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Maruti Mera Dosst Review

| Movie Reviews > Maruti Mera Dosst |
| Producer |
Abhimanyu Singh |
| Director |
Manikya Raju |
| Music Director |
Kartik Shah |
| Cast |
Chandrachur Singh, Ritika Shrivastava, Erik A. Nanda, Sushmita Mukherjee, Murli Sharma, Vindu Dara Singh, Shahbaaz Khan |
Animation film HANUMAN triggered off a trend. It made you realize that kiddie films can stand on their feet if they tell a story that they [kids] haven watched on the numerous kiddie channels.
Like HANUMAN, MARUTI MERA DOSST is about Lord Hanuman too. This one has two kids essaying central roles, merges animation and live, has loads of computer graphics, but, for a very valid reason, it just doesn magnetise the kid or the kid in you.
Lets probe. Movies targeted at kids ought to have that certain innocence, that purity, that simplicity that zooms straight into their heart. Surprisingly, like the animation ROADSIDE ROMEO last year, MARUTI MERA DOSST also treats kids as grown ups.
The negative forces here [Sushmita Mukherjee, Murli Sharma, Shahbaaz Khan] are straight out of masala films that adults enjoy. Even the lighting of sequences as also their make up [Sushmita, Murli specifically] are straight out of scary movies. Plus, these are very strong characters [partly due to their strong performances] too.
Is this really a kiddie film? Thats one question that crosses your mind at several points of the narrative. No wonder, the censors have also passed it not with a U certificate [which shouldve been the case had it been a kiddie film], but a U/A certificate.
Rameshwari, an eight-year-old, lives in a palatial house with her doting father [Chandrachur Singh], stepmom and the stepmoms mother [Sushmita Mukherjee]. Kokoi aka the stepmoms mother has come to the palace with the evil intention of inheriting the wealth.
Kokoi tries every trick in the book to harm Rameshwari. She uses black magic and the evil monstrous Tantrik Bhakshu [Murli Sharma], who has devils and spirits as his pets. She uses her brother, a murder convict Sadhu Pahalwan [Shahbaaz Khan], but in vain. Unknown to them, Maruti [Erik Nanda] is Rameshwaris saviour and they all have to contend with and face him.
Theres no denying that MARUTI MERA DOSST has a few clapworthy sequences, but its like finding a needle in a haystack. Besides, director Manikya Raju devotes too much time to the evil forces, when, in fact, he shouldve concentrated on the kids. One of the prime reasons why HANUMAN worked was because a large number of viewers not only enjoyed the movie as also the animation quality, but also felt enriched and enlightened by the experience. Thats certainly not the case with MARUTI MERA DOSST.
Technically speaking, Manikya Raju gets it right. The lighting of several sequences - as mentioned earlier - gives a scary movie effect. The background score is apt at times, but jarring at points. Talking of music, Jai Hanuman Gyan Gun Sagar [over opening titles] is a devotional track that youve grown up listening to. But the other tracks are uninspiring.
Chandrachur Singh has nothing to do. Sushmita, Murli and Shahbaaz are fine actors, but their mannerisms are ill-suited here. The young people at the start and end are complete non-actors. The girl portraying Rameshwari is okay, but the only one who stands out is the child actor enacting the role of Maruti - Erik. Hes adorable and a complete natural as far as acting goes.
On the whole, MARUTI MERA DOSST is targeted at the kids, but is not for kids. It lacks the purity, the innocence and the simplicity associated with kiddie films and the U/A certificate will only keep a section of its target audience away.
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kakore |
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Tyagi
22/02/2010 20:02:22 |
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ram
22/10/2009 01:10:35 |
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shalmon
11/08/2009 04:08:45 |
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