Thursday, December 11, 2025
ADVT 
Movie Reviews

Crude, Crass, Unimpressive 'Mastizaade' Is A Blow To Your Sensibilities

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Jan, 2016 01:08 PM
  • Crude, Crass, Unimpressive 'Mastizaade' Is A Blow To Your Sensibilities
Director: Milap Zaveri
 
Cast: Tusshar Kapoor, Vir Das, Sunny Leone, Riteish Deshmukh, Suresh Menon and Shaad Randhawa
 
Rating: *
 
A sex comedy, high on testosterone and low on IQ, "Mastizaade" is a blow to your sensibilities. It even slips notches below "Kyaa Kool Hain Hum 3".
 
Designed specifically to cater to the adult front benchers with everything crass and obnoxious, the film is about two friends Aditya Chotiya (Vir Das) and Sunny Kele (Tusshar Kapoor) who are addicted to sex.
 
Their modus operandi is to join the various addiction centres to ensure easy prey for their despicable yearnings. They boast among their friends for possessing 'Chick-rays', an X-ray vision that enables them to scrutinise easy girls.
 
The duo chance upon twin sisters Laila and Lily Lele, effectively played by Sunny Leone, only to realise that their 'Chick-rays' is ineffective on them and that according to them is the sign of true love. What follows is their pursuit to woo and convince the sisters.
 
The script pivoting on a flat, wafer-tin plot is injected with equally frivolous, insufferable sub-plots and blatant below-the-belt jokes.
 
 
With lazily crafted expositions, the film tilts heavily on done-to-death scenes and dialogues with sexual innuendoes which are loaded with puns, rhymes, double entendres and names like Lele, Kele, Chotiya, Urashit and Sondas.
 
The characters are one-dimensional with most of them obsessed with sex.
 
On the performance front, every actor executes buffoonery with aplomb and flourish. Tusshar and Vir Das lack the charisma of macho beefcakes. They are asexual dowdies and that is what makes this film a drudgery.
 
Riteish Deshmukh as their friend Deepak in an undeveloped character in a miniscule role is charming, but unexploited.
 
With the right amount of oomph, Sunny Leone in a double role is the saving grace of the film. She essays the roles of Laila and Lily with distinct costume and speech. While she is fluent as Laila, she stammers and stutters at the opportune moment with an innocent expression as Lily.
 
 
Of the supporting cast, Asrani as Urashit - Laila and Lily's father and Suresh Menon as 'Sondas', his openly gay son, are stereotypical and eyesores.
 
Sushmita Mukherjee as Asrani's wife and Gizele Thakral as the banker Titli Boobna is wasted.
 
Shaad Randhawa who plays Deshpremi Singh, Lily's the wheel-chair bound fiance is a pleasant surprise but the character does not do anything to boost his career.
 
The film boasts of a cleverly manipulative cinematography, especially Sunny Leone's introductory scene.
 
The music with a few rehashes of Sunny Leone's popular numbers does nothing to boost the viewing experience.
 
 
Overall, with blatant product placements which include boosting Pattaya tourism, poor humour and garish treatment, the film fails to leave an impress.

MORE Movie Reviews ARTICLES

Movie Review: 'The Hundred-Foot Journey' Visually Brilliant, Lacks Drama

Movie Review: 'The Hundred-Foot Journey' Visually Brilliant, Lacks Drama
While the title as well as the setting makes a good allegory for the narration that is so typical of Director Lasse Hallstrom, the theme of the film as well as certain scenes remind you of his...

Movie Review: 'The Hundred-Foot Journey' Visually Brilliant, Lacks Drama

Movie Review: 'Hercules' - brilliant 3D effects make it a treat

Movie Review: 'Hercules' - brilliant 3D effects make it a treat
What keeps you hooked is the rich earthy textures of the frames, the impressive production values and excellent 3D effects....

Movie Review: 'Hercules' - brilliant 3D effects make it a treat

'Kick' - Salman Khan, Sajid Nadiadwala kick up a storm

'Kick' - Salman Khan, Sajid Nadiadwala kick up a storm
I came away with Nawazuddin's evil laughter ringing in my ears. Not because it's scary, but so indicative of the world of ferocious comicbook battles that Salman inhabits so casually...

'Kick' - Salman Khan, Sajid Nadiadwala kick up a storm

Movie Review: 'The Grand Budapest Hotel' dramatically grand

Movie Review: 'The Grand Budapest Hotel' dramatically grand
Overall, do not expect the film to be realistic, but within its own framework, the film is captivating and engrossing...

Movie Review: 'The Grand Budapest Hotel' dramatically grand

Movie Review: 'Hate Story 2' - overbaked vendetta pulp

Movie Review: 'Hate Story 2' - overbaked vendetta pulp
"Hate Story 2" is a story in pursuit of a constant state of arousal. The female protagonist gets wet, gets into a bikini, gets just so aggressive - she is like a sex bomb ready to explode...

Movie Review: 'Hate Story 2' - overbaked vendetta pulp

Movie Review: 'Amit Sahni Ki List' an endearing 'roam' com

Movie Review: 'Amit Sahni Ki List' an endearing 'roam' com
Luckily the film never needs to run into any mortifying roadblocks. It's a smooth ride all the way. From Amit Sahni's Ms. Perfect (Anindita Nayar, tres chic) to his...

Movie Review: 'Amit Sahni Ki List' an endearing 'roam' com