Hum Do Hamare Do Movie Review Rating: 2.5 out of 5.0 stars
Star Cast: Paresh Rawal, Ratna Pathak Shah, Rajkummar Rai, Kriti Sanon, Aparshakti Khurana, Manu Rishi Chadha, Prachi Shah Pandya.
Director: Abhishek Jain
What’s Good: A reminder of why we need to bring back the veterans and give them characters they can blow the most amazing life into. Paresh Rawal & Ratna Pathak Shah do just that.
What’s Bad: That while you focus on them, you don’t let the rest of the world look half-baked and borrowed. And the makers do just that.
Loo Break: Take it after the introduction and during the climax, because you already know how this ends. But strictly not when Paresh and Ratna are showing their talent.
Watch or Not?: For the two veterans and their amazing performance. Rest all you have seen already.
User Rating:
Language: Hindi
Available on: Disney+ Hotstar
Runtime: 129 Minutes
As the title suggests it is about a family. Not brought together by blood but situation. When the love of his life (Anya, Kriti) tells Dhruv (Rajkummar) that she wants to marry a guy who has a family and adopts a pet, he takes the adoption part too seriously. An orphan by birth, he adopts parents and the comedy of errors begins.
Hum Do Hamare Do Movie Review: Script Analysis
Last week I saw Rathnan Prapancha, a Kannada film about a man finding his roots and learning what family actually means. Hum Do Hamare Do somewhere exists in the same zone but is also comedy. Also, the blueprint is not as fresh as the former. The question is the same, what does a family mean and whom do you consider one?
Story by Abhishek Jain & Deepak Venkateshan, Hum Do Hamare Do is a comedy of errors that is inspired by multiple Bollywood movies we have seen over years. Not just the characters obsessed by the idea Sooraj Barjatya has spent his life living, but the format of how it unfolds too is all we have seen. Boy and girl meet in a chance encounter, boy falls in love at first sight and decides he will only marry her or Sanyas! She demands, it is fulfilled, twist and climax. Screenplay by Prashant Jha.
What is actually interesting is the period between the demand and twist. And this is where Ratna Pathak Shah and Paresh Rawal enter the story and the whole movie is elevated just by their acting performances, more about that later. Who also takes a whole new avatar in writing is Prashant Jha, who is also credited for the dialogues. It is after Paresh enters his dialogues that turn more appealing. A lot of it is situational and some parts seem to be improvised too.
What lacks in Hum Do Hamare Do strongly is the base. It seems like the writers and the team were running towards the interesting part without really polishing the world around it which in the first case was meant to trigger the interesting portion. Rajkummar turns a rich guy from a little waiter in minutes, his rags to riches journey are spoken about multiple times. But never giving it the respect that aspect of his character deserves. Rather we are told to focus on ‘see how amazing a lover he is’. Your heroine fell in love with his tech expertise, why reduce him to a local lover.
The climax is quite predictable and for a Bollywood buff, you might have already guessed it too.
Hum Do Hamare Do Movie Review: Star Performances
Paresh Rawal and Ratna Pathak Shah are the real heroes in this movie. The actors make you feel how much more substantial work they deserve than the industry is offering them. As a fake father, Rawal leaves no stone unturned to become one. His one-liners and the timing are so balanced that it all looks improvised and not choreographed. In a blink-and-miss scene when Kriti comes to his home, he tells her ‘beta jhuk ke ana’, while it could have been easily offensive by some other actor, Rawal makes it sarcastically funny.
Ratna Pathak Shah is as good as she gets. Having loved her as a mother in Kapoor & Sons, this is a new shade. The actor knows when to act without words and when to be funny. Well, she also cries and it is an adorable moment. Her chemistry with Rajkummar as her son is surprisingly good and soothing to watch.
Rajkummar Rao can cakewalk these characters. We have seen him do this multiple times. Even his The White Tiger character was a rip-off of Dhruv, just the accent was an addition. He needs to bring back the Newton/Stree version of him soon. Kriti Sanon does a golden job of becoming the stereotypical Bollywood heroine. She introduces herself as a blogger in the first 10 minutes, never to be spoken about it again. She could have called herself an astronaut and nothing could have changed because Anya is written that one tone. I loved Kriti in Panipat and Mimi, she deserves much better.
Aparshakti Khurana has tried all shades of a best friend and now he even has a turban. Helmet was so good Apar, high time there is a paradigm shift in choices. Manu Rishi Chadha and Prachi Desai are good at their limited parts.
Hum Do Hamare Do Movie Review: Direction, Music
Abhishek Jain as a director is inspired by Hindi films and there is no harm in that. But if you add nothing fresh in it, why will one stay. He packs the middle act with all the interesting stuff, leaving the sides loose. If the first act and climax don’t appeal, how will one appreciate the entire product?
Sachin-Jigar are too busy creating only peppy numbers. Dum Gutkoo and Vedha Sajjeya might stay with me for some time though.
Hum Do Hamare Do Movie Review: The Last Word
Ratna Pathak Shah and Paresh Rawal are the best part of this comedy of errors, but there are other elements present too and they all need to be at their best to make them shine more.
Hum Do Hamare Do Trailer
Hum Do Hamare Do releases on October 29, 2021.
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To catch some more amazing Hindi films, check out our Sardar Udham Movie Review. You shouldn’t miss this Vicky Kaushal starrer!
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The post Hum Do Hamare Do Movie Review: Paresh Rawal & Ratna Pathak Shah Are Iconic But The Film Relies Too Heavily On Them appeared first on Koimoi.
October 29, 2021 at 09:36AM
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