Pagalpanti Review: A Comedy Catastrophe (Rating: **)

Film: Pagalpanti

Cast: Anil Kapoor, John Abraham, Arshad Warsi, Pulkit Samrat, Ileana DCruz, Kriti Kharbanda, Urvashi Rautela, Saurabh Shukla

Direction: Anees Bazmee

Rating: **

Reviewer: George Sylex

What's About - Pagalpanti stars John Abraham (Raj Kishore), Arshad Warsi (Junky) and Pulkit Samrat (Chandu) as three in tight spot men who are out to make money. Raj Kishore, on top, has been hit by a spot of misfortune which comes off on everybody he interacts with. So when Chandu and Junky's business adventure truly goes up on fire when they hold hands with Raj, the trio chooses to stay together till they can recoup the money. When they are enlisted by two London dons Raj (Saurabh Shukla) and his brother by marriage Wifi ( Anil Kapoor) the blundering trio figure out how to carry further misfortunes to their managers.

Film Analysis - The issue with the content is, it's rarely steady. The jokes (the greater part of them arranged directly from Whatsapp) come in enormous amounts however a considerable lot of them fizzle. It also comes up short in light of concentrating more on stars and sidelining the story. The just clever minutes in the film are a direct result of certain characters. There is some constrained humor in the film which makes you awkward. The efforts put in attempting to make you laugh all-time is a good try but fails miserably. Moreover drawing of characters just for certain chuckles was extremely off-base.

Director Anees Bazmee and the writers have tossed in everything in with the general mish-mash. There are energizing chases to high-octane action scenes stick – all shot wonderfully in the pleasant UK. But none of them works for the film due to a frail content. There are excessively numerous songs put haphazardly that solitary add to the runtime. Towards the end, it even wanders into a patriotic subplot that appears to be progressively constrained.

Performances - Physical comedy is normal from every single one of the characters and hamming could be a common loss. While Shukla, Kapoor, and Warsi are great at what they do and revive the sporadically clever lines, John Abraham baffles. The last is relied upon to do some hard work, yet he just doesn't have the ability and the agility as an actor to cart away this job on his etched shoulders. Abraham fumbles significantly, yet Warsi and Samrat are generally better. The ladies don't impress better either. Kriti Kharabanda, as the mobster's spoilt, spoiled little girl should be a haughty moron and she grinds on your nerves as a lady youngster. There's nothing sweet about an over-reveled rich lady. Urvashi Rautela as an expert artist stuck in the UK after her visa gets taken appears as though a superfluous prop included in with the general mish-mash of the disorder. Of the considerable number of ladies, it's Illena D'Cruz who passages better. Her disappointment at being bamboozled by Abraham's character makes her fascinating.

Verdict - If you are an enthusiast of Aneesh Bazmee films, at that point you can go to the theater and watch this. But for others, it's a colossal scale catastrophe film with not all that good comedies and constrained up patriotism. Simply hang tight for a streaming release

Facebook Comments

About GeorgeSylex

Film Critic, Writer, Reviewer, Columnist

Summary
Review Date
Reviewed Item
Pagalpanti
Author Rating
2
Share
More

This website uses cookies.