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Teraa Surroor movie review:Songs Are nice but where is Acting?

 
 
 
 
Critic's            Rating 2.0
Avg. Readers'  Rating 1.5
 
Cast:Himesh Reshammiya, Farah Karimaee, Naseeruddin Shah, Kabir Bedi, Shekhar Kapur, Monica Dogra, Shernaz Patel
 
Director:Shawn Arranha
 
GenreThriller / 1 h 46 min / UA
 
Story: Raghu (Himesh Reshammiya) does the right things, the wrong way. He worships Tara (Farah Karimaee) and she loves him too. However Raghu's philandering move drives her away to Ireland, where she is caught for drug peddling. Raghu believes she is innocent. Turns out, she has been framed by a mysterious man called Anirudh Brahmin. Can he rescue his girl from Dublin and nab the real culprit?

Review: On paper, Teraa Surroor sounds like an edge-of-the-seat action thriller. However, the execution is far from it. Instead of mounting tension, which is crucial for this genre, the film is inundated with umpteen songs and romantic flashbacks that eventually kill the pace and continuity. The use and abuse of infinite Slowmo sequences is another issue.

Also, one expects Himesh to entertain - be it intentionally or unintentionally. He gives brooding looks and poses, mouths dialogues in a robotic way instead. His Katrina Kaif like co-star Farah Karimaee is decent but equally drab as far as her onscreen presence is concerned.

But it's not just them. The story and direction are weak and the dialogues are repetitive. "Ireland ka lock down period bees minute hai" is harped for 20 times.

Songs are probably the film's only asset. We wish there were more originals and less recreated ones though. The cinematography and background score compliment the story. However, the unfolding of events take a tad too long, which lets down the initial build up. The climax could have been crisper. While the lead actors barely act, the bad guys over-act.

Naseeruddin Shah as always is effective in his small but significant role. Monica Dogra and Kabir Bedi stand out, while Shekhar Kapur makes an interesting cameo. Only if the rest wasn't so forgettable and monotonous. The patriotism bit too seems forced and out of place.




source:timesofindia
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