| Tere
Naam Movie Review
Forget cigarettes, booze and colas - it's films like
Tere Naam that should come with warning labels. Here's
a definitive guide to the various illnesses, disorders
and abnormal conditions that come as a package deal
with Tere Naam.
Bad-hair-day-osis: (A condition that
is generally known to crop up when you have an important
meeting/interview/date.)
Case study: Unfortunately (for us and him), Radhe Mohan
(Salman Khan) suffers this condition all through the
movie. Initially it's with eye-length strands of gelled
hair. If that's not a wig, it must be all the hair transplanted
from his chest. In the latter part of the film, he sports
an indefinable crop that proves to be a worse eye-sore
than the first hairstyle (?). Dudes at Habib's, your
services are desperately needed!
Doormat-itis: (Patients suffering this
disease tend to believe that they are rectangular pieces
of rubber/jute strategically placed at doorsteps to
allow people to rub their muddy shoes clean before entering
premises.)
Case study: Nirjara (Bhoomika Chawla) is afflicted by
this rare condition. She allows the men in the movie
(her lover - the goon, the lover's goons, her fiancé
and her father) to walk all over her, showing that Hindi
cinema's version of the Bharatiya Nari is still alive
despite the efforts made by Lara Dutta, Mallika Sherawat,
Bipasha Basu et al.
Where's-the-story-algia?: (Disease that
audiences catch while catching a flick made by Satish
Kaushik, David Dhawan and the entire B-grade Bollywood
bandwagon)
Case Study: A theater showing Tere Naam is currently
the hotspot for germs carrying this disease. It starts
out as a college flick with Nirjara, daughter of a pundit,
as a fresher, and Radhe as hanger-on-round-college who
passed out years ago. Radhe, the stereotype goon-with-a-heart,
falls for Nirjara, who for most part of the film is
scared of him. The movie meanders between being an obsessive
love story and a Robin Hood take-off.
A few good deeds later, she falls for
him too. There's time for just one songful of romance
between the two, 'cos soon Radhe's head is used as a
battering ram by some people he took panga with. A few
weird images of the cerebral cortex are flashed on screen,
and Radhe is written-off to the loony bin. He doesn't
seem to recover, so the doctor recommends that he be
sent to a loonier-bin (that looks like a cross between
the conventional Bollywood paagal-khana, a prison, The
Stonehenge and a shady Ayurvedic massage parlor).
The audience would be on the verge of
pulling out their own cerebral cortices at this point,
but the story (or the lack of it) gets worse - right
down to the very last nerve-grating scene. Blood and
gore dominate the screenplay.
Malhistronic-aria: (Loose translation
equals bad acting, generally suffered by... yeah, bad
actors.)
Case Studies: Salman Khan has lost it... the acting
skills he possessed during the days of HAHK, Saajan
and, more recently, Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam. He looks
stoned for most part of Tere Naam. Almost as if he knew
right from the start that a remake of a tragic (in more
ways than one) South Indian film (Sethu in Tamil, Seshu
in Telugu) would flop anyway. He would have preferred
to invest energy into activities like chasing models-turned-actresses,
which Bhoomika is not.
Bhoomika makes a rather wishy-washy
debut in Hindi. Her quivering lips and unglamorous look
might have worked in Okkadu, but they look sad in Tere
Naam. If Sallu fetches more whistles from the men in
the theaters, don't doubt their sexuality... Bhoomika
does nothing that elicits even a faint tweet. This disorder
afflicts the supporting cast, too - mostly played by
unidentifiable actors.
Cacophonia: (Experienced by people who
don't "get" heavy metal at a head-bangers'
concert)
Case Study: Listen to soundtrack of Tere Naam: College
song - Dhishoom Dhishoom - Bhajan - Pow Biff - Unremarkable
Dream Songs - Bam Bam - Aaaaugh - Naheeeen - Sob Sob
- Wail... If this can't assault your ears, nothing will.
Finally, a condition that was observed
among all those who staggered wearily out of the theater...
Splitting Headache: (Can occur as a
side-effect of various diseases, including watching
movies with less than a three-star rating.)
Case study: Understandably, a direct outcome of stomaching
2 & ½ hours of the above-mentioned unmentionables.
Audiences who ventured in without health insurance...
ouch! |