Review: 'Once Upon Ay
Time In Mumbai Dobaara!'
Milan Luthria's 'Once
Upon Ay Time In Mumbai Dobaara!', starring Akshay Kumar, Imran Khan and
Sonakshi Sinha, is an ill-timed gangster drama
How do I put this politely?
This is arguably one of the most awful, ill-timed gangster dramas with most performances
so loud and unassimilated that these characters could easily be contestants in
an Eid special segment of Comedy Circus where the theme is 'Gangsta Rap'.
Such utter crap, and done with
heartbreaking seriousness. It takes some doing to wrap up such a time-worn love
triangle into a pretence of modern storytelling.
Milan Luthria has never been a
great filmmaker. At least his earlier films like 'Kachche Dhaage' and 'Dirty
Picture' had some interesting conflicts between characters who are driven by a
desire for revenge but are frustrated in their malevolence by their love for
the very same people they want to hate.
The problem with '...Dobaara'
is that the two main characters who love each other to death are people we have
met over and over again. Most notably in Ram Gopal Varma's 'Company' where Ajay
Devgn and Vivek Oberoi played gangster and protege with great conviction and
ballsy velocity.
The
subsequent spinoffs have gotten seriously diluted.
This one is a sequel to
Luthria's not-so-engaging film where Ajay Devgn's imposing personality had made
the pale and sometime unintentionally funny proceedings bearable.
Except for Sonakshi Sinha
playing a starlet who talks too hard and too much and gets the male
protagonists (who need to be spanked for playing with guns when their IQ level
suggests video games would be more apt) into a serious conflict merely because
she's too dumb to see they both love her,'...Dobaara' has no redeeming
qualities.
Akshay Kumar as a Dawood
doppelgang(st)er is a laugh. His dialogues meant to show his mastery over the
hoary art of rhetorics, come out sounding like wimpy words of wacked-out wisdom
picked up from messages in Chinese cookies, if not from forwarded sms messages.
I don't know who wrote the
hideously bloated dialogues of this film. And I don't want to know. I'd just
like to suggest to the dialogue writer to go easy on the bumper-sticker wisdom
next time. You can't make the hero look heroic by spilling tacky wisdom all
over the frames in the hope that audiences would applaud the bombastic words
without thinking about their relevance.
This film wallows in a kind of
imbecilic irreverence where the protagonists seem bold brave, sexy and even
brazen but are actually cardboard versions of the triangular lovers in Raj
Kapoor's 'Sangam' and Vinod Kumar's 'Mere Huzoor'. But at least love triangles
of the past were honest about their melodramatic intentions. '...Dobaara'
cloaks its outdated radical ideas in a rumbustious display of trendiness.
One of the 'jokes' that ties
Sonakshi's character to her lover-boy Imran Khan is his misuse of the word
'intercourse'. The film uses the word over and over again like a school boy
that has just found a non-punishable way to say 'sex' in the classroom.
A flavour of flagrant
criminality is created through back-projected nostalgia, like an archival
cricket match 'fixed' by the all-powerful underworld don. Fleets of black and
yellow Fiat cars ply up and down Mumbai's streets in a show of periodicity. A
wanton woman (Sophie Chowdhary, in a seductive cameo) cheats on her
unsuspecting husband, making out with the dreaded don in backroom at noisy
party.
You can almost smell the cheap
perfume and the discount-rated champagne trying to pass as the genuine stuff in
Shoaib's party. This guy thinks he is menacing. He is actually a joke. And if
the real Dawood is anything like the way he is portrayed here we have nothing
to fear except his cheesy dialogue-baazi.
The gangster-villain (Akshay
insists he is a villain, and who are we to argue with a guy who keeps smashing
up furniture and appliances every time he doesn't get his way?) and his cronies
appear to have walked out of 'loin' Ajit den in the 1970s, not quite sure which
way they are supposed to head in the present day milieu of such awe-inspiring
gangster epics as Luc Besson's 'Taken' and Amit Kumar's 'Monsoon Shootout'.
This one comes too late, and
except for a skillfully-shot train robbery sequence featuring Imran Khan at the
start, it has too little to offer in the way action and adventure.
The stunts appear stunted.
Except for Sonakshi who plays the self-seeking starlet with earnest
airheadedness, Pritobash Tripathy who plays Imran's sidekick with misplaced
sincerity and Sonali Bhendre who delivers the only truthfully-worded monologue
in this verbally-cramped drama, the other performances are all of the
watch-me-ham variety.
And really, what this film has
done to the Mohd Rafi Qawwalli "Tayyab ali pyar ka dushman" would
make Manmohan Desai wince if he was alive.
Dobaara done. Please please, no
third helping.
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