Chillar Party Movie| Bollywood Movie| Salamn Khan Production| Chillar Party Review Movies 2011
Chillar Party Movie, Chillar Party Movie Review, Chillar Party review, Bollywood update, Latest releases, Bollywood movie releases this week 2011, Movie releases this week, Hindi Movies.
Chillar party cast, Chillar party crew.
Salman Khan Productions, Chillar Party released 8th July 2011.
Written and directed by the duo of Vikas Bahl and Nitesh Tiwari and bankrolled by UTV Spotboy, Chillar Party got superstar Salman Khan so excited that he came on board as co-producer well after the film had got off the starting blocks. Great judgment – Chillar Party is indeed a film worth backing every which way.
It moves from the light-hearted to the thought-provoking and from the rib-tickling to the tear-jerking without losing its equilibrium.
As Chillar Party opens, we are introduced one by one to the feisty gang of innocents around whom the plot revolves. It is probably as adorable a gallery of characters as any you will ever encounter in a Bollywood movie.
The child actors are outright naturals. Don’t be surprised if many of these names crop up on film credits for years to come.
The Chillar Party boys live in Chandan Nagar colony, a residential complex that is shaken up somewhat when Fatka, a spunky boy who washes cars for a living, arrives in their midst with a canine companion, Bhidu.
Fatka and his dog are outsiders in more ways than one – they belong to the wrong side of the social divide – but after the initial run-ins with the boys of Chandan Nagar, he and his pooch are accepted as an integral part of the chillar party.
But, especially for the dog, life isn’t quite as simple as it might seem to these little pranksters: a mean-minded politician decides that the locality is in need of being swept clean of stray mutts and Bhidu is instantly targeted. The boys swing into action and launch a ‘save Bhidu’ battle in the face of grave odds.
This is a confrontation in the classic good-pitted-against-evil mould, and it plays out to great effect on different levels: children versus adults, self-seekers versus do-gooders and, above all, the uplifting power of innocence and genuine emotion up against the vitiating force of corrosive cynicism
Chillar party cast, Chillar party crew.
Salman Khan Productions, Chillar Party released 8th July 2011.
Written and directed by the duo of Vikas Bahl and Nitesh Tiwari and bankrolled by UTV Spotboy, Chillar Party got superstar Salman Khan so excited that he came on board as co-producer well after the film had got off the starting blocks. Great judgment – Chillar Party is indeed a film worth backing every which way.
It moves from the light-hearted to the thought-provoking and from the rib-tickling to the tear-jerking without losing its equilibrium.
As Chillar Party opens, we are introduced one by one to the feisty gang of innocents around whom the plot revolves. It is probably as adorable a gallery of characters as any you will ever encounter in a Bollywood movie.
The child actors are outright naturals. Don’t be surprised if many of these names crop up on film credits for years to come.
The Chillar Party boys live in Chandan Nagar colony, a residential complex that is shaken up somewhat when Fatka, a spunky boy who washes cars for a living, arrives in their midst with a canine companion, Bhidu.
Fatka and his dog are outsiders in more ways than one – they belong to the wrong side of the social divide – but after the initial run-ins with the boys of Chandan Nagar, he and his pooch are accepted as an integral part of the chillar party.
But, especially for the dog, life isn’t quite as simple as it might seem to these little pranksters: a mean-minded politician decides that the locality is in need of being swept clean of stray mutts and Bhidu is instantly targeted. The boys swing into action and launch a ‘save Bhidu’ battle in the face of grave odds.
This is a confrontation in the classic good-pitted-against-evil mould, and it plays out to great effect on different levels: children versus adults, self-seekers versus do-gooders and, above all, the uplifting power of innocence and genuine emotion up against the vitiating force of corrosive cynicism
Comments
Post a Comment