Ratings
User ratings
Rating analysis
- Excellent38.1%
- Very Good4.8%
- Good33.3%
- Average9.5%
- Poor14.3%
Critics Review
Reviews
aadi_gurjar
Dil Dhadakne Do Review
rahul arohi
Dil Dhadakne Do Review
mohammad_ansari
Dil Dhadakne Do Review
aveek125@gmail.com
Dil Dhadakne Do Review
mohd_ishtiyaq
Dil Dhadakne Do Review
ketan_kevariya547
Dil Dhadakne Do Review
basem_jameel
Dil Dhadakne Do Review
imran_khan1980
Dil Dhadakne Do Review
Leena123
Look of film is rich as their characters but they behave like a typical middle class family. I…
Look of film is rich as their characters but they behave like a typical middle class family. I could have accepted it with few ones but every one!!!! Then what was the need to show them upper class!? Cruise thing was just stuffed to add some grandeur in film and it adds but nothing to add any entertainment or any good use of it in film plot except in boring way in climax. Writer and director had taken audiences for granted as if they belong to the family, whose story is being told. Lots of character confuse audience to understand the movie. There are very few emotional scenes and that too are mixed with some quirky humour so nothing comes to audience very clearly. There are few good emotional scenes, precisely shot actually, Neelam Mehara eating cake while crying, Anil Kapoor grabs Rahul Bose neck. Love track doesn't have any scene to mention. Its narrative style from the dog perspective doesn't appeal. Film bores and length makes it more boring. Performance wise Anil Kapoor and Shefali Shah as Neelam Mehra are very good. Rest are just OK. Music also bores as the lyrics.
Read more LessMeena123
Zoya Akhtar can be deservingly counted amongst the most exciting filmmakers working in the Hindi…
Zoya Akhtar can be deservingly counted amongst the most exciting filmmakers working in the Hindi film industry today. She has a novel approach, always something interesting to say, beautiful to show, without ever banking on her cast entirely to make sure her audience leaves, content. Her contributions to her films are evident, even when she manages to cast prominent actors even in the smallest of roles, splurging on the minutest details. While her miraculous debut, "Luck By Chance," was an affectionate, bravely grim and always insightful exploration of the functioning of the Hindi film industry, it was her second film, "Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara," that she made known the kind of cinema she believes in. It is classic escapist cinema; glistening and scenic locales, a barrage of good-looking people at every corner of the frame who wear fashionable clothes but are strangely alienated in their own lives. "Dil Dhadakne Do" is a contemporary rehash of the genre that Sooraj Barjatya made his decades ago, but it suffers from the same problems that "Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara" did. It has a troop of affluent but mysteriously unlikable characters who say dull things, do dull things, have dull problems and grumble throughout the film in the hopes of solving them, but all of this against the backdrop of a lovely country. It doesn't help their cases much, I'm afraid, that these problems are boringly predictable, and neither does it help our case because our narrator here is a dog. "Dil Dhadakne Do" kicks off with a voice-over explaining the milieu of each of our four protagonists, and setting up the plot that will go precisely haywire in the next 170 minutes. In the opening minutes, Akhtar cleverly stresses on the problems of each character without overdoing it, and we quickly have a clear picture of what's going on their minds. As the story progresses and finally boards a plush yacht, more and more characters join in, crowding the story as one would expect it to, but each character, each relationship is established rather skillfully. Romance -- furtive, open, expressive, subdued, developing, decaying -- is at the core of the story. People are either falling in love or out of it all over the place, and it gets on one's nerves at a point when it is hard to keep track who is chasing whom. But beside the multiple love angles here, there's also the familial problems that plague the family at the heart of all this. The family in question has a patriarch who is a millionaire but struggling to keep his company afloat, a self-made millionaire daughter who is -- I found this rather interesting -- among the world's ten best entrepreneurs as ranked by Forbes (that's a bit tall, innit?) but who is -- ouch! -- snubbed and overlooked by both her in-laws and parents, and a son who is the heir to the fortune but who wants to do nothing but ride planes. Of course, realism is not something to be found here. As mentioned before, the story follows the same trajectory that "Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara" did four years ago, only with more simplified characters. It is hard to invest into their troubles emotionally, because these are not characters whom we love or empathize with but the story develops assuming that we are already buying into their grief. That is a major blunder. Until intermission, "Dil Dhadakne Do" is predictable but reasonably diverting, and the set-up promises a potentially fun second-half. But post-intermission, the story crumbles like a sand castle in a tornado. There is a limit to how far one can stretch their story till it goes topsy-turvy, and how whiny the characters can get in successive scenes. But this limit is challenged so brashly, it becomes doubly difficult to care about anything any longer. The outcome of each parallel thread can be seen from a mile away, yet we are made to watch as each character struggles to cope with the decaying relationships in their lives. What was foreseen as a potentially amusing set-up swiftly deteriorates into a cluttered mess. Oh, where did the subtlety disappear? It vanishes completely, and everything goes -- painfully -- downhill from there. But the saving grace comes in the form of an adeptly executed scene where empowerment of women is broached. It is a shining star in the phase of the film where homilies on marriage and children are delivered at every turn. We will gladly lap it up. The performances are nothing to speak of, except Anil Kapoor and Ranveer Singh who give performances so earnest, it manages to salvage the film marginally. But what salvation can be achieved in a film that promised so much, yet achieved so little? In films that tackle dysfunctional families, it is necessary to create quirky characters that are genuinely affable and earn our sympathies, characters whom we can envision as or hope to be real people. "Dil Dhadakne Do" lacks that. And with an ending that is utterly over-the-top but thankfully not prolonged, it only becomes harder to care for these chicly-dressed but hollow mortals. This is not a bad film. It has a few bits here and there that are amusing, and a clever voice-over narration that is often introspective. But a handsomely-mounted film cannot redeem certain shortcomings. And the shortcomings are too many to turn a blind eye to. Reviving a dead genre isn't necessarily a bad idea, but it needs to be done right to be effectual. This simply is not.
Read more Lesssidkapoor24
The good things: - Visuals of Mediterranean cities, cruise, sea etc - Some good performances by…
The good things: - Visuals of Mediterranean cities, cruise, sea etc - Some good performances by Anil Kapoor, Shefali, Anushka and Priyanka What didn't work: - Story: When you make a film about the riches, the only to way to make it resonate with the not-so-riches is by showing primal, human limitations or challenges or problems. Not by highlighting the problems which are a function of them being rich at the first place - threat to status in the society, priority to money making over family etc. We have enough of our own problems to deal with, thank you! - Lackluster screenplay: Narrating a film like this from a dog's point of view makes it look silly from the word go. Pushing in a song in the second half when you should be having the audience gripped in attention. Less than convincing character arcs. - Too many characters: Adding more characters just for the sake of it does not compensate for a lame script. It just puts pressure on the audience to keep a track of who's who and how they even relate to the main story. All in all, it looks and feels like a film made by the riches for the riches, with no clue about the real problems of the world. If you have money to throw, go with family. If you have just got a bonus, go as a couple. If you are not so well off, wait for it to hit the TV screen, and watch alone, with headphones on.
Read more Lessashfaq786
Like every Zoya Akhtar movie "Dil Dhadakne Do" is perfect blend of life, family, friends, marriage,…
Like every Zoya Akhtar movie "Dil Dhadakne Do" is perfect blend of life, family, friends, marriage, business and the problems that surrounds them. The first half is an extended introduction of every character and their problems shown in a satirical manner. The post interval half is more serious and emotional. Overall it is a good and refreshing movie. The type of movie Bollywood needs. No unnecessary masala, 'herogiri' and clichés . The only thing the film lacked is good songs. The songs are not up to the mark in an otherwise good movie. If you are bored of the masala entertainers Bollywood is offering every Friday, than this is the movie for you.
Read more Less- Do Aur Do Pyaar Box Office
- Love Sex Aur Dhokha 2 Box Office
- Ameena Box Office
- Gauraiya Live Box Office
- Bade Miyan Chote Miyan Box Office
- Maidaan Box Office
- IRaH – The Immortality App Box Office
- The Lost Girl Box Office
- The Defective Detectives (English) Box Office
- Love Lies Bleeding (English) Box Office