Movie Review - Dobaara: See Your Evil by Suhel Johar
Despite 100
years of Indian cinema horror is sadly one of the most overlooked genres in
Bollywood with most films on offer consisting of whatever forgetful or ridiculous
plot line the Bhatts (during the 70s and 80s it used to be the Ramsays who were
associated with the genre) have cooked up that week. Prawaal Raman’s Dobaara: See Your Evil, an official remake
of Mike Flanagan’s acclaimed Oculus,
is not any better than those. Incidentally, the film is part of a three-picture
deal between Relativity Media, B&U Television Network, and Balaji
Telefilms, which also includes remakes of the films The Best Of Me and 3 Days To
Kill along with Oculus.
Dobaara: See Your Evil is set in England and as the story
goes Natasha Alex Merchant(Huma Qureshi) and Kabir Alex Merchant(Saqib Saleem )
are siblings who live a separated life due to a tragedy that has happened in
the past. She recalls her childhood with her family with her father Alex
Merchant (Adil Hussain) and her mother
Lisa (Lisa Ray) and their pet Rambo. Things are hunky-dory till the father
brings home a mirror which is said to be haunted. One fine day in a rage of
fear, Adil shoots Lisa and in turn Saqib shoots Adil. Natasha strongly believes
that it is the mirror which was responsible for all happenings. The
brother-sister duo reunite after a decade to destroy the haunted mirror but the
mirror is well prepared in advance and knows how to protect itself.
The film is ineptly
executed and the purpose of making the film remains unfathomable. The film is
set in England, and has not a single Indian reference point that connects it
with our experiences. No social or cultural adaptation has been attempted.
Dobaara: See Your Evil does have an interesting first half
however it is not at all scary as projected in the trailer. The performances by
the lead actors make the film interesting however the film lacks engaging
narration in some aspects. Some of the interesting episodes have been badly presented.
One couldn’t initially make out if Alex Merchant was possessed or schizophrenic.
The post interval episodes convince you that the film is a psychological
thriller.
The second
half of the film too has been loosely executed and will leave the audience
confused. Many of the interesting episodes
have been clearly
ignored and the
major plot has
been sidelined. The performances by the lead actors drive the
film completely. The pre-climax events make the film interesting and the climax
is completely predictable.
Writer-director
Prawaal Raman fails to make Dobaara: See Your Evil into
an interesting horror film as the film lacks scary content. In fact, Dobaara: See Your Evil can be called a
thriller instead of a horror film. The story of the film is interesting and well
written but Raman’s screenplay looks loose while his dialogues are okay.
Cinematography by Anuj Dhawan
is a major asset of the film. Editing by Hakeem Azeez and Nipun Gupta is decent.
Arko Pravo Mukherjee’s music is okay. Baxkground score by Avedis Ohanian and
Aditya Trivedi is effective but the decibel levels of the background score needed
to checked at several places.
Performance wise
Adil Hussain has been exceptional in the film, almost flawless. Lisa Ray has
been decent and apt for the role. Saqib Salem is impressive. Huma Qureshi is
just about average. Madalina Bellariu is iconvincing as the spirit of the
mirror, Anna. All the other actors do as required.
On the
whole, Dobaara: See Your Evil is
dull, forgettable and just exhausting.
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