Directed by Chekravarthy
Rating: * ½
With a cast that reads like the who's hoot of Bollywood this has got to be the noisiest most ambitious and rumbustious comedy of the season, if not of all seasons.
The chaos of errors starts with four desperados Aftab Shivdasani, Zakir Husain, Snehal Dabhi and Chunky Pandey barging into a house colonized by a Gujarati family which seems to exist on the precipice.
From there, the claustrophobic mood builds up with rapid-fire momentum, leaving no room for the characters and their relationships to grow . The narrative suffocates the characters and their motives, narrows them down to a burlesque of bankruptcy. Nonetheless, for about half of the film director Chekravarthy keeps the goings-on moderately interesting.
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This has got to be the most crowded canvas since the screen adaptation of Leo Tolstoy's War & Peace. Everyone seems to treat grim issues of crime , kidnapping, extortion and perjury as a kind of extended gag.
Indeed Darwaza Bandh Rakho is like a soap opera devoted to a malfunctional family where fiscal matters rule the conscience and speed is a substitute for sensitivity.
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What exceeds the rather ludicrous limits set by the chaotic canvas of this heist-hilarity are some of the performances. Though over-the-top , Ishrat Ali as the Gujarati householder grappling with an unexpected houseful situation in his house, comes up with an arresting performance.
Others who get it right in a film that makes a strong pitch for the wrong, are Zakir Husain, Divya Dutta(cute and exceedingly hyper as the house-maid) and to an extent Chunky Pandey. Isha Sharvani so graceful in Subhash Ghai's Kisna, is embarrassing in her screechy brainlessless. And what's Manisha Koirala doing in the extended ensemble cast looking as lost as Alice in no-wonder-land.
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Yes, it's different from the other comedies. But do we really need a comedy that derives its humour from an indeterminate blank account?