Even with a compelling idea, One Night Stand remains singularly
superficial. Jasmine and her writer Bhavani Iyer, manage to whip up only
a half-baked, predictable plot ridden with clichés
Cast: Sunny Leone, Tanuj Virwani, Nyra Banerjee, Khalid Siddiqui, Ninad Kamat
Direction: Jasmine Moses D'souza
Genre: Drama
Duration: 1 hour 37 minutes
Movie Story
After a steamy night filled with passion, Urvil (Tanuj Virwani) and
Celina (Sunny Leone) return to their regular lives. He is a typical
young achiever with a lovely wife by his side, who has no idea about his
sexcapades. Celina is devotedly married to a top-notch businessman and
has the most picture-perfect family. But, Urvil cannot get her out of
his mind. He becomes an obsessive stalker who wouldn't settle for
anything less than either having her or destroying her
Review:
The first thing that will come to your mind while watching this movie:
'Is Bollywood finally growing up?' To her credit, Jasmine Moses D'souza
has dared to think out of the box. She is confident enough to show her
hero as a philandering man, her heroine as a woman who pleasures herself
in a dalliance and dares to leave it just at that. It is novel to see
one night stands as something besides being prequels to stormy love
affairs. Also, finally there is a filmmaker who can break the stereotype
and portray Sunny Leone as a perfect mother, a supportive wife and a
doting daughter-in-law. However, Jasmine and her writer Bhavani Iyer,
manage to whip up only a half-baked, predictable plot ridden with
cliches.
The narrative has its
own merits but lacks coherence. The mood changes from sultry to somber
in no time. The situations are so banal that it fails to evoke any
sympathy. Be it Urvil's marriage that goes downhill once he starts
obsessing about Celina or the impact his behavior has on her family life
and her psyche, the filmmaker doesn't spend much time elaborating
these. Naturally, the drama runs thin by the second hour. The heavy
climax speech with its feminist undertones is poorly performed. The
points raised are well made but is too preachy for liking.
Sometimes good actors do have the power to exalt a mediocre script, but both Sunny and Tanuj fail to sink their teeth deep into their characters. Their acting lacks flair. She never looks genuinely harrowed and his demeanor is far from dangerous.
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