Home / Entertainment / Bollywood News / Article / Jhootha Hi Sahi - Movie review

Jhootha Hi Sahi - Movie review

Dir: Abbas Tyrewala Cast: John Abraham, Raghu Ram, Pakhi, Alishka Varde, Manasi Scott

Listen to this article :

JHOOTHA HI SAHI
U; ROMANCE, COMEDY
Dir: Abbas Tyrewala
Cast: John Abraham, Raghu Ram, Pakhi, Alishka Varde, Manasi Scott
Rating: *1/2



WHAT'S IT ABOUT: This film tells you that love is blind. And in this case, inattentive and deaf as well. All that separates a suicidal weepie gal's confidante from her rebound guy is a stutter. And if you can believe they made a movie about that and are curious enough to know more, here goes...
Sid (Abraham) is a bookstore guy in a relationship with Kruttika (Scott), an airhostess. It isn't working out and Sid refuses to accept that it's over because he hates being single. A spree of calls meant for a suicide helpline for Indians get routed to him, thanks to a printing error. One call in particular spooks him enough to not hang up.
The girl tells of her mother killing herself. Of her sacrificing a lot for her writer boyfriend, who eventually breaks up with her. Reason enough to go jump? Well, let's ponder over that later.
She starts confiding in Sid, who listens and advises her to find new friends and spouts philosophy by an ancient Indian. She gives him her name (it's Mishka, if you care), but he doesn't give his. Convenient, wouldn't you say? She decides to call him Fidato.
After some subtle manipulation of circumstances, Fidato convinces Mishka (Pakhi) to start seeing Sid even after a bad date and then continue to date him, even after he has a forced break-up with his girlfriend... But you can never have too much of a good thing, so the lie has to die.
Question is: will that end his relationship with Ms Weepy?

WHAT'S HOT: The flick is slickly shot and you can see the effort put in art and production design. Tourism to London might probably see an upsurge if people watch this film. Performance-wise, Raghu (he plays Sid's best buddy and next-door neighbour, Omar) makes a spirited debut. He's probably the only person enjoying himself and not trying too hard to play the part. The snarky attitude and effortless sarcasm lift the otherwise zombified film. Talking about trying, John gives it his all and tries his best to get beyond his standard two and a half expressions.

How do you like the new new mid-day.com experience? Share your feedback and help us improve.

Read Next Story
Dus Tola - Movie review

Trending Stories

Latest Photoscta-pos

Latest VideosView All

Latest Web StoriesView All

Mid-Day FastView All

Advertisement