For his first outing as a director, Abhishek Kapoor is sure-footed though the DCH hangover is evident in the minimal, conversational dialogues, the unhurried way in which the scenes unfold, even a plot device like friends uniting in the face of a maudlin death or the last few shots showing their togetherness. Even the funniest scenes—that of the group singing at a dandiya night or breaking into "I will survive"—are a quiet riot, like DCH.
With their get-ups, those rings and bracelets, the attitude and appeal, the four guys look and behave like a rock band. Farhan may be off key at times but his gravelly voice is quite distinctive. His acting too is uneven but eventually engaging. The star of the show, however, is Shahana Goswami who plays Debbie, the fiery wife of Arjun Rampal—uncomplaining yet nagging, strong yet vulnerable.
The purists might diss Shankar Ehsaan Loy music but it is catchy to the core—specially the title track, Socha hai and Kabhi khud pe hansa main, kabhi khud pe roya. Javed Akhtar too lets his pen go wild and proves that you can rock in Hindi with lyrics like Meri laundry ka ek bill, ek aadhi padhi novel, ek ladki ka phone number, mere kaam ka ek paper. The package gets complete courtesy Jason West who films the concerts brilliantly—the energy does spill over.
High Fives
Bollywood1. Rock On
2. Bachna Ae Haseeno
3. Singh is Kinng
4. Phoonk
5. CKkompany
Hollywood
1. Tropic Thunder
2. Babylon A.D.
3. The Dark Knight
4. The House Bunny
5. Traitor
Country Album
1. Love on the Inside (Sugarland)
2. Taylor Swift (Taylor Swift)
3. What Am I Waiting For (Heidi Newfield)
4. 35 Biggest Hits (Toby Keith)
5. Carnival Ride (Carrie Underwood)
Courtesy: Film Information
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