The Sunday Guardian

Beautiful love story with high doses of drama Namaste England

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Director: Vipul Amrutlal Shah Starring: Arjun Kapoor, Parineeti Chopra, Aditya Seal, Alankrita Sahay, Satish Kaushik Vipul Shah likes to come clean. His movies are straight forward, simple and aimed at the heart. Namaste England is no exception. It bears a strong thematic resemblanc­e to Vipul’s that came 11 years ago. In both, the desi Punjabi sonof-the-soil hero makes it his business to bring his London-based wife back to her roots and her senses.

This image of the hot-headed impetuous somewhat selfish heroine suited Katrina Kaif’s haughty personalit­y in the earlier film. Parineeti Chopra is way too homely to look convincing in her Londoner’s avatar. In a way that suits the plot’s purposes, as the image of the desi girl hellbent on acquiring a British residency acquires a sense of ironic wistfulnes­s in Parineeti’s tangy personalit­y.

Param, her pure-hearted husband is played by Arjun Kapoor with an all-heart earnestnes­s. He follows his over- ambitious wife to London to get her back, ropes in a British-Asian girl Alisha(Alankrita Sahay)’s help to set up a charade that fits in snugly with the film’s main thematic thrust: don’t ruin your today in pursuit of your dreams for tomorrow.

The cast performs with sincerity that sometimes gets stagey. While Arjun and Parineeti look comfortabl­e in each other’s company, some of their romantic moments together are done with the over- cute impishness that seems way out of line. Curiously,the second leads are far more appealing and convincing. Aditya Seal as Parineeti’s trophy-husband succeeds in making his character of a spoilt NRI brat any- thing but a jerk. Considerin­g the limited time he has been provided to make his presence felt, Seal does well for himself.

Alankrita Sahay starts off as spoilt silly Saira Banu from “Purab Aur Pachchim”, a desi girl lost in a haze of western influences but quickly makes way for a more empathetic character.

Miracles, says the plot, are not impossible. Just look for them in your heart.

Ah, before we forget, Vipul squeezes in his Manoj Kumar/”Purab Aur Pachchim” moment when Arjun’s Param gets to tell a phoney firangi Indian why he will always a be a second-class citizen in England. Akshay Kumar, you will remember, did the patriotic act with impeccable conviction in

While the narrative serenades the effervesce­nt mood, a serious tone is allowed to creep in with a statement on the issue of illegal migrants in Europe. Stand-up comedian Mallika Dua plays a swanky Punjabi Londoner whose husband mops the floors on Heathrow Airport. Considerin­g the amount of cleaning up going on in India, he could just as well use that mop at home.

is beautifull­y shot by Yiannis Manolopoul­os. The film looks and feels as though it has been shot in a dreamscape. The free-floating baby-shower feeling sees the saga to its unimpeded end.Of course Param and his truant bride (now fully sobered-down) live happily ever after. Given the film’s blithe mood that isn’t a spoiler. It is the need of the hour. IANS

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