AKA www.indiafm.com
   
 
 
 News  l  Features  l  Top 100 Movies  l  Trailers & Clips  l  Reviews  l  Previews  l  Movie Calendar  l  VFX  l  Awards  l  User Quizzes  l  Never-Ending Quiz  l  Showtimes
 
Phoonk (August 22, 2008)

 
 Movie Preview
 Cast & Crew
 First Look
 Movie Stills
 On the Sets
 Parties & Events
 Wallpapers
 Screensavers
 Articles
 Trailers
 Videos
 Audio/Songs Listing
 Music Review
 User Music Reviews
 External Music Review
 Movie Review
 User Movie Reviews
 External Movie Review
 DVD Review
 Awards
 Censor Details
 Box Office India
 Box Office Overseas
 Quizzes
 Trivia
 Bloopers
 Website
 Buy DVD/VCD
 Showtimes & Ticketing
 Fanclub
 
 
  User Movie Reviews  

Write Your Own ReviewAverage Rating: 2.79
By Rehana M, August 23, 2008 - 10:00 IST Add to my Trusted circleAdd to my not Trusted circle
3 of 10 people found this review helpful

Five minutes into Phoonk you wonder why it isn’t called Ram Gopal Varma Ki Phoonk. Every scene, every dialogue and every character in Phoonk is something that you have seen many times over in many other RGV films. The jumping-out-of-your-skin background score of Bhoot, the ominous feeling of an unseen terror of Raat and even the central character of a child plagued by evil forces in Vaastu Shastra, Phoonk evokes a strong sense of deja vu. Which may well have been fine but for the fact that nostalgia isn’t always a good thing. Phoonk may well be a tribute to earlier RGV films — even a bits-and-pieces remake of some — but it has nothing of its own to offer.

With black magic as its central theme, Phoonk traces the trials and tribulations of a family whose young daughter falls prey to the evils of witchcraft and jadootona. With the wafer-thin plot not having the steam to even trudge through the first few reels, the director relies on everything else to drag us through the rest of the film. Crows, owls, black cats, strange characters that seem to pop out from nowhere, ordinary household objects becoming sinister vehicles of terror, camera jumpstarts, the play of light and shade... too much of Phoonk goes into building a sense of foreboding.

But at no point of time does Phoonk make you jump up in your seat or shut your eyes in fright. And for a film that touts itself to be the scariest ever (at least in Bollywood), this definitely isn’t good news.

Besides Raat and Bhoot, Phoonk also revisits some other horror films, but needless to say never quite manages to recreate their brilliance. So the spirit-possession scene which gave one goosebumps in The Exorcist (“It is the scariest film I have seen,” RGV has confessed) is at best a two-minute dangle in the air in Phoonk, and the toy that wreaked so much havoc in Child’s Play is but a silent spectator in the RGV scheme of things.

The largely unspectacular performances make Phoonk an even more ordinary film. Kannada star Sudeep contorts his face in every possible way, but remains as wooden as ever.

Child actor Ahsaas Channa is too adult in expression and too studied in her performance to evoke any kind of sympathy from the audience. And small screen vamp Ashwini Kalsekar’s loud act is even worse than Nisha Kothari’s in Aag. Reach out for your ear plugs to combat Amar Mohile’s music score.

Ram Gopal Varma had promised a briefcase full of cash to the viewer brave enough to sit through Phoonk in an empty hall. Can we at least get a briefcase for suffering yet another RGV horror show?



Would you recommend this movie to your friend: No

User Movie Rating: 0.5

Was this review helpful?  

[ Read what other surfers have to say about this movie ]
Bookmark and Share
 

 
BOLLYWOOD SEARCH
 
 


[ Contact Us ][ Feedback ][ Privacy ][ Advertise ][ Add to Favorites ][ BrandingBrands.net ][ Hungama.com ][ HungamaMobile.com ][ GamingHungama.com ]

To get in touch with us, call on +91-22-24903344 or fax us at +91-22-24903355.