Akshay Kumar's films are becoming classier by the month. There's a certain
restraint in his presence here. The way he conveys the pain and hurt of
an impossible love is quite surprising for an actor who until recently
was counted among the wooden.
Director Raj Kanwar's recent efforts to polish up his act have yielded
tepid results. "Dhai Akshar Prem Ke" and the box office hit
"Andaz" were louder than the lyrical aspirations of their
creator.
Kanwar gets it more right this time. The theme of 'love versus obligation'
is nothing new to our cinema. Then redemptive hope lies in the treatment.
And we aren't let down completely in the way the jukebox-symphony moves
forward.
There's a certain elegance in the movement of the mix 'n' match love
story. Aditya (Akshay) and Jiya (Katrina), engaged to marry the wrong
life partners, must move towards that inevitable mutual embrace at the
end when the scrambled game of musical chairs finally ends.
In
between there are several musical pieces choreographed with an eye-catching
élan. One of them filmed in a commodious banquet even has yesteryear
cabaret queen Helen breaking into a sassy jig.
Such moments are well-knitted into the tale of star-crossed love. Though
the film suffers for Kanwar's trademark loud Punjabi characters grooving
garishly to Bhangra-pop beats, crude gay jokes between Akshay and Mohan
Joshi, coincidences peeking out of an otherwise smooth narrative, there's
a touch of self-conscious suaveness in the storytelling that goes a
long way in keeping the central romance from collapsing under the weight
of self-importance.
The initial encounters between Aditya and Jia are deftly visualised.
Vikas Shivraman's camera frames the good-looking pair with arresting
vibrancy.
The dialogues, you feel, could've gone easy on the rhetoric. Often
you feel that the lovers, fighting off their respective engagements
to court true love, are reading their lines out of an invisible prompter.
But Akshay-Katrina look terrific together. Akshay's controlled performance
spotlights the character's virtuosity in the midst of luscious temptation.
Watch him in that almost wordless moment when his screen-friend Vivek
Shouq (in a hideous hairstyle) confesses he was behind the lovers' break-up...Akshay
gives a clenched interpretation to a role that doesn't allow him to
'do' much on screen.
Katrina is passably competent in a tailor-made role, giving a mild
emotional spin to a couple of scenes. But her inadequacies surface when
pitched against Shernaz Patel (in a minuscule part) or even against
Bipasha Basu who, in the brief role of Akshay's ambitious fiancée, brings
a fleeting finesse to her under-written part.
But pray, what's Anil Kapoor doing playing Katrina's arrogant self-important
fiancé? From the start you know this couple is doomed.
Don't look for surprises in this smooth-and-shiny romance...Or originality.
Bits and pieces from various Hindi and Hollywood creations surface intermittently.
But the queasy limit is the climax where Katrina is stuck upside down
in a hit-and-run car. The whole sequence is lifted from this year's
Oscar winner "Crash".
That's some quick thinking!