideens of all hues, a striking but clueless Pakistani ‘intelligence office’ (Lauren Gottlieb), and sundry others. And our boys are regarding run, towards India and freedom.
What’s nice will be the fact the film never pretends to be anything that it isn’t: it’s decidedly low-brow, low-rent, and refuses to take itself seriously. So, of course the action unravels on a quite obvious set masquerading as Karachi, enables for many digs at our neighbour’s expense. But the jokes have a spread, slamming people on our side of the border too. Pot-shots are slung at the Americans, and other trigger-happy nations: even dreaded Taliban aren't spared.
Jackky Bhagnani and Arshad Warsi develop a serviceable pair, hmo's playing a gormless Gujju boy whose ‘kanjoos’ father (Dalip Tahil) would rather let the Pakistanis (or the light-eyed Baloch kidnappers, in this particular instance) keep his son rather than him (the tight-fisted father) cough up ransom money. Bhagnani misses a few beats but is willingly to be laughed at. This will help you. Arashad Warsi looks a little out of it to begin with, and then settles down to being his reliable wry self, picking up the ‘sur’ and buoying his co-star. Always advantageous to see this talented actor get screen-time.
No comments:
Post a Comment