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Aankhon Ki Gustaakhiya: Pretty Poppycock

Aankhon Ki Gustaakhiya

Rating: * ½

  There were five  people in  the  movie theatre, three of them with me, laughing  from the very beginning of this weird rom-gone. If I didn’t know any better, I would  see(you see,  this  film is  all about seeing, or not seeing,  or pretending not  see, or whatever) Aankhon Ki Gustaakhiyan(AKG) as a  riproaring comedy,a satire on all those intense love stories  from the past which we have devoured repeatedly? Or perhaps a spoof on the  ongoing debate on nepotism versus outside talent?

 Sadly,  AKG is none of the above. It takes itself so seriously, that I really felt sorry for the  absolutely  negative feelings that the  product evokes. But  the fact is—and all  five of us  watching the film will vouch for this—the very basic premise  of the plot is laughably ludicrous: a girl sets off on a train journey all alone  with her eyes  covered in  a mask .

 Sabaa(newcomer Shanaya  Kapoor with her probable  talent duly  masked)  is a method actress practising to  play a blind girl. On the train she meets  a blind man(a real one) Jahaan(Vikrant Massey, this is his real 12th Fail) who  for reasons unknown to  humanity, doesn’t tell the blindfolded  girl that he is  blind.

  From the word go, every move that the couple makes is questionable  and ersatz. The  film’s motives are fake, the train on which they meet is fake, together they head to Mussoorie(why why why?) . But there is little  of  the  hill station visible on screen. Most of the time  the irreparably asinine pair is  indoors, yapping  yapping yapping…one blindfolded, the other blind, both braindead, as far as  we can,errr, see.

    The second-half moves to a foreign country where  Jahaan, now christened  Kabir(why?) keeps bumping  into  Sabaa. Nothing has changed. This is one of the most headstrong  films in recent years(and I don’t mean that  in any  positive way). Sabaa continues  to  wear her  eye mask even when  her  prep  for the role is over, for  reason only she can explain.

Jahaan continues  to  write bad songs, which he insists are  instant classics waiting to be discovered  by the world.

  Quite like the makers  of this film who seem to believe they have made an intense love story which the  world  would  one day embrace .Kagaz ke fool?

  The film is noticeably cramped in its spatial aspirations. For most of the narrative we  see only the two lovers looking(in a manner  of speaking)  into the  crisis  on hand of not  being able to look  at one another. Midway a  third character,  the Understanding Boyfriend (played by  Zain Khan Durrani)  shows up with a transfixed  expression of  a man wiser beyond his  years.

Exactly what  he is so  wise about,we don’t know.Maybe he knows something about the  film’s raison d’etre that we don’t.

 Ditto  the  film which seems  to  move in mysterious ways, encircling the couple  seductively. But  the mating game never goes beyond  sightless courtship and brainless drama. The problem with this couple which they cannot see(ahem)  is that they have no problem. I  still don’t know why Jahaan and Sabaa are  hellbent on tormenting the  knickers  out of one  another, and in torturing the hell out of the audience.

We  appreciate  the  film’s literary antecedents(Ruskin Bond, no less).  But  the treatment of the  meagre story is inflated  improbable and intolerable  . So sorry,this is  just not  happening.

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