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Cast: Rahul Bose, Mallika Sherawat, Kay Kay Menon,
Paresh Rawal, Pavan Malhotra
Director: Sanjay Chhel
Rating: *

This film means to be quirky, cute and comical. It ends up
being a crashing bore. And the sound of the crash that you hear could be those
plaster-of-paris props that adorn the stage where the cast enacts the worst
version of K. Asif's imperishable romance "Mughal-e-Azam" ever conceived.
As often happens, the film must have sounded so much better on paper. All the
accomplished actors who constitute the vast cast must have got the joke and
agreed to do this intended satire about the goofy adventures of a stage troupe
during the week of the 1993 Mumbai blasts.
Alas, Asif weeps in his grave. And so do we.
This is a political satire combined with a naughty comment on theatrical
infidelity with Paresh's sexy wife Mallika being wooed by a smitten Rahul
(suitably wide-eyed and far removed from his Mallika-driven affections in "Pyar
Ke Side Effects").
Kay Kay, who had done a serious gritty film on the bomb blasts in "Black
Friday", slips into its satirical interpretation with astonishing fluency. As a
bumbling cheesy ghazal singer with terrorist links (remember Naseeruddin Shah in
"Sarfarosh"?), Kay Kay brings a sparkling tongue-in-cheek quality to the
goings-on, a sparkle that the film doesn't deserve. It fails to earn itself the
committed devotion of such a distinguished cast.
Pavan, another fine actor, is also delightfully over-the-top as a sleazy
gangster who gets as confused about the characters played by Kay Kay and Paresh
(a bit of Kundan Shah's "Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron" here) as we are about this film's
intentions.
Is this a theatrical film on play-acting? Or is it meant to be a cinematic
interpretation of theatrical hi-jinks? Be that as it may, while Kay Kay goes
from "Black Friday" to goofy Friday, Mallika (god bless her costume designers)
goes from "Murder" to blue murder. Watching her do a re-mix of "Pyar kiya to
darna kya", Madhubala must be smirking in her grave.
If Mallika's "Murder" on infidelity was a path-breaker (at least as far as
sexual audacity goes) her attempts to flirt from the pokey stage with her
besotted spectator right under her suspicious husband's watchful eyes can at
best be described as "Pati Patni Aur Woh" gone to the dogs.
Chhel has always been a capable wordsmith. As a director, he had his polished
moments in "Khubsoorat" where Sanjay Dutt turned ugly duckling Urmila Matondkar
into a swan.
One is never sure if Mallika is the duck or swan in "Maan Gaye Mughal-e-Azam".
All one knows at the end of this horrifically hammy ode to a hammy theatre
company's outrageous attempts to save Mumbai from the underworld (yeah, but who
saves us from this film?) is that there is no more than perhaps seven minutes of
bonafide humour in the entire tale.
The dialogues are either dreadfully double-meaning or primary school gags. RDX
and R.D. Burman are equated for laughs. But the film has neither Burman's
melodiousness now the explosive quality of RDX. |