Woohoo! Here is a movie starring Rahman’s music in the
backdrop of the young couple from Aashiqui2, old couple bearing fine acting, and
other potpourri of stuff filled with Mumbai and tons of clichés. Yes, it is the
music that keeps you in the theatre, happily awake and interested. Happily is
underlined.
Adi (Aditya Roy Kapur) and Tara (Shraddha Kapoor) meet accidentally at first, then unrealistically later at a wedding, and then hit it off sickeningly puerile way. The movie had lost me there. Nachos in hand kept me seated and thankfully so as the worst was over. Let’s move on. Sharing a common belief of staying far from even the word called marriage, they go the live-in route under the watchful eye of an elderly couple - their landlords – Gopi (Naseeruddin Shah) and Charu (Leela Samson). They both share a supremely sublime love with husband calling wife Baby and she calling him Papluji. Gopi uncle (that’s what our leads call him) is exceedingly caring for his wife who ungrudgingly struggles with advancing Alzheimer’s. On the one hand, Adi the video game maker and Tara the budding architect fall in love; on the other hand, the older couple unknowingly leads them out of their idea of marriage being the synonym of hell and the opposite of career. Sticking to the hackneyed thumb-rule, post interval they are bound to realize the goodness in togetherness with wedlock. They do and then proudly and publicly become fools, the tag they often ascribe to the married.
The good thing is there is no much-wallowed melodrama. And the best thing is its ending. Pun intended. You can sail through to it by occasional fresh strokes of dialogues, often cleverly stuffed with contemporary repartee, in this painfully predictable story. You will see plenty of Mumbai local, BEST, Gate way of India, and force-fitting of ‘Ok-Jaanu’ multiple times to justify the lazy title. By the way, having seen the sincerity and impeccable love from Gopi to his ailing Charu, I feel that ‘Ok Baby’ would have suited better as the title!
As for the due credits, Shraddha is truly a revelation: she looks ravishing and claims your wholehearted stare including for her acting. Aditya makes his mark as well. Let me say, they really make a fine pair. Naseer and Leela literally own their parts and command the hearts of the audience. Their chemistry is palpable and heartwarming. Last but the best thing is the might of the maestro. Whenever AR holds a mic he is gifted to churn out a goosefleshy number. In this it is the fantabulous title track, the one that has been knocking on my eardrums loudly since its launch.
The bottom line is that if you can digest a reasonable number of here-we-go-again and who-does-that moments, you won’t mind watching this. My final word is: Skippable.
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