crew movie review : Film Crew, A sexy, funny and honest airline heist movie. The film addresses the audience as men who lose the ability to think after the hero reveals his assets. Tabu and Kareena’s funny comments about their age match quite well. Overall the film should be watched.
- Film : Crew (Hindi)
- Director : Rajesh A Krishnan
- Cast : Tabu, Kareena Kapoor, Kriti Sanon, Kapil Sharma, Diljit Dosanjh
- Duration : 118 minutes
- Story: When three girls struggle to keep their heads above water. What happens when they get a chance to change their lives overnight? That’s all the story.
Crew, a Hindi film from the makers of Veere Di Wedding, revolves around three air hostesses, Geeta (Tabu), Jasmine (Kareena Kapoor) and Divya (Kriti Sanon), who run their respective households and get caught in a web. Are going. Situations where the line between greed and covetousness becomes blurred.
Writers Nidhi Mehra and Mehul Suri are sure to have the talent of Tabu, Kareena and Kriti to create magic through light-hearted dialogues.
The film addresses the audience as men who lose the ability to think after the hero reveals his assets. Tabu and Kareena’s witty comments about their ages are quite matching, but overall their talent deserves a better written script.
Forming an easy bond right from the start, this trio fills the characters with sarcasm and sarcasm. But the underlying mediocrity of the script cannot be disguised by glitzy glamor and acting.
Keep praising Tabu’s comic timing and ability to create magic. When she explains a clichéd situation like the process of explaining safety instructions to her husband played by Kapil Sharma. Kriti’s natural talent for drama is commendable. But the real driving force behind this flight is Kareena Kapoor.
Kapil and Diljit Dosanjh are given very little space to make their presence felt in roles like the three-scene, one-end credits song. Shashwat Chatterjee impresses as the Mallya-like tycoon.
The entire background score is taken from Subhash Ghai’s film Khalnayak ‘Choli Ke Peeche’. But it works within the context of the film.
But Hero No. 1’s repeated use of ‘Sona Kitna Sona’ creates a stir. After a point in the tumultuous second half, it seems like the makers have left the set to focus on the beautiful women.