Director B.H Tharun Kumar, whose last effort – Nayee Padosan – was indeed laudable, seems to have gone haywire this time. He has chosen the right story without doubt, but the presentation/interpretation is slapdash. The film has a waferthin plot and to make matters worse, the screenplay is lackluster. The goings-on, barring some sparks towards the finale, are an exercise in boredom.
Film tells the story about a guy who wants to get married but there is one hitch - he is unemployed. He searches for a job but comes across a comic Casanova boss [Rishi Kapoor] who has demands of his own!
How he overcomes all the chakkars and gets the love of his life forms the crux of the film!
Finding faults with LKCM is as easy as spotting a thick black spot across a white background.Right from the illogical turn of events, a drab screenplay to tacky characterisation, the film gives reasons aplenty to make a hasty exit.Director has executed a couple of sequences efficiently, more towards the post-interval portions. But he is letdown, and terribly at that, by a dull and unimaginative screenplay
What taxes the viewer further is that the film goes on and on, aimlessly, for 2.3hours, though the ideal length shouldve been 2 hours, with several entertaining moments.
Technically, the film is shoddy and even otherwise the dramatic scenes lack the required punch.
Music is not all that inspiring. The title song is good to hear but seen in the context of the films narration, seems like a forced item. Even the picturisation seems like a hasty job. Cinematography is passable. Dialogues rely more on clich.
Aarnav Bhatia does not impress. He shows sparks in a few scenes only. Shoma Anand is just about okay. Rishi looks tired and least interested in the goings-on. Parmita is awkward.
Love Ke Chakkar Mein stands on a weak foundation – the script – and will thus find the going tough.Poor fare!