<a
href="http://www.mrqe.com/"><a
href="http://www.imdb.com/"><a
href="http://www.wikipedia.org/"><a
href="http://www.aasra.info/"><a
href="http://www.efilmcritic.com/"><a
href="http://www.talkingpix.co.uk/"><a
href="http://www.newyorktimes.com/"><a
href="http://www.timesofindia.com/"><a
href="http://www.thepioneer.com/"><a href="http://www.tirbuneindia.com/"><a
href="http://www.hindustantimes.com/"><a href="http://www.dnaindia.com/"></a></a></a></a></a></a></a></a></a></a></a></a><a
href="http://www.internationaltribune.com/"><a
href="http://www.efilmcritic.com/"></a></a>
<a
href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/"></a>
Hindi film Review
Johnson Thomas
Film Review: Darr@The Mall : Sappy ghost story
Cast: Jimmy Shergill, Nusrat Bharucha, Asif Basra, Arif
Zakaria
Director: Pawan Kripalani
Rating: * *
Pawan Kripalani impressed with Ejta Kapoor’s ‘Ragini
MMS’ but ‘Darr @ The Mall, does not have the same gravitating force. Designed
to be a horror film, this one lacks scares. It’s basically a revenge drama set
around a land-grab issue and the generic
moments come off quite neatly but the audience is never affected by it.
Amity Mall has been plagued by inexplicable
accidents. The promoters though are all set to have a big re-opening party, Item
dance et al, to imbue confidence in potential visitors. But concomitant deaths
make the going difficult and when the new Chief of Security Vishnu(Jimmy
Shergill) takes guard, it’s already too late. Aneja(Arif Zakaria), Khan(Asif
Basra), their friends, children and supporting staff are all in for some
horrifyingly gory treatment. No prizes for guessing who the real culprits are
here. The body count keeps getting incremented as the narrative progresses.
There are not many surprises here and neither are
the effects exactly believable. There even comes a point, post interval where a
character is resurrected and put through the grind again. Actually speaking,
there’s very little that is convincing here. Ahana(Nushrat Bharucha) is
supposedly in love with her boy-friend, yet when called aside for a cozy moment with
him, she refuses. Soon enough he meets a gory death and in quick succession so
do the other youngsters who keep going off alone despite knowledge of the
strange goings-on. Jimmy Shergill, who gets lumped with an ineffectual role (
even though he is both Vishnu and Arjun in the film), is the only one who stays
on the credit side of things here. A back-story that bears close resemblance to
the one in ‘The Conjuring,’ can do
little to justify or elevate things. The ‘item number’ is shabby and the
production design quite sub-standard. You just have to go with the flow I
guess. Most horror aficionados would. I am not one of them. For me, this script
is simply lackluster. No scares, no jumpy moments just a lot of set-up and
ketch-up!
No comments:
Post a Comment