Bharjari Movie Review
Due to the fact both director Chetan Kumar and actor Dhruva Sarja weren't part of any various other film for 3 years since their successful mixture with Bahaddur, it really is surprising that they were able to only select a worn-out storyline because of their comeback.
Regardless of the slick narrative, amazing screen existence of Dhruva Saraja and grandly mounted sets, Bharjari is but a motley hotchpotch of circumstances from standard commercial movies. It is Vajrakaya in a single scene and even Bahaddur in another. It generally does not even provide you with the feel-good deja vu hurry but a seen-it-all drudgery.
Possibly the filmmakers were certain of the box office potential of a film with this mixture and refused to take the slightest threat of creating a demanding script. The safe wager has led to an average film. However, Bharjari has everything followers expect in an industrial star's film; dialogues that state the sun, moon and celebrities for the hero, pretty ladies who dance and swoon for him, 100 kg muscle hand bags of villains who fly like cotton candy when punched and a history score which makes up for whatever is usually lacking on screen.
The first half of the film is spent finding a girl to fall in like. A rich girl then falls because of this 'middle class ' boy who in addition has failed in 10th. In some way he 'writes' an test to become listed on the Army, eligibility become damned. This is the beauty of commercial movies.
The next half of the film is his damsel-in-distress rescue saga. Cliche after cliched picture pass by. All of the commercial plot factors that were successful within the last couple of years like uniting estranged feudal family members and revelation of a higher class birth of a typical chap are tucked in.
Dhruva Sarja oozes self-confidence. But that confidence outcomes in the same sort of dialogue delivery to both villain and the girl love. If you don't commit the blasphemy of looking for story and signifying in such sort of films, you can well appreciate them for all they are worthy of. Dhruva is a star and his selection skills shall be put to serious test. A Bharjari or two may get away the box office scrutiny as the horizon continues to be rising. It's time to appear for tales that aren't aimed just at the starting weekend crowd.
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