'Money Hai..." - sometimes funny, sometimes drab
Ratings: **
Give this film a chance. "Money Hai To Honey Hai" has a
certain sincerity of purpose and a rather sturdy narrative that serves
the comic purpose until interval.
But that's when the pace slackens, the interest-level droops and
the chuckles drop drastically to make way for a touching and simple
climax that tells us it's okay to be ordinary and that living is about
letting your dreams run free.
Choreographer Ganesh Acharya's earlier directorial effort "Swami"
was a well-intended narrative gone awry due to a story-telling inertia.
But this time Acharya is on surer ground. And it's got little to with
the Mauritian outdoors and the sun-kissed beaches the film boasts
of.
"Money Hai..." soaks you in its warmth, but it's finally
a failed comedy - albeit an honourable failure.
Seldom have you seen a less noisy comedy in recent times. The background
sounds are kept at a minimum and for once the characters don't scream
inanities and double meanings at one another.
The plot about six incorrigible losers who get a chance in life when
a wacky millionaire (played by Prem Chopra) makes the Losers Inc.
- a chance they can't refuse.
Some of the tracks in the plot are truly funny. Hansika Motwani as
a tv icon who wants to break away from her weepy Bahu image on a long-running
soap is surprisingly in command over the rites of screen excesses.
Hansika's hammy acting is so purposely pitched at an extravagant
decibel you can't but laugh.
Upen Patel's toy-boy act with Archana Puransingh is also hilarious.
The rest of the comic act swings from rib-tickling to drab.
A remarkable aspect of "Money Hai To Honey Hai" is the
choreography - a field where Ganesh Acharya excels. The music and
dances in this film have a frisky and flighty flavour - very outdoors,
very sexy and different.
And it's not just Govinda who gets to shake a leg to an original
beat. Every actor swings in to a freewheeling groove.
Upen and Hansika pull out all stops. And Celina Jaitley, who plays
a fashion designer who dreams of making clothes for the working class,
tugs at the heart.
The story is basically of dreamers coming together to assert their
yearnings in ways that are sometimes interesting and sometimes listless.