Share

Every actor has own definition of bold: Urvashi Rautela

And it has been witnessed time and again.

Advertisement

In fact, many equated this film to be an adult comedy, which did a bit better in the single screens rather than the multiplexes for the obvious reasons. The film, titled Great Grand Masti is the sequel of Grand Masti and stars the Masti boys, along with Urvashi Rautela.

Among his highs, besides the title role in “Ek Villain” (2014), we can include “Bluffmaster!” and “Heyy Babyy” and 10 films that turned out to be part of four franchises – “Masti” (2004), “Kyaa Kool Hain Hum” (2005, from which he turned down the third installment), “Dhamaal” (2007) and “Housefull” (2010).

Riteish Deshmukh, Vivek Oberoi and Aftab Shivdasani featuring Great Grand Masti Movie Review is here, just look it.

The main premise remains the same – three desperate married men are looking for some harmless masti, basically a chance to cheat on their unsuspecting wives.

No respite in sight, they decide to milk an opportunity to score, when they assume that Amar’s ancestral village has booby babes (assumption made after ogling at Amar’s maid). But they are trapped when they get to know that Shabari is a ghost who is longing for lust. This is one role that sets you apart.

A year ago was good for adult movies in India but the same couldn’t be observed. Once the truth is out that Shabri is a ghost, the film should have been a laugh-riot but it is not. Now, when you do the same thing for the third time, you are expected to deliver and they do. The plot is predictably formulaic, but it is the situations along with the inane yet perky dialogues by Madhur Sharma that make the film endurable.

The second half too is boring and fails to impress the audience. The rest of the movie is how they escape from the ghost.

If you are still reeling from the terrible experience of watching Housefull 3 and want to get some light fun this weekend, then Great Grand Masti must be on your weekend’s To Do list. While, it’s fine to whip up unpretentious sleaze fests that Kumar’s films have come to be, adding a garnish of misplaced morality on this garish gateau is forced if not ironic. Nigam Bomzan has done the cinematography and editing is handled by Sanjay Sakla. Comedy timing of Ritesh and Aftab are a treat and Urvashi is scintillating along with the other females.

Q: How was it working with a relatively new girl in Urvashi Rautela? Usha Nadkarni is louder than a loudspeaker in the film.

Advertisement

So, Meet tries to rape Amar’s mother-in-law, and she later makes out with a raunchy godman. Ketan Mangesh Karande, Meet’s brother-in-law, whenever he appears on the screen, you want to keep your eyes shut.

Far from funny Great Grand Masti comes across as nothing more than a joke on viewers