Rama Rama Kya Hai Drama
Director:
Chandrakant Singh
Producer:
Surendra Bhatia, Rajan Prakash
Starring:
Neha Dhupia,Rati Agnihotri, Anupam Kher, Khurana, Rajpal
Yadav, Aashish Chaudhary, Amrita Arora, Mona Thiba,
Sanjay Mishra, Razzak Khan, Allan Kapoor, Zia Biswas
Music:
Siddharth, Suhas
Lyrics:
Kumaar
You
know that feeling you get while undergoing molar surgery
or when you have a head on collision with another
vehicle while driving down a dark road? You get the same
dreaded feeling of disgusted disbelief while seeing "Rama
Rama Kya Hai Drama".
This movie is a piece of putrid tripe masquerading as
mirth and camouflaged as comedy. At the end of this
dreadfully droll drama, you look around and ask: "Why
me?"
"Rama Rama Kya Hai Drama" could be a contender for the
trophy of the worst comedy ever made in India. The lines
that the two couples, Rajpal Yadav-Neha Dhupia and
Ashish Chowdhary-Amrita Arora, throw at one another make
you question the institution of marriage.
The plot is intensely anti-marriage. Perhaps the
director or writer doesn't believe in it, but does he
believe in cinema? The awry proceedings try hard to
convince us that there are no rules governing the genre
of comedy. Sure, but show us at least one genuine moment
of humour in this homage to bilge.
Rajpal plays a man who is acutely unhappy with his wife
and runs around on a
fantasy
binge, imagining other people's wives and girlfriends to
be his own. Ashish, poor guy, looks constipated while
Amrita Arora, who plays a hi-fi harridan, shrieks at him
for imagined trespasses.
All this helter-skelter chaos of comedy would have been
mildly amusing if the director had cared to even borrow
a chapter or two from the protocol of comedy.
Director Chandrakant seems inspired by B.R. Chopra's "Pati
Patni Aur Woh". We even get a reference to that lovable
and naughty comedy, slipped into the domain of Rajpal's
domesticity on a television screen.
Regrettably, the director has neither the sense nor the
sensitivity to bring that sparkle which makes a sex
comedy a beehive of chortles.
The buzz, if any, is in the screenwriter's head as he
puts together episodes from badly written stand-up comic
acts on marriage.
While Rajpal's habitual hilarity fails to carry the
show, a talented actor like Anupam
Kher is reduced to a parodic prop in this ode to amused
anarchy as seen through the eyes of a director who has
probably never known the difference between gags and
genuine comedy.
Technically as shoddy as it gets, the camerawork and the
sets remind us of a washed-out village that has been
plundered by a particularly uncontrollable wild bull.
Overall, the movie is a big bore.
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