Saturday, August 01, 2009

Movie Review- Love Aaj Kal



If we ever calculated the differential between potential and result for movies and listed them in descending order, Delhi-6 would top the list with Love Aaj Kal coming a slap-worthy second. The movie is difficult to review because during it -when we had the pleasure of hacking the movie to death in true sadakchap style, and after it –when we were abusing everybody from Imtiaz Ali to Imtiaz Ali under the unsteadying influence of Diet Coke, we couldn’t figure out what the hell was happening; not because it was Mementoistically complicated or Night-Shyamalanistically abstruse, but because it was so comprehensively pointless. And it pains me to criticize the movie, because I think Imtiaz Ali is a smart director. But unfortunately, if he addresses a gathering that has just been subjected to Love Aaj Kal, he will most certainly earn plenty of frustrated footwear.



So Jai Vardhan Singh (Saif) is this stereotypical uber-cool uber-modern clean-shaven stud whose core competencies include scorning traditions, scorning old love stories, chick-hopping, and being practical. The first 15 minutes of the movie move at a frenetic pace culminating in an amicable break-up between Saif and Deepika, who split so that they can pursue their professional dreams. In the period between their last goodbye and Deepika’s flight to India next morning, Saif meets Veer (Rishi Kapoor), a stereotypical 60s man who waxes eloquent about the virtues of sachcha pyaar and laments the logicopractical modern man who doesn’t follow his heart enough. Deepika and Saif have a truly entertaining conversation before she leaves, and then she leaves.



Now that he has nothing better to do, he hangs out with Rishi Kapoor who tells him about his innocent 60s love story. The pattern is predictable- Rishi Kapoor (who looked like a turbaned Saif in his jawaani) tells Saif about his 60s love story with this Punjabi kudi (who looks thin enough, and has expressions monotonous enough, to be considered one-dimensional); and Saif keeps interjecting with “Come on man!” and other Censor Board-approved variations of “What the fuck!”



To cut a dreadful story short, Saif and Deepika want to “move on” after their break-up. Saif finds some Swiss chick who loves Indian culture and wants to see the Taj Mahal; Deepika dates with and gets proposed to by her boss (Rahul Khanna with a size 2 clipper run over his head); Saif takes his newfound girlfriend to India and starts meeting Deepika on the sly; Deepika marries Rahul; Saif is destroyed, Deepika is distraught; Saif wastes himself by growing a beard, losing his job, and pining for Deepika; Deepika ditches Rahul because she can’t get Saif out of her head; LHS = RHS, Saif meets Deepika and they make up.



I’m sure the script must’ve been okay; it just hasn’t worked on screen. For starters, there was -273oC chemistry between Saif and Deepika; Imtiaz made the mistake of compressing their entire love story into 15 minutes; they could’ve been brother and sister for all I cared. Secondly, the songs were numerous and bad; I can’t understand why Imtiaz hires Pritam; he might as well buy the rights of some Vietnamese or Moroccan album. Thirdly, he strived too hard to show the contrast between love aaj and love kal, and used some of the most clichéd clichés you’re ever likely to hear to establish this contrast. The biggest weakness of the film, however, was the dialogues. Imtiaz Ali is a really witty writer, as he showed in Socha Na Tha and Jab We Met; but the dialogues in this movie, save the odd one here and there, were woefully vacuous.



The acting was just okay. The 60s love story track had a lovely rustic charm to it that no amount of cool-dudeness from Saif, mini-skirts from Deepika, and smooches from both could match. Saif looked a pretty authentic Sardar and I can’t believe he had to apologize to the Sikh community for the length of his beard in the movie. Rishi Kapoor was a delight to watch, and I can understand why he was such a rage in his time. In all, the movie wasn’t bad- it just didn’t work; it was too lethargic and too one-eyed in its interpretation of our generation. Go watch it with a gang of friends in a shady theatre where people don’t stare at you for making a racket, and make a racket- you’ll have fun.

11 comments:

Vivek Syania said...

Agree with most of your points. Movie was a little drag in between, but I think its music wasnt all that bad. Thought of writing a piece on it myself but then you wrote it just as adequate.

I do not know how precise was its angle on today's generation but certainly I wouldnt agree with so much of "practical" ness... Pata nahin "unka angle kya thaa? "..

pavan said...

haha... that was funny dude... 10/10...

Ravi Bansal said...

Typically witty. You trash them thoroughly well. How about praising one next time around?

Akshay Rajagopalan said...

@Vivek

I'm kind of biased against Pritam these days. Don't want to praise him for somebody else's work :P

@pavan

Hope your rating wasn't for the movie!

@Ravi

Big weakness- I can't be witty when I praise. That's why you see me reviewing only movies I don't like. But I hope I can review a good movie, whenever we actually get one.

Akasuna no Sasori said...

"who looks thin enough..." and "LHS = RHS" - Priceless!! Good to see more movie reviews da. I saw bits of Jab We Met yesterday. I dunno, it just doesn't work for me.

Akshay Rajagopalan said...

@Arun

I thought Jab We Met was a decent popcorn timepass; the writing was fresh and cliche-free...something LAK couldn't manage.

Ashok said...

The only Hindi movie I've seen in ages was a pathetic Saif-starrer: Race (seven months back). Now I hear of another pathetic Saif flick. Gotta watch it, I guess.

Preeti said...

Great review! It's more fun than going to the theater I tell you.

Akshay Rajagopalan said...

@Ashok

Race was much worse than this. Love Aaj Kal had its moments; Race was a disaster on all counts.

@Preeti

Wish I'd read a review or two before going to the theatre! Again, it might not have helped- the movie seems to be quite a hit in India.

Vid Karmarkar said...

Forget the opinion but I like how u articulate ur thoughts! :)

Akshay Rajagopalan said...

@Bio Sleuth

Glad you liked it. Keep visiting!