The central question of Halla Bol is why real celebrities (Ajay Devgan, for example) never stick their necks out, or as Sidhu puts it, why they open their mouths as wide as they can to endorse a product, but don’t move their lips for a social issue. It’s a good question and the film asks it well.
The film also asks why, more generally, none of the rest of us do either. This is its downfall. Once Sameer’s luck fails, he gets dragged over every social issue, from communal politics to the casting couch. It is like being spoon-fed a cold, bland porridge of boiled newspaper. After dwelling pointlessly on the Bollywood phase, the script rushes through this politically correct wilderness, getting lost over and over. Music and dialogue fall flat. There are some powerful moments, like the climactic scene when Sameer returns to the street-play format in a final bid for justice: gasping for coherence and poignancy, the movie turns back to Safdar Hashmi’s story. It uses his horrific end for a cinematic boost, then resumes its haphazard effort to convince the audience to rise up. They did, and left.
High Fives
Bollywood
1. Taare Zameen Par
2. Welcome
3. Jab We Met
4. Om Shanti Om
5. Aaja Nachle
Hollywood
1. Juno
2. I Am Legend
3. Sweeney Todd
4. National Treasure
5. Charlie Wilson’s War
Rock
1. Long Road Out of Eden (Eagles)
2. Coco (Colbie Caillat)
3. Mothership (Led Zeppelin)
4. Raising Sand (Plant/Krauss)
5. RIOT! (Paramore)
Courtesy: Film Information
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