Bollywood has scored a hat trick this year with the success of three sequels - "Phir Hera Pheri", "Krrish"
and "Lage Raho Munna Bhai". Will "Dhoom 2", the latest to join the bandwagon, be equally lucky?
"Dhoom-2", a sequel to the hugely successful movie "Dhoom", is all set to woo the audiences in November.
The original had Abhishek Bachchan, Uday Chopra, John Abraham, Esha Deol and Rimi Sen.
The sequel has Hrithik Roshan and Aishwarya Rai playing thieves. Hrithik replaces John from the earlier
flick. Aishwarya and Bipasha Basu pitch in for Esha Deol and Rimi Sen.
The story of the movie goes like this:
Ali's (Uday Chopra) dream of becoming a police officer finally turns into reality. He is Assistant
Commissioner of Police Jai Dixit's (Abhishek Bachchan) right hand man. They try to keep a tight leash on
crime together, but fate has something else in store for them.
Aryan (Hrithik Roshan), a hi-tech international thief, after pulling off a series of near-impossible heists all
over the world, decides to move to Mumbai. That's when Ali and Jai's lives turn upside down.
Aryan succeeds in dodging Jai and Ali, who are working on his case round the clock. Then comes Shonali
Bose, Jai's college mate, now a police officer.
She helps put pieces of the puzzle together as she has been closely tracking these thefts and is now
considered an expert on Aryan, whom no one has seen - not even Shonali.
Aryan finds his match in Sunehri (Aishwarya Rai), a petty yet clever thief. They decide to work together and
thus the game begins.
Does ACP Jai Dixit manage to nab Aryan? Or does Aryan give him the slip?
From the desert of Namibia to the backwaters of Goa, the mean streets of Mumbai and the ancient forts of
Rajasthan, and finally to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - the film promises to take the audiences on a ride through
some of the most exotic locations in the world.
Apart from that, director Sanjay Gadhavi has laced it with the best of technology to turn it into a hi-tech
thriller.
The music score of "Dhoom" played an important part in its success, but the music of part two is not as
appealing as the original.
The promos, however, have aroused a good amount of curiosity among movie buffs and in the trade circle.
Wednesday, October 25, 2006 12:39 IST