Cast: Arshad Warsi, Mahima Chaudhary, Pravin Dabas, Kanwaljeet Singh, Sachin Khedeker, Jaspal
Bhatti, Rohit Roy, Nassar Abdullah, Mrinal Kulkarni, Sandhya Mridul, Iravati Harshe, Shravan, Mahima
Mehta
Director: Samar Khan
Cinematographer: Samir Arya
"A Day in the Life of a Soporific Airport" is how this unusual, episodic, romantic comedy should have been
subtitled.
A couple on the brink of a divorce, a husband whose wife ill-treats him, an Italy-returned pompous dude, a
pregnant airhostess who has just rejected a pilot's sympathetic shoulder, an army man who wants to get
remarried when his son is just out of his honeymoon...
Two teenagers who meet after discovering love on the Internet, a sloshed airport manager who runs into his
ex-flame now married to a sore man... The characters flow fast, though not furiously, from debutant director
Samar Khan's handsomely mounted, beautifully visualized airport-lounge drama.
Mellow in mood and musical in the treatment of its stagy characterizations, "Kucch Meetha Ho Jaye" lives
up to its title.
Sweet and tender, Samar Khan's film is definitely not a pretender. It deals with life and relationships and
their ensuing vagaries with a gentle smile and an occasional smirk.
Positivism permeates from the plot unhampered.
The string of breached man-woman relationships that surface during a flight delay on a surprisingly un-busy
airport is dealt with in episodic overtures.
Not all the sequences hold you. Many in fact, leave you wondering why the lenses froze on characters, who
could've solved their problems while we weren't looking.
Kanwaljeet's bumbling "Hail fellow, well met" army man's character is excessively pitched into the
over-populated plot. And Sandhya Mridul's emotionally overwrought airhostess' act becomes tedious,
especially when we want to just see what the other characters are up to.
But there are so many warm, funny and revealing characters, and situations, that you actually begin look at
the airport's multi-storeyed characterizations as an extended joint family.
Throughout the film you feel the presence of a guardian angel - not necessarily Shah Rukh Khan who
makes a delayed rabble-rousing somewhat gimmicky appearance.
And parts of the film capturing the quirky contours of a man-woman relationship are savagely
funny.
The young lovers facing the first crisis in their relationship: how to win over her father. "Get her pregnant,"
the boy's best friend advises.
Elsewhere, Arshad Warsi, delightfully drunken and droll, eyes the burqa-clad Muslim wife Gulab (Mahima
Chowdhary) who miraculously changes into the tightest and skimpiest skirt, presumably borrowed from
Britney Spears...
There are men, and there are boys. Middle-aged companionship rubs shoulders with pubescent fantasies in
this designer-drama - not quite as compelling and funny as its model Hollywood flick "Love Actually", but
romantic and melodic enough to qualify as a romantic musical.
You wish Samar Khan hadn't got self-indulgent, especially in the second half.
Big mistake. Still, if we cut through the narrative's phoney marital jargon, we get a film that's altogether
blithe bubby and charming.
The characters flash their smiles and hide their tears with aplomb that echoes Shakespeare's
all-the-world's-a-stage adage.
But there are no signs of working class activities on the airport, except for a baggage collector who's lost
his rooster.
Himesh Reshammiya's songs add their bit to the toothpick-slim drama.
The performances are smooth, even and mildly engaging, with Arshad Warsi, Mahima Choudhary and
Sachin Khedeker getting a hang of their roles better than the others.
And though the going gets progressively cumbersome, you cannot take away from the film's inherent
charm.
"Kuch Meetha..." is like a cake whose icing is so delectable that you don't notice there's no cake.
Monday, April 18, 2005 12:06 IST