![]() Music is good but Go Pagal could have been kept a little shorter. The climax is slightly stretched and especially a forced emotional drama involving Mathur’s character is boring. The only problem is that while introducing humor into this tale, Kapoor’s anchor shifts and one finds him struggling to get to the point. That’s one amazing take on Indian judicial system and how it’s usually on snooze fest.īe it, the bad lighting conditions at a court or a lawyer’s assistant presenting packages to customer saying a Gold package for 50 lacs means a sure shot clean chit from court, are small but powerful scenes that Kapoor cleverly directs. One of the best scenes is when the defense lawyer Mathur and judge Tripathi sit for dharna in the court overnight and everyone at court is seen snoring. The Kanpur-Lucknow city locations and the courtroom scenes have been well shot. In terms of direction too, Kapoor turns out to be impressive with a local setting that is easy on the eyes. His story is spot on and laden with powerful dialogues. Subhash Kapoor handles too many departments for this film such as story, direction and screenplay. Inaamulhaq has a small cameo that turns out to be an interesting twist. Considering the actor that he is, we love him for what he pulls off here too. It’s a delight to see Kumud Mishra in a negative role for a change. In the two scenes that she performs, she leaves a strong impact. Huma Qureshi is alright in her role of Jolly’s wife, Pushpa. ![]() With great ease, we see him do goofy things like dance to ‘Gulaabo’, call Alia Bhatt, Mahesh Bhatt’a greatest contribution and also resume a court session at 3 Am.Īnnu Kapoor too does a decent job as Mathur, a true Lucknowi laywer. His act of judge Sundar Lal Tripathi is beyond compare. Saurabh Shukla is the best thing that happens to this film. He particularly excels in the scenes where he has a face off in court with Annu Kapoor’s character. He fits the role perfectly and pulls off the role of transitioning from a schemer to somebody who takes justice seriously is brilliant. Jolly LLB 2 Review: Star PerformanceĪkshay Kumar is a delight as Jolly. Kapoor once again succeeds in making a film that hits the right notes with a mix of light moments and hard hitting realism. Kapoor’s sharp dialogue towards the end on the statistics of pending cases and lawyers in India is appalling. The portrayal of Indian judiciary and mainly how things progress in lower courts is quite rightly done here. ![]() His preparation is kept aside, we seem him romancing to Baawra Mann instead. Dealing with a plot that revolves around terrorism and corruption, there is much fodder for the makers to latch on to for entertainment.ĭialogues are quirky and towards the second half, they even become emotionally hard hitting.Ĭourtroom scenes are well written, except I found, the whole Manish Malhotra lehenga for the judges daughter part slightly unnecessary.Īlso, the transition from Jolly’s small time cases to handling a biggie here is not shown in details. The sequel promises to be fun affair that gets serious at the right junctures. While the first film got immense appreciation, the expectations from this one were sky high. Subhash Kapoor had taken us by surprise with Jolly LLB. Will he be able to unearth the truth is what is left to see. ![]() He is set to fight against established lawyer, Mathur (Annu Kapoor) while Sundar Lal Tripathi (Saurabh Shukla) is the judge in charge.Ī complicated case that revolves around terrorism, corruption and fake encounters becomes a tough affair for Jolly. His wife, Pushpa (Huma Qureshi) on the other hand, enjoys her drink but is immesely supportive of her husband.Īfter accidentally messing up with Hina’s (Sayani Gupta) case, Jolly’s conscience takes a beating and he decides to bring her justice. Jagdishwar Mishra aka Jolly (Akshay Kumar) is a struggling lawyer who makes his living assisting a big time Lucknow lawyer and also by taking up small cases individually. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |