Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueSet during the India-Pakistan partition, the story of Sardar Mohammad revolves around an infant who is saved by an Indian Sikh police officer. The officer brings up the boy as his own and he... Tout lireSet during the India-Pakistan partition, the story of Sardar Mohammad revolves around an infant who is saved by an Indian Sikh police officer. The officer brings up the boy as his own and he shares a close bond with his parents, especially his mother. The boy enjoys a peaceful li... Tout lireSet during the India-Pakistan partition, the story of Sardar Mohammad revolves around an infant who is saved by an Indian Sikh police officer. The officer brings up the boy as his own and he shares a close bond with his parents, especially his mother. The boy enjoys a peaceful life until one day he finds the truth about his step parents. The discovery disturbs him and... Tout lire
- Récompenses
- 3 nominations au total
- Guddi- Colonel's daughter
- (as Harshjot Kaur)
- Ablu Bajurg
- (as Parwez Sethi)
Avis à la une
The core of this film is a story worth telling. Unfortunately, the film makers clearly have little understanding of how to tell such a story. The script presents a series of random events which barely connect and feel tedious, that tell very little about the characters, and that rely upon rather cheap theatrics and excessive emotional outpourings to make you care about characters who are otherwise superficial and one-dimensional. The first half of the film plays as a rollicking, rather unfunny comedy; the second half descends into tear-soaked, sentimental effusions which permeate every encounter, regardless of whether the tears make sense or not.
The period clothing and details wrap you in a polyester swirl of colors and patterns which become quite garish under the highly colorful lighting schemes which feature, for no discernible reason, a large number of aqua color filters.
The musical numbers are slow to emerge in this picture, strangely enough, but once they do begin, the dancing and overall stagecraft are questionable; the main actor is clearly not a skilled dancer. I enjoyed the songs in a campy sort of way, but my friend Dee thought they were boring. In my opinion, however, the songs were the best part of the movie.
I think the hardest thing to take was the lethargic pace of the film combined with the overlong, overacted scenes of endless sobbing which dominated the film's narrative. I mean, the crying was so excessive that it made American soap operas seem restrained and naturalistic by comparison. And why were they crying so much? Apparently, they had some sort of foreknowledge (divined from God?) of the end of the script, there could be no other explanation. The sobbing and overacting were so extreme that I actually found it all quite hilarious... when I wasn't falling asleep from boredom.
Most of the Bollywood films that play in the United States are exceptional examples of their genre; Americans don't tend to be subjected to the run-of-the-mill features which must dominate the industry. This piece of period claptrap was clearly an exception. It was memorably bad. I won't spoil the ending for you, but it could have been a parody, it was so ridiculously tasteless, nonsensical and drawn out. I can't recommend this piece of expensive trash because it was mostly deathly dull, but, if you do decide to subject yourself to it, be prepared... and make sure you eat before you go; they talk about food so much in the movie, it makes you hungry.
Le saviez-vous
- Bandes originalesSardar Mohammad (Title Track)
Written by Tarsem Jassar
Performed by Tarsem Jassar
Music by R Guru
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Sardar Mohammad?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 106 243 $US
- Durée2 heures 21 minutes
- Couleur