Apr 26, 2016 02:57 PM
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Recouping from the psyche desensitizing strike of Kyaa Kool Hain Hum 3 and Mastizaade was sufficiently hard, now groups of onlookers need to manage yet another lethal blow in Santa Banta. Watching Santa Banta will leave viewers asking important inquiries. Were Santa Banta jokes so terrible that they were great? Did they never at any point make us chuckle?
That is the impact of this film which takes after two-useful in vain Punjabis - Santa(Boman Irani) and Banta(Vir Das) - who are gone off as mystery specialists. Sent set for salvage the Indian High Commissioner of Fiji, the numb-skulls court inconvenience reliably however the resulting circumstances once in a while make you chuckle not to mention draw a generous giggle.
The Sikhs, who at an opportune time are charmed with descriptors, for example, "dilwale" and "khushmijaaz", will be mooched in the wake of watching this film for it makes them show up the unfunniest individuals to be around with. The Nepalis aren't saved either as Johnny Lever plays Choosa, a wannabe hoodlum who wears a skirt, a silly mustache and is yet clearly mixed up for Bahadur the guardian. Vijay Raaz gets the chance to present the one noteworthy joke of the film. A round Ram Kapoor is a sweat-soaked collectibles merchant, who makes viewers miracle is Fiji truly that hot and where his make-up man was the point at which he was generally required. Neha Dhupia shouts her lungs out, maybe venting her disappointments on being a piece of a drag of a film.
Poor Lisa Hayden takes her a player in a mystery operator so truly that she overlooks this is a comic drama. In any case, given that nothing about this film is even remotely amusing, you can't point the finger at her. Irani and Das stand out as sore thumbs as two Sikh amigos, attempting to elevate the procedures. It's not by any stretch of the imagination their issue for separated from awful throwing, the film has a terrible script with jokes that fall level. Be that as it may, it comes with the odd cautioning sign. "Principle toh pagal ho jaaoongaa, " says one baffled character. It is much the same as what the gatherings of people will feel in the wake of watching this film.