Friday, February 22, 2013

Murder 3 Movie Review




I want to confess something before starting out with this review. Sara Loren's character in this movie (Murder 3 ) has her first dialogue which goes like, "Mujhe akele aur tanha aadmiyon ki aankhon mein aansoon achhe nahin lagtey", which means "I don't like seeing tears in the eyes of alone and lonely men." These words does say a lot about the movie, doesn't it? 

Murder 3 could have been a brilliantly done movie, but what it actually transpires into is a bland, borderline comatose and what it believes is an 'official' adaptation of the Columbian thriller "La Cara Oculta" (The Hidden Face). It shows sensuality, lip locking and almost as bad dialogues as you could ever hear from a commercial movie! 

True love is perhaps the best thing one can ever find in this life, but if you do dare to cheat on your spouse, you might end up in more danger than you could imagine. Yes, that is the main plot or the premise of the movie Murder 3, Vishesh Bhatt's latest offering in the Murder franchise. Murder 3 starts off with Vikram (Randeep Hooda), who seemed to have been dumped by girl-friend Roshni (Aditi Rao Hydari). A heart-broken Vikram starts to spend most of his time drinking in the bars, and is almost ready not to ever forgive his girl-friend for what she did to her. That is where he eventually meets Nisha (Sara Loren), who lends him her shoulder to cry. Eventually, it happens; Vikram and Nisha fall in love with each other and Nisha ends up shifting into Vikram's palatial house situated on the outskirts of the city. Soon, Nisha starts to experience things, starts to hear voices, et al from the old house, made decades ago. But, she is confused as to what is actualy is. She thinks there exists some ghost in the house, but Vikram takes her all too lightly. What happens next and what secrets does the house hold is the main plot-line of Murder 3.

Where Murder falters, for me, is the fact that it has romantic songs forced in after almost every scene. These songs do not hold any real relevance to the plot, or between them at all. It is almost as if the film-maker spoiling the grip or the suspense or the drama with these unwanted songs. Performance wise, all the leading characters do a decent job; however, Randeep Hooda doesn't really live up to the expectations that perhaps the public or his fans might have had from him, especially given his earlier strong performances. Debutant director Vishesh Bhatt, though of a directing lineage has quite a lot of catching up to do is what I felt, especially his actors are almost like the sketches of what his characters should have been.

There is a strong twist at the culmination of Murder 3 which almost saves it from a bad and predictable ending, but anyways, since it is almost a copy-paste job of another movie, the credit goes to the original content and not Murder 3 in its entirety. At the end, all I can say is Murder 3 is not really one of the best offerings from the Bhatt camps. It is a one time watch, yes, but, if you ask me, placing cameras, huge sets, and copying a story doesn't really guarantee a hit. But, that's just me I believe. Not everyone in the fraternity agrees with me.

Rating: 3.5 / 5 Stars

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