Film: "Yaariyan";
Cast: Himansh Kohli, Nakul Preet, Deepti Naval;
Directed by Divya Khosla Kumar;
Divya Khosla Kumar’s directorial
debut Yaariyan stars Himansh Kholi, Serah Singh, Rakul Preet
Singh, Nicole Faria, Gulshan Grover and Deepti Naval.
It isn't a pretty sight to see an actress of Deepti Naval's caliber
ham. But she, poor thing, does just that in a sequence that even Nirupa Roy
would have thought twice before getting into.
The film revolves around four college friends who are
pretty much good for nothing. Lakshya (Himansh) is desperate to experience his
first kiss, but something goes wrong every time he aims to get it. What’s
bizarre is that the whole college is gung-ho about Himansh’s first kiss. It
doesn’t end there, with the youngsters. Even the teachers suffer from some
hormonal locha and cannot keep their hands off each other. I am glad
that I haven’t come across any such college in my life! The tale shifts from
the touchy mode to sports, Australia ,
racial attacks, patriotism and lots of cleavage popping out of the screen into
your face. Divya tries to integrate too many issues into one plot.
That’s why Yaariyan failed to make any impact on me. Maybe college
goers won’t mind watching a movie that hardly makes sense.
"Yaariyan" enters into the young....no, make that
very young...territory. Lamentably in the perverse parameters of a particular
kind of Bollywood entertainment, "young" is equated with ...no, not
reckless....but brainless to the point of being moronic.
There are any number of under-dressed under-graduates luring
and pulling boys into empty classes for a bit of necking.
The debutant director sets her sights on making a movie that
pays a jam-packed homage to the coming-of-age movies like Mansoor Khan's
"Jo Jeeta Wohi Sikandar" and Karan Johar's "Student Of The
Year". The movie also bears a weird physical resemblance to Farah Khan's
"Main Hoon Na".
The debutante director assumes her audience-profile to be
18-20-year-olds who spend all their time dreaming of smooches and splashing in
azure beaches. Laughably, none of the film's young protagonists thinks beyond a
kiss. Sex, if you must know, is not for the young in a cinema that focuses on
busts, bums and thighs and on a pair of coconuts when the camera tires of the
real thing. There is unlimited attempt to sexy.
Hands down it has to be the music and then the
cinematography. The songs are lively and colorful and will certainly cheer you
up every time you regret walking into the theatre. And Yo Yo Honey Singh’s
special number is delicious icing on the cake.
As for the cinematography – the movie has been shot in
virgin and unexplored parts of Darjeeling
and in Australia .
The locales are beautiful and will make you go ‘wow’. There is a motorcycle and
bicycle race scene that has been shot brilliantly. Also, the first half is
tolerable thanks to some good comic punches. Performance wise, Himansh Kholi is
decent and the rest are just okay.
The most significant element – the script! There is too much
happening at one point and then abruptly there is nothing happening at all
beyond the bosom popping. Brilliant actors like Deepti Naval and Gulshan Grover
are wasted. Also, newbie Himansh Kholi needs to work on his ever-smiling face.
He flashes his million dollar grin in every frame, which soon gets very, very
irksome.
Overall, it is an average movie.
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