The Sunday Guardian

A pretty-looking film with flawed screenplay Ae Dil Hai Mushkil

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Director: Karan Johar Starring: Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, Ranbir Kapoor, Anushka Sharma and Fawad Khan Karan Johar loves his films to look beautiful. He works towards gleaming, polishing and grooming his locations and actors as though he were building a Taj Mahal for the Gen-Y to rest its reposeful romanticis­m.

Ae Dil Hai Mushkil (ADHM) is one good-looking film with actors who epitomize human beauty. True, they strive helplessly towards reaching the inner core of their being to obtain a spiritual centre to match that abundance of physical beauty.

That synchronis­ed connectivi­ty between inner and outer beauty, escapes the filmmaker as well as his characters who are heard mouthing some beautiful poetry that seems ordered online.

It’s all very designer-designer in ADHM. You know, like kitchen interior and living room walls in a home decoration magazine. But nonetheles­s pretty to look at and enormously gratifying for the high level of visual aesthetics that Karan invests into his frames. Full marks to cinematogr­apher Anil Mehta for shooting Karan’s location and actors with an intensity that frequently betrays their shallow interests in life.

Though there are four pivotal characters in the capricious quadrangle, the focus is entirely on Ranbir and Anuskha who seem deter- mined to make a tamasha out of their togetherne­ss. And I do mean that literally. If Imtiaz Ali’s Tamasha had paired Anushka with Ranbir, this would have been what Tamasha would have looked like.

Ranbir and Anushka in a no-brainer mode whoop it up like two kids at a theme birthday party blowing up condoms in the mistaken belief that they are balloons. Not that Karan’s vision would allow even a nip of non-vegetarian­ism. ADHM is an exceedingl­y pure take on love, of the unreciproc­ated kind.

Ranbir’s Ayaan loves Anushka’s Alize. They have a lot of fun together and are constantly exploring the wild juvenile side to their personalit­y. But she finds him to be just friendship material. Now what was that Deepika film where Imran Khan faced the same crisis of credibilit­y. Ah yes, Break Ke Baad.

You will spot a likeness to many recent romcoms including Karan Johar’s own Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna in this mish-mash of maudlin emotions and mushy poetry. By the time Fawad Khan saunters in as Anushka’s object of adoration, we are physically exhausted by the juvenile antics of the RanbirAnus­hka pair.

While Ranbir behaves like the guy from Barfi! fused with the dude from Tama- sha, both cloned into the angst-ridden singer in Rockstar, Anushka’s chirpy highoctave act is doomed into self destructio­n but salvaged by her spontaneit­y. Surely, she can do better than get typecast as the new avatar of Preity Zinta.

Fawad’s entry is welcome and his exit baffling. Why does he reject Anushka’s love? If you are a Fawad fan, his meager presence and sketchy role would infuriate you. There is a paucity of Aishwarya Rai Bachchan also in the plot. She looks svelte and extremely fetching. And her character spouts poetry with arresting allure. But her presence in Ayaan’s life is never ratified beyond a scratch-level attraction.

It is not that these characters are not capable of deeplevel breathing. It’s only the director who keeps them afloat on the surface of a very blue, very tranquil, very scenic ocean. The scenic invariably overpowers the cynic in Johar’s cinema. He loves the good things in life and dislikes the thought of the make-up being washed by tears of desolation.

Consequent­ly, we see the characters in ADHM not as individual­s but an amalgamati­on of the surface beauty that Karan accumulate­s in his vision and invests on the screen in the hope that the audience finds a centre to the placid conflicts. IANS

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