Sunday, April 28, 2024
ADVT 
Movie Reviews

Review: 'Main Tera Hero' is low on aspirations and high on hi-jinks

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 Apr, 2014 02:23 PM
  • Review: 'Main Tera Hero' is low on aspirations and high on hi-jinks
Cast: Varun Dhawan, Ileana D'Cruz, Nargis Fakhri, Arunoday Singh
 
Directed by David Dhawan
 
Rating: * * *
 
It's not easy being David Dhawan. Over the last 20 years he has constantly kept the laughter alive. Having generated barrels of mirth with Govinda and Salman Khan in the past, now it is time for David's son to have a blast. Playing Seenu, the no-good wastrel who cons his way through a series of outrageous escapades, Varun Dhawan is to be seen monkeying around in every frame.
 
To his credit, the Dhawan scion carries off the incessant demand on his performing skills. Varun is a like a Govinda on steroids. He pumps up the energy level to the extent that even his two discernibly dheeli-dhaali heroines end up looking they are having fun. It could be just an act. We will never know. Every character is in the wink-wink mode.
 
Cleverly David Dhawan builds on Varun's contagious gusto. Scene after scene gives the star-kid a chance to flex his muscles and demonstrate his skills at holding a frame up with gravity-defying laughter.
 
"Main Tera Hero" is the kind of loopy, askew-me plot that makes no claims to any intellectual gratification. Its naked, unassuming goofiness is its greatest USP. And who goofier than Varun Dhawan who starts off as a student in a college where the campus beauty Ileana d'Cruz is an untouchable. The neighbourhood goon-like cop, played by Arunoday Singh, has put a proprietorial seal on her. To be honest Arunoday has the most difficult part in this any-goes comedy of hell-raising errors. He is shown to be a goon in khaki with serious anger-management issues.
 
 
One of the film's funniest sequences shows him bashing in his anger-management therapist, Ashwin Mushran's face. I don't think this sequence could have been part of the original Telugu film ("Kandireega"). Writer Tushar Hiranandani updates the original material, giving the plot and the individual scenes a sense of renewed animation and vigour.
 
The film is adroitly shot and edited. Like the leading man's six-pack abdomen, there is no flabbiness in the storytelling. The characters do the stupidest things with a brisk bravado.
 
Although the plot is skimpier than the two heroines's costumes put together, it derives terrific energy and sustenance from its leading man's zest for life. The writing vacillates vibrantly between the perky and the puerile. What saves the day is the narrative's gumption. David Dhawan doesn't fear falling over as he hurls through an abyss of absurdity.
 
 
The film is low on aspirations and high on hi-jinks. Moving from Mumbai to Bangkok, the plot is bolstered by a blizzard of low-brow episodes. Even the song and dances are engaging knick-knacks, more memorable for being forgettable than anything else.
 
As a showcase for Varun Dhawan's skills, "Main Tera Hero" is a cleverly designed blues-chaser. Surprisingly there is room for other actors to make an impact. Besides Arunoday who is happily stupid in his mushy-bully's role, Anupam Kher and Saurabh Shukla as a gangster and his right-hand man kick up a storm.
 
But what's with the Dhawan's bimbette treatment for his leading ladies? If Karisma Kapoor and Pooja Batra had nothing better to do than run around Govinda and Sanjay Dutt in Dhawan's "Haseena Maan Jayegi", in "Main Tera Hero", Ileana and Nargis pant after Varun and Varun and Varun, and then some some Varun.
 
 
You get the picture? One of the songs commands "Palat! Tera dhyaan kidhar hai?" "Hamara dhyaan bilkul idhar hai, Dhawan Saab. Bright, bouncy and colourful, the mad mad world of David Dhawan's 20-year old smile-a-while scheme gets a renewed laugh-line in "Main Tera Hero". While Varun Dhawan goes about the task of filling up the screen with his confident zest, David Dhawan ensures there is enough fuel to furnish the funnies with a furious tempo.

MORE Movie Reviews ARTICLES

Movie Review: '300: Rise of an Empire' is a mediocre vengeance drama

Movie Review: '300: Rise of an Empire' is a mediocre vengeance drama
After half an hour of watching the film, you feel the film rambles and gradually it becomes monotonous and wearisome

Movie Review: '300: Rise of an Empire' is a mediocre vengeance drama

Movie Review: 'Shaadi Ke Side Effects' is warm and funny

Movie Review: 'Shaadi Ke Side Effects' is warm and funny
You can't take your eyes off Farhan and Vidya. They look evenly matched and entirely yummy in their yin and yang yearnings

Movie Review: 'Shaadi Ke Side Effects' is warm and funny

Movie Review: Mr. Peabody and Sherman is surprisingly pleasant

Movie Review: Mr. Peabody and Sherman is surprisingly pleasant
Based on the 1959 US four-and-a-half minute broadcast skits, "Peabody's Improbable History", the film is a father-son bonding adventure film laced with history and time-travel.

Movie Review: Mr. Peabody and Sherman is surprisingly pleasant

'Highway' - Elegiac Excursion into Know-Man's Land

'Highway' - Elegiac Excursion into Know-Man's Land
It's tough if not impossible to make a politically correct film about a rich girl falling in love with her kidnapper. To a very large extent, "Highway" manages to travel a credible road, letting the sleeping dogs lie by simply believing in Veera's truth (for whatever it may be worth).

'Highway' - Elegiac Excursion into Know-Man's Land

Movie Review: Darr@The Mall is a polished horror thriller

Movie Review: Darr@The Mall is a polished horror thriller
 No over-saturated soundtrack, no creaking doors, and most surprising of all - no busty women and that in itself is reason enough to applaud this film

Movie Review: Darr@The Mall is a polished horror thriller

Movie Review: Gunday is a dumbed-down version of Deewaar

Movie Review: Gunday is a dumbed-down version of Deewaar
Gunday is a dumbed-down version of Yash Chopra's classic "Deewaar" where the boy from world of poverty grew up to a life of glamorized crime.

Movie Review: Gunday is a dumbed-down version of Deewaar