The Moderator here is very liberal. He is a very genuine person and doesnt
block mails without a reason.

Dont blame the mod or ARR for any reason

On Sat, Nov 22, 2008 at 7:56 AM, kumar0305 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>    You all were sending me crape emails, moderator is not posting any of
> my post because I said " Whats wrong with you Rahman". I know moderator is
> not going to post this one too, but he will read this, I hope.
> Now what are you guys going to do. *Being fans don't mean you support
> every thing you idol makes, when its bad try to accept it.
> *
>
> Masand's Verdict: Yuvvraaj doesn't hit the right note
>
> The dialogue is a mix of clunky lines that make you cringe in
> embarrassment, and a bunch of unintentionally hilarious gems that will make
> you laugh every time you think of the film. Like that priceless scene in
> which Katrina scolds Salman for being an insensitive son to his father: *Jo
> bete ne apne baap ki shakal sapne mein bhi na dekhi ho, woh beta nahin, woh
> hardcore anti-family man hai.*
>
> There was a slim chance the film might not have hurt this bad if the acting
> was any better, but to think the stars of this film were paid crores of
> rupees to put up this show makes you realise that indeed life is unfair.
> Salman Khan does pretty much as he pleases, walking in and out of scenes as
> if he were at home, never mindful of the fact that he's playing a character
> here and that some consistency in performance is expected of him. He just
> about scrapes through the comedy with a few light moments, but completely
> fails to touch your heart in the film's emotional scenes.
>
> Zayed Khan struggles through even basic scenes in the film, unable to alter
> his expressions in keeping with the film's needs, yelling when he's expected
> to be intense, and looking away in exasperation each time he can't come up
> with a more fitting reaction. A crash course in acting at Ghai's own
> Whistling Woods Film School might not be such a bad idea for Zayed.
>
> Katrina Kaif looks lovely and makes an earnest attempt in the acting
> department too -- in a film like this, that's plenty effort. Boman Irani
> hams it up as Katrina's doctor dad, and turns in what is sure to be one of
> his career's most embarrassing performances.
>
> And then there's Anil Kapoor whose character I had difficulty understanding
> - was he autistic, was he blind, did he have arthritis? I never did get it
> in the end because of the strange mannerisms and quirks Anil brought to his
> performance. And yet, it's the only performance in the film where some
> competence is visible.
>
> Ghai spares no efforts in giving *Yuvvraaj* a fancy feel, there's pleasing
> photography and spunky choreography on display, but AR Rahman's soundtrack
> throws up only three good tracks which is a shame considering the film's
> designed as a musical.
>
> *Yuvvraaj* doesn't quite hit the right note because it's an archaic drama
> that feels too tired. Barring a handful of vintage Subhash Ghai moments that
> still work, the film sadly is far from his best work.
>
> I'm going with one out of five for director Subhash Ghai's *Yuvvraaj*, I'd
> much rather watch *Hero* or *Karma*all over again.
>
> 
>



-- 
regards,
Vithur

Reply via email to