A new star is born  

 
Winsome combo: Imran and Genelia shine  
Film: Jaane Tu ..Ya Jaane Na
Cast: Imran, Genelia
Director: Abbas Tyrewala 
His uncle is still at it: wowing admirers across generations, reinventing 
himself with every new venture. 
Now
comes Aamir Khan’s nephew, Imran, whose face does nothing to make you
question his genes. He resembles Aamir in more than a passing manner.
Importantly, he also reminds us of Aamir in his ‘Qayamat Se Qayamat
Tak’ days: fresh, fro
thy with a winsome smile. And a complete natural in front of the
camera. ‘Jaane Tu…Ya Jaane Na’ may not work wonders at the box office,
but we all know a new star is born! 
Director Abbas Tyrewala takes the time-tested way to introduce
Imran: a love story set in the university campus, the kind we see only
in cliché-ridden Bollywood. So all the students wear designer stuff,
girls lick their lollypops, guys wear their cap back-to-the-front. And
there is not even a hint of academics. Our guy is better looking than
everybody else, the girl – Genelia, now clearly on a comeback trail –
just about. She is a motor mouth, he can barely speak a sentence. She
can return brickbats with a tonne of rubble, he is likely to show his
other cheek to an assailant. The other youngsters fill up the frames,
help maintain a young ambience in a story that works through its taut
narrative. 
Despite occasional lapses in momentum, the love story of two people who don’t 
know when Cupid strikes.
In new-found freedom for Hindi cinema, the hero and heroine are best
friends. He cannot stay without her caustic remarks, she cannot do
without him trailing her like a shadow all the time. She cannot stand
his non-violent streak, his docile ways, he cannot tolerate her loud
ways. That they are usually in a group cloaks the truth: friendship is
a nice cover for what is essentially a non-platonic attraction. For the
non-happening story to move forward, Tyrewala introduces a girlfriend
for the hero with obvious repercussions. Throw in a toughie for the
girl, the kind who would enjoy drool-value. Again, the side-effects are
predictable. All familiar, all enjoyable. Good as long as it lasts.
‘Jaane Tu…’ is not a path-breaking film. In fact, the director pays
homage to every conceivable stereotype along the way. Tyrewala makes it
palatable by keeping the tenor light and comic. 
Now add a new emerging Bollywood mom. She still prepares a toast and halwa for
her son, but wears pants, reads novels, speaks English. That Ratna
Pathak Shah makes a rare appearance as the ambivalent mom spices up the
proceedings. But hey, wait a minute, the dark horse of the film is the
irrepressible Naseeruddin Shah. In a cameo as the gallant Rajput, he is
a winner. His flawless dialogue delivery, his nuances, his body
manoeuvring all lend the film some of its best moments. Watch ‘Jaane
Tu…’ It may not offer anything new beyond a hero who is going to be
around for some time. 
It sails through on the basis of its packaging, its seamless interweaving of 
the traditional with the modern.
ZIYA US SALAM

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