Film: "Ujda Chaman"
Cast: Sunny Singh, Maanvi Gagroo, Aishwarya Sakhuja
Direction: Abhishek Pathak
Rating: **
Reviewer: George Sylex
Ujda Chaman is an official remake of Kannada film Ondu Motteya Kathe, Ujda Chaman featuring Sunny Singh is to be commended for picking a genuine subject, yet the film misuses its points of interest and gives us an insane item.
Story: Chaman is a miserable, virgin, somewhat unpleasant and bare 30-year-old single guy who is paying special mind to somebody to get hitched with. This is on the grounds that a guruji in Chaman's family has predicted, that he'll kick the bucket as a single man if he doesn't get hitched by the age of 31. In this way, Chaman joins Tinder, Chaman keeps the profile picture editing his egghead, Chaman meets his match Apsara (Maanvi Gagroo), Chaman denies her since she's fat. The story advances with these two characters.
Analysis: Abhishek Pathak neglects to dazzle with this one and the cast of lesser-realized entertainers doesn't support his motivation. Obviously Ranjan's prosperity recipe – he made his imprint with Pyaar Ka Punchnama with a non-starry cast- - doesn't function admirably for everybody. Driving man Sunny Singh had demonstrated a lot of guarantee in Pyaar Ka Punchnaama and Sonu Ke Titu Ki Sweety however in Ujda Chaman where he flies solo, without a group of pals it is very apparent that he needs to sharpen his comic planning some more.
Sunny Singh goes only in a single direction for Ujda Chaman. Indeed, it requested a controlled presentation yet Sunny never gets up from his lethargic character sketch. With a few comparable articulations, he figures out how to involve most extreme screentime which gets baffling by the end. Maanvi Gagroo is at her standard thing 'great' in the film
Ujda Chaman has four songs with none of them being noteworthy. One beneficial thing about the film is the manner in which it shows Delhi. The Capital city looks wonderful as the camera skillet over Shah Rukh Khan's place of graduation Hansraj College and other special places in Delhi. An honest to goodness Delhiite will clearly associate with the film in view of this. So if you don't have anything better to do in life this end of the week and need to go out with loved ones, you can try Ujda Chaman out.
The film makes you awkward when it manages body-disgracing and makes it sound trivial. The film at last forcibly feeds you the idea of internal excellence with an exhausting monolog in the climax subsequent to spending its whole length giving us the romance of a thinning up top man and an overweight woman. Music of the film is not all that much, however, the noisy foundation score is on-point with the melody 'Chand Nikla' being played at the correct minutes.
Verdict: Ujda Chaman is an extremely awful remake of its unique. It doesn't make you chuckle or think. The film is an ideal case of how to do a bad remake. The makers should watch how they adapted this film (Tamasha) in an enjoyable manner.