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Rahu Ketu, Powered By Sanitized Laughs & Hazy Humour

Rating: ***

 Straight off, debutant writer-director  Vipul  Vig’s Rahu Ketu is  likeable  for  its  resolute  avoidance  of all vulgarity. In fact this is  one of the most reverent bromance comedies in  recent times. There is no end to wickedness in the plot and characters. But no one whispers an improper word,no middle fingers are show  to decorum.There are no  bananas in  any frame.

   Varun Dhawan(overacting  all the way, and not his fault) and  the underrated Pulkit Samrat play Rahu and Ketu, two fantasy figures from mythology who are  brought to  life by  a sly seer(Piyush Mishra) and his  pliable  pupil(Manu Rishi  Chadha). Mishra and Chadha try to make sense of their half-baked roles but eventually give up.

Rahu and Ketu are  joint  anti-corruption bureau  . What  ensues is  their adventures in blunderland, some of  them mildly amusing, the rest….oh well!

  Having given  life  to  two incorrigible  blunderers  the writer-director  is unable to  provide  them  clever  lines to sustain the duo’s interest level. Pulkit  Samrat  especially,  finds his character pushed into a corner with no hope of rescue.  His partner in crime  Varun Sharma makes his presence felt with smarmy lines delivered loudly.

 The  character I most enjoyed  for its unfettered morality was  Meena Taxi, played  by Shalini Pandey who  once was Arjun Reddy’s bullied girlfriend. Here she  turns  the table on the heroes  and other  male characters  by  slapping and pushing them  around. I wonder why Pandey  insists on looking and  speaking  like Alia  Bhatt’s  thirst cousin.

   The Himachal  setting is  soothing, especially when  compared with the  noisy shenanigans  which seem to be   going nowhere we would like to  go.  Towards the midpoint, the laughs cease completely.And we are left  looking at a screenplay that thinks with every part except the brain.

  The  funny stuff,  if you are still interested,  shows  up whenever  the  devilishly talented  Amit Sial shows up as a corrupt cop . Chunky Pandey as  a  Russian mobster is sporadically funny. Ditto the film. Rahu Ketu is  not a washout. It is original and  sassy, in the mood for  the unexpected when  it wants  to be, settling for  the smirks when the  laughs die down.

This is  the kind of comedy where Varun Sharma starts snoring before he goes to sleep, and Shalini Pandey  asks  a havildar she hardly knows  to get cosy with her under  a blanket.And the Chunky character  insists  on  addressing   Deepak  ad ‘Deefuk’.

Rahu Ketu reminded  me of the 1978  film of that name  where Premnath and Pran played  the two heroes.Pulkit and Varun are no  match for the original. But they try.

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