Thursday, November 29, 2018

The Dark side of life: Mumbai City Full Reviews

Film: The Dark side of life: Mumbai City
Cast: Mahesh Bhatt, Kay Kay Menon, Neha Khan, Alisha Khan, Avii Pardasni, Deepraj Rana, Nikhil Ratnaparkhi, Jyoti Malshe, Gul Hameed
Director: Tariq Khan
Rating: * **


The Dark Side of Life: Mumbai City, is an annal on the dull shadows that frequent the general population who seek the city for their sustenance. About people who are pushed to the verge of sadness while doing combating passionate and budgetary issues, this film endeavors to concentrate on issues of forlornness, despondency, suicide, psychological wellness and mutual holding in an amicable way. It's a true benevolent exertion however the narrating is somewhat sideways and seems thought up. Executive Tariq Khan's endeavors to produce a socially pertinent dramatization is respectable regardless of whether not in fact sound.

The lead characters have been produced to fit into explicit 'types' living in the city. There's Stock dealer Sumit Balsaria (Kay), Parul (Jyoti Malshe), Insurance Agent Anand (Nikhil Ratnaparkhi), Cop Warren Lobo (Deepraj Rana), Wannabe Singer Prince (Avii Pardasni), Actress Kadambari Chauhan (Sayed Gul), a high support 'princess' Kavya (Neha Khan), Muslim draining heart Zulfikar Hussain (Mahesh Bhatt) and Meer Hassan (Irfanouz Zaman). Sooner or later their lives cross and we get a look at a more extensive picture – one that sends its shared concordance and mental prosperity objectives with truthfulness. Sadly the sharpness and sympathy are to a great extent missing.

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The style and structure seems propelled by Hollywood, yet the assumption and play on feelings are unadulterated Bollywood. The cinematography and exhibitions are essentially messy. Mahesh Bhatt and Kay hold their heads up however. The composing is altogether pointless with characters spoken to a great extent by their psychological pains. Mumbai is a minor setting. So the film is less about Mumbai and more about the characters and their absence of versatility. What's more, the consummation, however well implied, is somewhat long winded and along these lines unpalatable.

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