Ishqiya Tastes Good & Different


Get ready for tangy, pungent, sizzling and spicy stuff. Be forewarned, Ishqiya isn't the fluffy, candyfloss, saccharine sweet story of lovers breaking into songs in mustard fields. In Ishqiya, you just don't know what turn the story may take next. Not just the story, even the characters here are so impulsive and unpredictable.

You need to have a strong stomach to absorb Ishqiya. It's high on drama, it's wild, it's real. But it's not dark, it's not sleazy, it's not crass. Frankly, you don't expect debutante director Abhishek Chaubey to make a stereotypical fare thanks to the tutelage by his guru Vishal Bhardwaj, who loves to swim against the tide and undertake risks in film after film.

You could call Ishqiya a distant cousin of Omkara. Set in Gorakhpur in North India, the film has a rustic feel, depicts characters that may make you uncomfortable and is laced with saucy lingo. Yet, it's different than Ishqiya.

Story
Two thieves, Khalujaan (Naseeruddin Shah) and Babban (Arshad Warsi), are on the run from their boss, Mushtaq. They seek refuge at a friend's house, but instead meet his widow, Krishna (Vidya Balan). The time spent together draws the duo to her, Khalu with his tinted vision of old-fashioned love and Babban with his lustful eye. But the past catches up with all three!

There's no denying that the promos had prepared me of the journey ahead, yet it took us a good 15-odd minutes to get into the world of Khalujaan, Babban and Krishna. But once you get sucked into their world, the blurred images start getting clearer and clearer and you become an active participant in their journey.

The first hour passes in a jiffy, but the story actually gets dramatic and volatile in its second hour. It's at this stage that things start getting more and more unpredictable. The story does a somersault every 10 minutes and by the time it reaches its finale, you're curious to know how the debutante director would conclude this saga. The end, of course, will have its share of advocates and adversaries, but the fact remains that it's offbeat.

Abhishek Chaubey is a welcome addition to the ranks of avid storytellers. His choice of the subject and also handling of the material is what makes this film so eminently watchable. Not once do you feel that Ishqiya has been helmed by a first-timer. Note the change of events in the song Dil To Bachcha Hain Ji or the kidnap drama and the heated argument that follows thereafter. Even the passionate lovemaking sequence between Arshad and Vidya has been dexterously canned.

However, Chaubey and his team of writers could've kept the writing simplistic towards the finale. It's complex and also lacks clarity. Yet, all said and done, screenplay writers Vishal Bhardwaj, Sabrina Dhawan and Abhishek Chaubey deserve kudos for coming up with a film that keeps you hooked for most parts.

Vishal Bhardwaj's musical score has his unmistakable stamp all over. The film is embellished with two lilting gems - Ibne Batuta and Dil To Bachcha Hain Ji - which are a rage with listeners already and have been juxtaposed beautifully in the plot. Mohana Krishna's cinematography is first-rate. Dialogues (Vishal Bhardwaj) are acidic and a few lines are indeed startling.

Performance
Every actor in Ishqiya delivers a sparkling performance! Naseeruddin Shah is superb as a romantic. He is matchless in the sequence when he learns the truth about Vidya and Arshad. Arshad packs in a bravura performance yet again. Post Munnabhai films, Arshad should be liked in this one the maximum. Vidya continues to surprise. It's a dynamic performance undoubtedly. Paa and Ishqiya are two landmarks in her career.

The actors enacting the role of Jijaji, the kidnapped victim and Vidya's husband are all perfect. The child, who interacts with Arshad, is natural. In fact, every performance in Ishqiya is worthy of mention.

On the whole, Ishqiya is definitely worth a watch. The film has a riveting plot, great performances, soulful music, an absorbing story and skilful direction to make the viewer fall in ishq with it. It should appeal to the hardcore masses as also the multiplex junta.


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Download Free Karthik Calling Karthik Movie Songs Wallpapers Trailer Watch Online

Karthik Calling Karthik Songs

Hey Ya! Clinton Cerejo , Shankar Mahadevan , Loy Mendonsa
Hey Ya! (Remix) Clinton Cerejo , Shankar Mahadevan , Loy Mendonsa
Jaane Ye Kya Hua K.K.
Kaisi Hai Ye Udaasi Kailash Kher , Sukanya Purayastha
Karthik 2.0 Midival Punditz , Karsh Kale
Karthik Calling Karthik Suraj Jagan , Shankar Mahadevan , Caralisa Monteiro , Malika Singh
Karthik Calling Karthik (Theme Remix) Midival Punditz , Karsh Kale
Uff Teri Adaa Shankar Mahadevan , Alyssa Mendonsa
Uff Teri Adaa (Remix) Shankar Mahadevan , Alyssa Mendonsa

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Karthik Calling Karthik Details

Genre: Thriller / Romance

The Story : Karthik Calling Karthik is the story of a lovable loser Karthik, whose life changes with the help of someone who also claims to be Karthik. A thrilling, soulful and romantic journey of this man's victory against all odds.

Star Cast
Farhan Akhtar...... Karthik Narayan
Deepika Padukone...... Shonali Mukherjee
Ram Kapoor...... Mr. Kamath
Shefali Chhaya...... Mrs. Kapadia

Director: Vijay Lalwani
Producer: Farhan Akhtar, Ritesh Sidhwani
Music Director: Shankar Mahadevan

Release Date:
February 26, 2010


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Chance Pe Dance Movie Review Watch & Download Online Free

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Two films (Luck By Chance, Chance Pe Dance) about strugglers in the film industry have the word chance as part of the title. It’s an indication of how precious and elusive that one opportunity is.


And looking for that break is Sameer Behl (Shahid Kapoor) who quits Delhi, refusing to sell saris for a living, and goes to Mumbai to become a star. Easier said than done, he realises to his dismay. He finds work as a courier boy, while doing the rounds of what seems like an endless circle of auditions.

Meanwhile, he’s living the typical struggler life with a rented room for a home and friends making up for family. Dancing in a nightclub (“audition without permission”), he gets noticed by a producer and is hired as a hero on the spot. This, after years of struggle, seems to be too good to be true - and indeed it is.

Throughout the film, the track meanders onto a predictable path. We know immediately that when Sameer bags the offer, there is trouble ahead. Eventually, without a job and a home, he lives out of his car, takes up work as a school dance teacher and participates in a reality star hunt show.

The school kids’ parallel track is an unnecessary diversion. The kids crib that they’ve always stood last at inter-school competitions and, now, Sameer is their saviour. Do you really need to know what happens at the next school competition? (This is Jack Black and The School of Rock’s Bollywood avatar.)

His choreographer girlfriend (Genelia D’Souza) is so moved by Sameer’s state that she quits the producer’s project, too. Sameer, in the talent hunt audition, says something about his mother’s dream (instead of the dialogue) and the judges are ecstatic. Yes, it’s that kind of a movie.

It’s annoying that children are brought in to add the emotional angle, and the film goes too far when it shows a timid girl who transforms and uninhibitedly screams on getting the trophy. Honestly, it’s like two films in one. As far as the dance goes - you’re never swept away by the moves, or enamoured by the choreography. Shahid’s dance is entertaining and masterful; but it doesn’t move you.

Shahid Kapoor makes Sameer a goofy sort of nice guy, though, towards the second half, the affected charm stops amusing us. Still, he is excellent at humour. The actor has worked hard on himself and his waxed, toned, tanned, shirtless physique is proof. Genelia is sprightly as the happy-go-lucky girlfriend who won’t drive her Scooty over a speed of 30.

The music is fun. The song picturisation, where giant versions of the characters are moving around Mumbai’s landmarks, is a blast.

Dialogue is understated and real in the first half. On the road, without support, Sameer wonders how he’ll get through: “Nobody’s there ya, kaise manage karoon”. Or the kids calling a sleep-deprived Sameer ‘soya’ bean.

Writer-director Ken Ghosh’s sprinkling of humour throughout the breezy first half makes the story of Sameer’s struggle immersing. His daily challenge to find a place to bathe and wash clothes is endearing, even as he finds a solution in the school’s washroom. Again, his eyeing children’s lunch-boxes while returning their ‘good-afternoons’ is tragicomic. Ghosh does very well in portions, but falters towards the finale. Following a dead formula, the light heartedness of the beginning is `balanced’ with an emotionally loaded finale.

Had the film retained its smart, humorous and authentic tone without falling into pattern, this would have been a great watch. For now, you’ll have to forgive the predictable second half if you want to enjoy Shahid’s uninhibited, charming performance.

Rating: Two-and-half Out of Five


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Pyaar Impossible Movie Review Download Free Online


I'm just a girl, but with you I feel like a princess. The truth is you're not a loser, I am,' she concludes remorsefully to get the attention of her wronged admirer by broadcasting her emotion-driven speech on multiple iMac screens of a sprawling electronic store.

Yes, Pyaar Impossible is exactly a film like that.

Mushy on the surface but too cordial to tackle the delicate imbalance of its subject -- beautiful girl+ geeky boy=not the ideal recipe for romance or the heartbreakingly exaggerated concept of Prince Charming.

Beauty is subjective, after all. Even the most gorgeous woman is deemed as plastic by some whilst an ordinary face is perceived as exotic. And wearing glasses does not make one a geek or more importantly, ugly. It's an obsolete stereotype, employed timelessly by cinema, which needs to die. It's long-due, seriously.

That out of the way, Pyaar Impossible isn't the kind of sensitive, layered romance between two unlikely individuals to summon such thoughts. It's, in fact, too harmlessly hollow to even think of going in this direction.

Rather it features an experiment wherein Priyanka Chopra's otherwise uber cool Alisha is forced to dress up in a dowdy jersey and cargo shorts, scruffy hair and needless to say a pair of thick glasses -- the kind Johnny Depp wears to look reflective (or maybe he's genuinely too worn out to wear contacts) and fish for a guy's number in Singapore's bustling Clarke Quay.

Though I personally felt she looked great even then, director Jugal Hansraj and writer Uday Chopra refuse to shoot down this hackneyed conditioning -- guys don't make passes at girls who wear glasses.

In Yashraj's -- click here to become a fan -- latest rom-com, everyone's affluent and sticks to a common vocabulary of Shut up, really?' 'Yeah, whatevers,' 'Like, you know? and 'Wow, sweet' as if they were in a Lindsay Lohan high school movie. In the beginning, it's pretty much all that.

Chopra plays Abhay -- the eternal loverboy harbouring secret feelings for the hottest girl in college, Alisha, even seven years after graduation. He's the perpetual good kid who calls daddy (Anupam Kher in the friendly father mold seldom goes wrong, does he?) for advice and goes out of his way to help.

And so, although he's flown from Mumbai to Singapore in search of a fraud (Dino Morea plays a suave fiend in well-tailored suits) who stole his software program, he ends up playing nanny to Alisha's precocious imp of a daughter, Tanya.

At some point you expect things to get a bit grown-up and complicated but they don't. Uday sticks to the format doing a selfless Surinder Sahni stripped off his gullible simplicity and earthy sentimentality. While he's not bad, his earnest smiles appear too laboured for us to give a damn about his underdog's cause or take Priyanka's helpless cries, 'I am divorced, single mother' too seriously especially when the latter, essaying a Public Relations head of a giant software corporation, dresses like a foxy catalogue model. No one wears beachwear to work. Not even in Singapore. Perhaps a Thai tradition? (Watch the movie, you'll know what I mean.)

Does that mean I recommend Pyaar Impossible? Well, like I said it's harmless. You gain nothing. You lose nothing. It's the kind of film, which could get over in five minutes if only Chopra 1 would let Chopra 2 finish his sentence. But no, Chopra 2 takes two and a half good hours to spill the beans leaving you with little besides a super hot Chopra 1 to admire.

Flashing those never-ending gams and a saucy attitude to stylish effect, the sassy actress, captured stunningly in Santosh Thundiyil's lenses, works up a chummy chemistry with her cheerful co-star and plays the modern, yummy mom with spirit, despite her vaguely-sketched character that contradicts between an airhead and realist.

Let down once again by a script that doesn't live up to her potential, Priyanka, to her credit, overcomes the dull spaces and predictable moments with her vibrant presence and coquettish enthusiasm.


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Ishqiya Movie Songs Wallpapers Reviews Trailers Online Download Free Watch

Ishqiya Movie Wallpapers







Ishqiya Movie Songs

Ab Mujhe Koi Rekha Bhardwaj
Badi Dheere Jali Rekha Bhardwaj
Dil To Bachcha Hai Rahat Fateh Ali Khan
Dil To Bachcha Hai (Remix) Rahat Fateh Ali Khan , Clinton Cerejo
Ibn-E-Batuta Sukhwinder Singh , Mika Singh
Ibn-E-Batuta (Remix) Sukhwinder Singh , Mika Singh
Ibn-E-Batuta - Nucleya (Remix) Sukhwinder Singh , Mika Singh

Ishqiya Movie Synopsis
Ishqiya is a story of romance between individuals caught in a web of crime, suspense, passion, and deceit. Two thieves, Khalujan and Babban, are on the run from their boss, Mushtaq. They seek refuge with an old friend, and instead meet his widow, Krishna. As they plan their escape, their time spent together draws the duo to her, Khalu with his tinted vision of old-fashioned love, and Babban with his lustful eye. The threat of imminent death forces them on a path of violence and betrayal. Set in a rural landscape, Ishqiya explores basic human emotions as influenced by desire, greed and revenge.

Ishqiya Movie Overview
Starring : Naseruddin Shah, Arshad Warsi, Vidya Balan
Director : Vishal Bharadwaj
Language : Hindi
Genre : General
Release Date : Jun 18 2010


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