Animation Movies

Ads Here

Thursday, September 16, 2021

Bhoot Police | Bollywood Movie Review by Movie Insert | Saif, Arjun, Yami, Jacqueline


  

At one point in Bhoot Police, a character, addressing a crowd, advises them not to believe   in the two tantric babas who have been hired to drive away the local chudail. They have only been   hired because their father was a famous tantric. She says: Nepotism ne yeh poora desh barbad   kar diya hai. And on cue, Saif Ali Khan and Arjun Kapoor, playing the ghostbusters Vibhooti and Chiraunji, give each other a look.Both actors are  of course, products of nepotism themselves and their knowing expression made me smile. But that’s pretty much as clever as Bhoot Police gets. The film is a horror comedy – a genre that is often used by Bollywood as an excuse to peddle   lazy writing. Bhoot Police is no exception. Which is astounding because the writing team   includes director Devashish Makhija who has co-written and directed the haunting Ajji,   acclaimed stand-up comedian Anuvab Pal who has co-written one of my favourite films – Loins of Punjab Presents; Pooja Ladha Surti, whose credits include Andhadhun and Badlapur;   and the film’s director Pavan Kirpalani who did such a terrific job on a limited budget and in a   contained space with the 2016 film Phobia. Here, they all seem to be phoning it in. The idea had potential – two brothers, one a believer and the other, a non-believer,   who are summoned to fight a chudail named Kichkandi who their father had also gone up against.  Their clients are two sisters running a tea estate, which now appears to be haunted. Even among these two - Maya and Kanu - one is a believer and the other,   a non-believer. This mix of faithful and agnostic, potential pairing of brothers   and sisters and the frequent disruptions by a creepy spirit could have made for passable   entertainment but the script needed wit and buoyancy. In places, we have flashes of this – Jamie Lever and Amit Mistry also do their part. But mostly, Bhoot Police stays leaden. The one bright spark is Saif, attempting a mash-up of Boris from Go Goa Gone and   Langda Tyagi from Omkara. Wearing outlandish clothes – in one scene, he’s in boxers and a   jacket – Saif is insistent on having a good time. According to Chirounji, Vibhooti is only   driven by two things – paisa aur hawas. Saif takes this flimsy descriptor and runs with it.   In one scene, he is flirting with an American girl who says to him: come with me, you can makeAmerica great again. To which he replies: no Suzy, pronounced sooji, my country is needing me. The other actors are saddled with even less. There’s Jacqueline Fernandez who looks smashing   but is forced to enact a purposefully silly woman whose life is social media and detox days. With better writing, Kanu could’ve been a source of comedy. Yami Gautam, who was so lovely as Pari in Bala, doesn’t even get these basic character traits. Maya is bland and forgettable. So is Arjun Kapoor, saddled here withbeing the sincere, younger brother. The most memorable thing abouthis character is his nickname Chiku. He lumbers along, as does the film,for more than two hours. Watching Bhoot Police, I realized thata film which is mediocre is more soul-sucking than one that is actively awful because you cansee glimpses of what could have been. You can see Bhoot Police on Disney+ Hotstar. 

No comments:

Post a Comment