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Aaja Nachle

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Summary

Aaja Nachle
Vee/Oxy B@Veekey
Dec 04, 2007 03:57 PM, 5355 Views
(Updated Sep 16, 2008)
Dance WIth Madhuri!!!

After four days of taking note


and listening to all potential outrage surrounding this reportedly comeback


movie of the *Ek Do Teen *diva, I gave


it a go.


First of all why


everyone is


running it down? Why all of a sudden there is a hullabaloo over a couplet that


hardly conveys anything to damage any sort of outlook of any community? Just


because the protagonist is not a male? Just because the whole damn story orbits


around the fairer sex? I can imagine the response of people had it been made


with any ‘MALE’ actor as protagonist doing the same stuff. Did not we recently


experience it with *Chak De?


Come on people call spade a spade


on


View next photoly after knowing the cards. Most of you might assume I am just trying to be


in favor of it whilst being singular and others might be thinking my anger is


justified but I refute any of those objective and dare to call spade a spade. I


am no Madhuri fan. Neither my jaws dropped seeing her *thumkas *nor was I awestruck by the script. What I loved was how


Madhuri lifted a below-average script to a presentable level and worth a *dekko. *I am not rejecting her dancing


but then the lady acts as well and here she did act, she did come out a winner


in her own standards.


This is a story of a New York


based choreographer *Dia *(Madhuri


Dixit Nene)hailing from small town Shamli. Whilst being shot at by a


visiting *Firang *and acting as a guide


shortly, she falls in love with him and flees with him to the foreign soil.


Upon getting emergency call notifying her of her dying guru (Darshan Zariwala)


who amorously called her *Chudail,  *shecomes back to put life into the already dead open theatre *Ajanta *where she learnt the nuances of


dancing. She then takes on the baton in her own hands to fight the local MPs


and MLAs and more than that her own people and friends.


The movie comes out to be quite


unfashionable and conventional when it comes to script. However, what holds a


little bit interest is the presence of Madhuri. Not a single moment when she is


in the frame is forgettable and boring. Her smile is captivating; her stance is


to die for. And she is ably supported by the likes of Vinay Pathak, Divya


Dutta, Ranvir Shorey and most appreciably Konkona Sen Sharma. The small part of


Akshaye Khanna and Irrfan Khan is so-so.


Now here are some pluses and


minuses:


Pluses:


1)


Madhuri. Her introductory song *Dance with me *truly brings out the right


moves and shakes from the diva. She looks aged no doubt when camera gets closer


but then isn’t she 40? Huh!! I hear people saying she looks aged. But then she


is.


2)


All the songs. Be it high paced title song or *Show me you Jalwa, * or Rahat Fateh Ali


Khan’s soft touchy *O re pia, *all


songs are situational and do not seem forced upon.


3)


Konkona Sen Sharma and Divya Dutta


4)


The climax. The 20 minutes of musical ending is


nicely arranged and executed. I like many others were aware of the outcome as I


said it gets very predictable scene after scene, yet I enjoyed it.


Minuses:


1)


The script. It started well but then goes


utterly jaded and monotonous.


2)


Few smaller details are overlooked. Sometimes


they can be ignored but here they were too vital to be left out. Like, how come


she gets to arrange for a spectacular opening show knowing very well abhorrence


for her in hearts and minds of people of Shamli?


And why there is no audition for *Majnoo?  *How come the policeman who got dragged at


the nth moment to enact *Laila’s *father


enacted the role so well? Weird!!!


Jaideep Sahni is an extraordinary


writer who knows how to hold the attention of the people and present real life


situations which are digestible that were hardly seen in Yash Raj Films


sometime back. The guy seems to have slipped a bit in this case. He tried to


give it a *Chak De *feel which was not


required. The basic theme of both the movies is same: *“I want my status back”. *However, unlike *Chak De, *you do not get connected to the protagonist’s ache and


distress and that’s where Jaideep slipped. Never mind, I won’t run him down for


this. I wish to see more of his work.


So


what if the movie is declared flop just after 3 days of release (for


few select movies, few select people keep waiting for eons to call it a


flop and some never accept that as well: ask Pradeep Sarkar about Laga Chunari...).


For me, Madhuri could do without its commercial outcome. She chose the


script that suited her, danced, acted, entertained and flew back.

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