Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Movie Reviews

'Fukrey Returns': An Entertaining Deja Vu

Troy Ribeiro IANS, 08 Dec, 2017 12:56 PM
  • 'Fukrey Returns': An Entertaining Deja Vu

Director: Mrighdeep Singh Lamba

Cast: Pulkit Samrat, Varun Sharma, Ali Fazal, Manjot Singh, Richa Chadha and Priya Anand

Rating: **1/2

 

Sequels are expected to be bigger, better and ideally build on everything that made the original successful. On paper, "Fukrey Returns" boasts of everything one expects from a sequel, except that the novelty factor which actually made its predecessor popular, is missing.

 

For those who have not seen the 2013 released film, "Fukrey" is a genial romp about four good-for-nothing, middle-class boys in Delhi who embark upon a harebrained scheme to raise money. They do so by predominantly interpreting Choocha's dreams, which kicks off the mess. They eventually learn that there are no shortcuts in life.

 

Working on the same premise, "Fukrey Returns" continues the saga from its original. Life is like usual for the quartet, Choocha dreams of romancing the local don of vices Bholi Punjaban (Richa Chadha) and yet tries to date other girls with the help of his closest pal, Hunny (Pulkit Samrat).

 

Hunny, who is in love with Priya (Priya Anand), assures her father that he can double investments within 24 hours. Zafar (Ali Fazal) the musician is all set to settle down with his girlfriend Neetu (Vishakha Singh). Lali (Manjot Singh), the hapless son of a sweetmeat seller, is a reluctant rebel.

 

Bholi Punjaban who has been in jail because of the four guys, brokers her release with the corrupt politician Babulal Bhatia. As soon as she is out of jail, she summons the four with the aim of recovering her losses from them. Instead, the four con her with Choocha's "premonitions," which leads them onto a treasure hunt.

 

 

While the dialogues with Delhi lingo are peppy and the characters engaging, the plot seems too farfetched. The screenplay wavers with scenes of jolly wholesome entertainment with incredibly humorous moments and moments that painfully drag. While the first half is promising, the second half is simply tedious with laughatons and the chase that seems like a marathon. By the climax, the writing is slack and predictable.

 

On the performance front, Varun Sharma as Choocha is the showstopper. With the plot focussing majorly on him, he brightens up the screen with his on-the-nose histrionics. He does his scenes with gay abandon. Pulkit Samrat, with no originality continues to clone Salman Khan in some scenes. Manjot Singh just happens to be around. With an underwritten role, Ali Fazal is conspicuous by his long time absence on screen.

 

Richa Chadha as the don Bholi Punjaban, though impressive, lacks the persona. Some of her scenes seem forced and trite. Pankaj Tripathi as Pandit, an accomplice of the quartet, is natural and plays himself. He is just another insignificant character in the drama.

 

Priya Anand and Vishakha Singh who play the love interest of their respective characters lack lustre and are stereotyped.

 
 

The music with some really hummable numbers, meshes smoothly into the narrative.

 

Overall, "Fukrey Returns" is palatable fare for those who want a deja vu of "Fukrey".

MORE Movie Reviews ARTICLES

Qarib Qarib Singlle: The Best Travel Rom-com Since 'Jab We Met'

Qarib Qarib Singlle: The Best Travel Rom-com Since 'Jab We Met'
Irrfan Charms His Way Through The Film Into The Hearts Of The Audience And Eventually, His Heroine.

Qarib Qarib Singlle: The Best Travel Rom-com Since 'Jab We Met'

Shaadi Mein Zaroor Aana: Wedding Worth Attending

Shaadi Mein Zaroor Aana: Wedding Worth Attending
Overall, this simple love story with stellar performances, garbed with some hard-hitting issues of our society, is a treat to watch. A wedding worth attending, for sure.

Shaadi Mein Zaroor Aana: Wedding Worth Attending

'Secret Superstar': Emotionally Engaging, Entertaining

'Secret Superstar': Emotionally Engaging, Entertaining
Narrated in a simple, old-fashioned, heartfelt manner, you expect the story to be that of an ambitious young girl pining to be a superstar at a reality contest. 

'Secret Superstar': Emotionally Engaging, Entertaining

'Chef': Endearingly Palate Pleasing

'Chef': Endearingly Palate Pleasing
Chef is a feel-good film about the importance of relationships and the message comes across smoothly albeit garbed in a long-drawn plot.

'Chef': Endearingly Palate Pleasing

'Newton': A Simple, Realistic Eye-Opener

Low-concept and modestly-scaled films are always hard to sell, but authentic passion and a steady accumulation of detail, sets writers Amit Masurkar and Mayank Tiwari's "Newton" apart.

'Newton': A Simple, Realistic Eye-Opener

'Poster Boys': Frothy Entertainer With Mass Appeal

Shreyas Talpade's "Poster Boys" is a screw-ball comedy about three men who find themselves socially ostracised after they feature in a poster promoting a public service campaign on suture-less-vasectomy.

'Poster Boys': Frothy Entertainer With Mass Appeal

PrevNext