Jaane Tu Ya Jaane Na : Movie Review
04th July 2008  23.20 IST 
By Naresh K. Deoshi  

No horsing around. Let’s cut to the chase. Jaane Tu Ya Jaane Na is a simple, 
refreshingly different romantic film that makes you wanna fall in love.

There is something about Imran Khan that makes him very endearing. He has the 
demeanor of a shy guy with a
rare combination of the sharp and meek, the clever and vulnerable. He
has an unpretentious, honest face, clear eyes and a voice that is
confident and also inhibited. To a T, he suits the role of a Rajput who
can’t even kill a fly, forget about punching someone or seeing the
inside of a jail. 

There is something about Genelia D'Souza , the way she smiles and the way she 
scowls. She has a fine blend of
femininity and tomboyishness. She doesn’t have the face of a stunner,
but it’s a face you can watch for hours without getting bored. To a T
she suits the role of a girl who would love someone without knowing it,
a girl who would pick fights with other boys but can’t tell what’s in
her heart to the person most close.


  
 
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You see! The point I’m coming to is that director Abbas Tyrewala (and his wife 
Pakhi) has cast a perfect ensemble in his directorial
debut. Be it Ratna Pathak Shah as the admonishing mother of the
protagonist, or Naseerudin Shah as the sword-wielding dead Rajput
father who speaks to his wife (Ratna) from a photograph. Or be it Paresh Rawal 
as the cop who deals with criminals and imparts justice with his baton and 
bumboo rather than putting load on the judiciary. Or be it Arbaaz Khan and 
Sohail Khan , superbly cast as two macho Rajputs, who ride horses in city and 
pick up fights in discotheques.

All these actors are very appropriately cast in a story that has loads
of youthful exuberance, hilarity, love, friendship, romance and
heartbreak.

‘Jaane Tu Ya Jaane Na’ is about a bunch of friends.
Jai aka Ratz (Imran Khan) and Aditi aka Meawoo (Genelia) are so close
that people close to them think they are in love. Only Jai and Aditi
themselves are unaware of any such feelings towards each other. Rotlu,
the brooder, has a crush on Aditi. And Bombs, the tubelight, silently
longs for Jai. Jiggy and Shaleen are totally chilled out. Together the
sextet makes a gang of singing, dancing, joking and joshing buddies. 

Things change when Jai falls for Meghna (Manjari Phadnis). Aditi feels
Jai getting distant from her and this disturbs her. Then, Aditi too
finds her Mr. Right in Sushant, a broad-shouldered ‘man’ with a roving
eye. Now, Jai feels he is losing Aditi. How Jai and Aditi get out of
their romantic mess and discover their heart’s true desire is what
‘Jaane Tu Ya Jaane Na’ is about.

On paper, the movie might look
like any other love story with some beaten-to-death clichés like the
hero mounting on a horse and riding to an airport in the climax to stop
his ladylove from leaving for the US. But believe you me, it has never
been presented in such as novel way – with a delectable dash of humour
– as in ‘Jaane Tu’. 

Hats off to Abbas Tyrewala for keeping
the story so simple and populating it with characters (including
horses) that chip in their bit to the movement of the plot. As it turns
out by the film’s end, not a single character is dispensable to the
story. Each one has a part to play, including the fuddy-duddy, dead
daddy (Naseeruddin Shah) of the protagonist who speaks from a photo
frame. In fact, my favorite scene from the film is when Jai comes home
bruised after his first active fight and his dad almost bursts with
muffled joy of his son at last showing some Rajput trait. Without
saying a word, Naseer conveys it all with his expressions.

Paresh Rawal comes in a few scenes and leaves you floored. Ratna Pathak
Shah is good. The young actors playing the bunch of friends are
natural. It’s hard to notice any acting in their performance. Arbaaz
and Sohail are absolutely adorable as the rustic cowboys eager to pick
up fights. Not to forget A R Rahman ’s music that blends seamlessly into the 
narrative whether it’s played in background or in foreground. 

In the end, ‘Jaane Tu Ya Jaane Na’ can be aptly summed up in a few lines from 
the song ‘Nazrein Churana’. The lines go: “dil ki yahi khataa hai, dil ko nahin 
pataa hai, ki dil chahta hai kya.”

Don’t miss this film.

Rating: ***1/2

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