#GOLMAAL AGAIN REVIEW MOVIE#
Secret Superstar Movie Review: A still from the movie The girls are required to merely play along without letting their hair down. Neither Tabu nor Parineeti Chopra, despite the key roles that they are assigned and the adequate performances that they deliver, look particularly ill at ease among the male mad hatters who are allowed to run amok with impunity. It is left to the actors to pump life into a dead horse that is still breathing but is in no position to break into a gallop. The horror twist to the successful Golmaal franchise is a somewhat awkward narrative strategy that sucks the air out of the otherwise breezy comic romp. Harmless buffoonery isn't such a bad idea when delivered in moderation, but when it teeters on the edge of the excessive and seeks to draw humour from disabilities and speech defects - one guy is mute, another lisps and a third one loses his hearing for a bit and becomes the butt of ridicule - it crosses the line and stops being funny. A few of them are hilarious, but most only gobble up precious footage. But the film begins to careen out of control by the halfway mark under the weight of too many comic detours and feints. The film plays out in a fairy-tale hill setting where the oddballs that we were first introduced to over a decade ago converge to display their wares after a seven-year hiatus, is admittedly funny in parts. Golmaal Again Review: A still from the movie Most of the gags that the film stages - many of them are protracted beyond comprehension - simply disappear into a void. Yunus Sajawal's screenplay puts all its eggs in a bottomless basket filled to the brim with mindless mumbo-jumbo. Golmaal Again stretches credulity, what with its ghosts, spirits and apparitions.
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The film is a wild, wacky ride in which grown-up men revel in behaving like a bunch of delinquents, but the core of the plot hinges on emotions that stem from the bonding that five orphan boys develop with an infant girl they find on the streets and then are separated from when it is time for them to move out of their shelter. Golmaal Again has a slew of crowd-pleasing components that could propel it to box-office glory, but it is often guilty of laying too much store by lame devices. That isn't as much of a shame as the fact that the ghostly air that cloaks the yarn does not deliver much by way of genuine comic value. Oh no, NOT AGAIN! The fourth film of the Golmaal series, barring a few cosmetic changes, does not shy away from unleashing more of the same surfeit of inanity.
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Cast: Ajay Devgn, Arshad Warsi, Shreyas Talpade, Tusshar Kapoor, Kunal Kemmu, Tabu, Parineeti Chopra