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Sunny Sanskari Ki Tulsi Kumari Gets It Right

Sunny Sanskari Ki   Tulsi Kumari 

Rating: ****

If there is  plenty that is  wrong with the new Karan Johar  production—the dearth  of  girth  in the  screenplay, for example—there  is  so much that’s  right  in  the  narrative. Although Karan  Johar has not directed the film, Shashank Khaitan has, every frame is  a  homage to  the spick and span gosh-how-posh aesthetics of Johar’s directorials, especially  in the songs which are shot on  sets  that resemble colour-frenzied hallucinogenic  versions  of  a drugged fantasy.

There are  only goodlooking  people  in  Sanskari-Kumari.Janhvi Kapoor who plays the title  role has  never  looked better. This time, the camera and the cameraman Manush Nandan really love Janhvi. They  swarm around  her  like  bees  to  a hive,  contouring her  every move with loving carer.She displays  a   lot more than  just her cleavage  this time.

The spontaneous Sanya  Malhotra who plays Janhvi’s souten is  no harridan.  She  too is  shot  lovingly.

Glam is  the  keyword  here.  The  glossy characters set the mood for the  film’s basic First World problem: the  dumped damsel in distress Tulsi Kumari  must get her boyfriend back. In this , she seeks the  assistance   of  Sunny Sanskari (Varun Dhawan whose  personality lacks  maturity,  not sincerity). The two head to  the destination wedding of their respective dumping partners who ,  it’s  a small world, are getting married to one  another.

If you  think  Sunny and Tulsi’s ex-es are evil  hedonists,  think  again: Vikram  and Ananya(there is no escape from the latter’s presence, even  as a  name,  in Karan  Johar’s cinema) are decent  folks, pressurized  into marrying  into money.

Tch tch. Poor rich folks and their  First World  problems…if you are  into this sort of vicarious  voyeurism into  affluence,  them Sunny Sanskari Ki Tulsi Kumari , an upmarket cousin  to Kartik Aaryan break-a-marriage romcom Sonu Ki Titu Ki  Sweety,  is just your  poison.

It is chic urbane  and cool enough  to make you drool.Some  of the  antics  of the idle rich—the entire film is set  in a  high-maintenance resort in Udaipur—are  priceless.

My pick of the  lot is  a moment in the restroom  where the two women Tulsi and Ananya,  rivals  in love, have an impromptu bust competition.This mine-is-bigger-than-yours moment extends to the  boys as well, when Varun peeps  at  Sharaf while they are  urinating  in  a swimmingpool(don’t ask why, the rich can do anything).

Naughty  and  nifty, Janhvi and  Sanya are sporting enough to  take on the fluff  with  lots of  grace  and affection. Janhvi  especially  takes  a  while to  get into  the mood. Once she get there she  has a whole lot of fun digging into the shallow waters  of  the plot.

In comparison the two boys have less bantering  and  backchatting  to do.  Rohit Sharaf  in the thankless role of  a  treacherous  suitor  invests  some compassion in a role that reeks of misogyny. Varun in  comparison, is  everywhere , but never  able to conquer that  intrinsic brattiness that makes him more Macaulay  Culkin than James Dean.

The  film is insanely  goodlooking and incalculably entertaining. The characters are so  misplaced in their romantic  judgements, they seem to be  in the wrong  wedding venue. It’s in how much fun they have with their anomalous courtship  games that this  riotous romcom  scores  baloney brownie points.

Oh yes,  Karan  Johar makes a cameo appearance. There is  a clearly  a wicked actor  lurking beneath the star-celebrity personality.

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