EMI Review – Trailer

  • Director :Saurabh Kadra
  • Producer : Sunil Shetty
  • Cast : Sanjay Dutt,Arjun Rampal,Malaika Arora,Ashish Chowdhry,Neha Uberoi,Urmila Matondka

3 click here to View Trailer

Sattar (Sanjay Dutt), owner of Good Luck Recovery Agency, is the saviour and the solution for all those caught in the debt trap. From Bhaigiri to business to politics to social work — that’s how Sattar wants to progress in life. He has already graduated from Bhaigiri to business and is now eager to jump into politics.

Most sought after by banks, telecom companies and various multinationals, today his Good Luck Recovery Agency is a leading recovery agency. Sattar follows a simple rule when it comes to his business — loann liya hai to chukana padega.

But will Sattar succeed in using this simple principle when dealing with characters and cases like Anil-Shilpa (Aashish Chowdhary-Neha Uberoi), Chandrakant-Arjun (Kulbhushan Kharbanda), Ryan-Prerna (Arjun Rampal-Malaika Arora Khan) and Prerna (Urmila Matondkar)?

Money crunch? Need a house? Looking at a car? Wanna travel abroad? Pick up a loan for just about everything today. The pesky calls at odd hours, the sweet talk and rosy picture painted by financial institutions, before you pick up a loan — EMI picks up incidents from real life. Interesting!

But EMI does a somersault as it deviates from fact to fiction and follows the beaten path in its second half. And that’s when the film slips. While the writing clearly lacks punch in the post-interval portions, a few scenes do register an impact, courtesy Sanju.

Director Saurabh Kabra’s choice of the subject in perfect, but the writing gives away. Chirantan Bhatt’s music is strictly okay. Dialogues are strong at places.

After a lacklustre performance in Kidnap, Sanju is in elements in EMI. Remove him from the film and the movie would fall to abysmal levels. Arjun Rampal is natural. Urmila doesn’t really get scope. Malaika looks alluring, that’s it, and Aashish Chowdhary and Neha Uberoi don’t look too believable. Kulbhushan Kharbanda stands out.

It’s the goons, the Bhai’s henchmen, who add spice to the goings-on, especially Manoj Joshi, Snehal Dabhi and Dayashankar Pandey.

On the whole, EMI has its share of interesting moments, but they are few and far between. Disappointing!

Verdict: One and a half stars





Got something to say?





Sponsored Links

VC

Subscribe to Email Updates

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

FilmyFair Archives

Search for news