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*ing Govinda,
Aishwarya Rai, Namarata Shirodkar, Jackie Shroff
.... |
| Director: Deepak
Sareen |
| Producer: Tips
Films |
| Music: Jatin-Lalit
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Click here for 'Albela' songs |
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Albela is a film about two love stories separated by
the interval. And no, the love stories are not between
Govinda (Tony) and Aishwarya Rai (Sonia), and Jackie
Shroff (Prem) and Namrata Shirodkar (Nina).
The first story of the film is about Sonia, an Indian
who lives in Austria and her first visit to India. She
bumps into tourist guide Tony, who promptly falls in
love with her. They sing and dance, laugh and cry, all
the while making Nina intensely jealous.
Nina is Tony's childhood friend who is madly in love
with Tony, but he doesn't realise it. So she is reduced
to cooking and cleaning for him. The second half of
the story deals with Prem, a journalist. Sonia and Prem
love each other. But Sonia's father doesn't approve
of the relationship.
Why? Because he hates Indians. Why? Because his wife
was an Indian and she deserted him and their one-year
old daughter, for no apparent reason. There starts the
tug-of-war between Tony and Prem, with Sonia being the
first prize and Nina, the consolation prize. The film
is pleasantly enjoyable. Period. Classic it is not.
Don't even attempt to analyse it -- Albela is full of
loopholes. For example, Sonia calls Prem "poor", when
he has all the money to frequent Vienna and India, just
for a story. And it doesn't seem like the trips are
all expenses paid, because no company is ever mentioned.
Tony calls his two-storied bungalow a 'kholi' and 'jhopri'!
Strange that a tour guide can afford such a luxurious
house in small town Malaga, Goa. But the one that really
takes the cake is when Sonia's father (Sayeed Jafri),
who spends 23 years hating his wife, thinking her to
be a betrayer believes, in the wink of an eye, that
she was actually a very sacrificing woman who deserted
them for a very virtuous reason. Surprising also that
Sonia, a rich girl from Austria, gives so much liberty
to and pays so much attention to Tony who is, after
all, just a tour guide.
The only sightseeing they do in the whole film is go
to the beach (which overlooks her hotel) and a temple.
Besides, Deepak Sareen can't seem to keep track of the
fact that Sonia came to Malaga to find her mother's
grave -- she never actually does search for it. She
is too busy looking good! The acting couldn't have been
worse! Aishwarya, as usual, is a visual treat. The film
is just another ramp for her to display her exquisite
designer clothes. If only she paid more attention to
her acting. Govinda is atrociously overweight, and has
a tendency to mouth his dialogues as if everyone in
the theatre had lost their hearing. On the other hand,
Jackie Shroff steals the show -- no bulging bags under
his eyes, and the actor looks good.
Namrata Shirodkar is hardly present in the film. When
she is, all she does is cry. So making out whether she
can act or not is rather tough. The music, however,
is the saving grace of the film. Jatin-Lalit have composed
pretty good music. Haiya hoo kya masti, sung by Kumar
Sanu, Udit Narayan and Alka Yagnik is one of the best.
Pyaar ka jadoo sung by Alka Yagnik and Udit Narayan
follows suit. Manmohan Singh's cinematography is really
good, though one wonders what all the foreign locales
are doing in the middle of the film, when it is supposed
to be set in Malaga.
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