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Cocktail 2 Review: A sluggish revamp of a tale undeserving of a retelling.

  Cast: Shahid Kapoor, Kriti Sanon, Rashmika Mandanna, Tiku Talsania, Neelu Kohli, Kannan Arunachalam, Suparna Marwah Directed by: Homi Ad...


 

Cast: Shahid Kapoor, Kriti Sanon, Rashmika Mandanna, Tiku Talsania, Neelu Kohli, Kannan Arunachalam, Suparna Marwah


Directed by: Homi Adjania

 

Music by: Pritam


Rating: 2.5/5


Homi Adajania’s films have this specific feel to them that’s hard to come across in Bollywood: the laid back summer aesthetic that both Finding Fanny and Cocktail, and even Angrezi Medium, boasted off, that seem so close to Éric Rohmer’s style — including the lengthy conversations as well, albeit Adajania’s dialogues don’t possess the same nuance or the depth that Rohmer’s possessed — yet so distant (albeit, its kind of audacious of me to assume that they’re on the same wavelength, or were made for, even remotely, the same reasons). 

 

Whilst the dialogues in Cocktail (2012) didn’t feel sluggish or forced to the extent that the ones in Cocktail 2 do, the dialogues in both the films aim to achieve the same moral high ground that’s explicitly rooted in the conservative tradition. Both the films, quite sluggishly, come to the same point: the girl who parties is the immature one, whilst the one who’s a little more “homely” and “boring” is the mature one, hence making the latter the perfect candidate for marriage; this messaging in particular, is what drags the film down eventually, as everything that takes place is forced to work around this conservative ideology, and the measures Adajania takes to make this as explicit as possible is quite jarring: the party girl wears shorter clothes and is often seen is bikinis and has had tons of purely physical relationships, whilst the other one is never seen in short clothes (an obscene thing by conservative standards), and hasn’t had many (if any other than the current one) relationships. The party girl is carefree with seemingly no aim in life, whilst the “better" one has a job, is good with finances and has a clear aim in life. This stark and dumb contrast is what kickstarts the drama: the clash of two ideologies, or, more aptly put, the clash between an ideology and the caricature of what it thinks the opposite ideology embodies. This was explicit in the first one, where Deepika Padukone creates a scene after getting drunk and Diana Penty is the one who soothes her (if she’s more maternal, how on earth can she not be the better one!); and in this, Kriti Sanon is quite literally an alcoholic (who never seems to get drunk?) while Rashmika Mandanna isn’t seen drinking more than once (maybe twice). And Shahid Kapoor — around whom the female leads’ lives revolve — is portrayed as this saintly figure, who is the epitome of what a “man” should be.

 

The jokes, like the first one, don’t really land and come off as awkward (especially since the characters are well into their 30s, and the dialogues sound extremely adolescent), but in this, feel forced as well. The entire progression of the plot feels forced and unnatural, and Shahid Kapoor’s character is written as extremely stupid and one who can’t read the room or decode expressions, and isn’t fleshed out at all. The female leads on the other hand are better fleshed out (sure), but they’re extremely childish in the way they act and speak. The direction is not good either; it feels unfocused and rushed, and aimless: the establishing shots of Sicily look like they’re pulled straight out of a YouTube vlog, and compiled it in the most passable fashion possible. Add to that the very unnecessarily sluggish pace the film adopts, and it makes it a truly boring experience to get through. Add to that the fact that this is quite literally the same film from 14 years ago in its themes, and more or less, the plot, just slightly changed, which is enough to make it seem new and modern, and its an unfulfilling experience along with a boring one.

 

After a decade and a half together, Diya and Kunal’s relationship is shaken when Ally, an old friend, re-enters their lives. What begins as a plan between two women spirals into chaos, triggering hilarious, emotional rollercoaster none of them saw coming.

 

By Ravit Mishra

 

 

 

 

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