• One Up Entertainment Pvt. Ltd.’s Gali Gali Chor Hai (UA) is about the problem of corruption in India and how the common man’s life is affected because of this menace. Bharat (Akshaye Khanna) lives in Bhopal with his wife, Nisha (Shriya Saran), and father, Shivnarayan (Satish Kaushik). Bharat, a straightforward and principled guy, works as a cashier in a bank and also doubles up as Hanuman in the local Ram Leela stage-play because he loves acting. Playing Lord Ram in the play is Tripathi (Amit Mistry) whose elder brother, Manku Tripathi (Murali Sharma), is the local MLA. One day, Tripathi comes to Bharat’s home, asking for a room in his house to be allowed to be used as the election office in the area for his MLA-brother because elections are just around the corner. Since Bharat’s wife is not in favour, he refuses to let Tripathi use the room. Bharat has a paying guest in Amita (Mugdha Godse).

  • Viacom 18 Motion Pictures and Burmawala Brothers’ Players (UA), the official remake of the Hollywood film, The Italian Job, is about a gold heist adventure. Charlie Mascarenhas (Abhishek Bachchan), a chartered accountant by profession, learns from a DVD he receives from Shehla, the widow of his deceased friend, Raj (Aftab Shivdasani in a friendly appearance), that gold worth Rs. 10,000 crore is going to be transported from Russia to Romania in a train. He approaches Victor Dada (Vinod Khanna), who is serving a jail sentence, and seeks his help in putting together a team to rob the gold.

  • On the whole, Jo Hum Chahein is a non-starter. It is so boring and dull that it can’t be expected to pick up after the terribly weak start.

  • On the whole, Shakal Pe Mat Ja is a poor show from start to finish and will meet with a disastrous fate.

  • On the whole, Rockstar will be loved by one section of the audience – mainly the youth in the multiplexes of the big cities. But there will also be a section – mainly the single-screen audience, masses and small-centre audience – which will find the drama dark and depressing. Given the film’s high cost on the one hand (around Rs. 60-62 crore) and its lovely start on the other, crossing the average mark shouldn’t be a problem.

  • On the whole, Miley Naa Miley Hum lacks the merits to work at the box-office. It will flop at the ticket windows.

  • On the whole, Loot is a poor fare and will fare poorly at the box-office.

  • On the whole, Damadamm! Is a dull fare which won’t do well at the box-office.

  • On the whole, Tell Me O Kkhuda does not have the merits to make any mark at the box-office.

  • On the whole, Mujhse Fraaandship Karoge is an entertaining fare for the city youth. It doesn’t have much for non-city-based audiences, single-screen cinemas and non-youth audiences. But it has plenty for the city youth. Its poor start and dull pre-Diwali days ahead are a dampener but it has the merits to pick up by strong word of mouth.

Viewing item 11 to 20 (of 65 items)