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Hum Tum
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Directed by Kunal Kohli
Karan (Saif Ali Khan) is a cartoonist and a self-styled ladies' man. His daily comic, "Hum Tum," playfully explores the battle of the sexes. On a plane from Delhi to New York, he sits next to Rhea (Rani Mukherjee), and she doesn't seem the least bit interested in him. His feeble attempts at flirting go nowhere, but when they have a stopover in Amsterdam, she agrees to spend a few hours exploring the city with him. Karan quickly learns he has little in common with the feisty but proper Rhea, but he won't give up. He ends their contentious time together with an unwelcome kiss. Rhea is outraged and storms off, but Karan insists they'll meet again. And he's right. Months later in New York, he spots her in the park, and she causes a scene with his girlfriend. They don't see each other again until three years later, when Karan is helping his mother plan a wedding that turns out to be Rhea's. They bicker again, but this time, they part on good terms. Years later in Paris, Karan is visiting his father (Rishi Kapoor), when he runs into Rhea again. He learns from Rhea's mother (Kiron Kher) that a tragedy has befallen the girl, and he sets out to help her reclaim her positive outlook on life. Sensing that she needs to be with a straight-laced, boring guy, he conspires with Rhea's mother to fix her up with his shy best friend, Mihir (Jimmy Shergill). Things don't go as planned, and Karan and Rhea find themselves forced to confront their feelings for each other. Former film critic Kunal Kohli wrote and directed Hum Tum, his second feature. The score is by Jatin-Lalit, with lyrics by Prasoon Joshi. The film features animated sequences and a few surprise "guest appearances." ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Critics may call Hum Tum a rip-off of When Harry Met Sally, forgetting perhaps how much that film owed to Woody Allen's work. Buoyed by charming performances and a surprisingly mature romantic story line, Kunal Kohli's film overcomes minor deficiencies in its score to succeed as a fine Bollywood musical. While the addition of cutesy animated sequences breaks up the flow of the movie, without adding much insight, these segments do offer insight into the work and mindset of the cartoonist, Karan (Saif Ali Khan), the film's male lead. The musical numbers are fairly lackluster by Bollywood standards, and the addition of a few pseudo hip-hop catch phrases and rapping, increasingly common in these films, doesn't help. Still, the numbers are generally well conceived, at least, on a visual level. A musical sequence before Rhea's (Rani Mukherjee) wedding is frothy fun, and the London-set "Chak De," with its background chorus of Brit kids, has a bouncy appeal. There are a few clever in-jokes that longtime Bollywood fans will appreciate. For example, Rishi Kapoor, who plays Karan's playboy photographer dad, starred in Bobby, the film from which Kiron Kher's character (Rhea's traditional mom) takes her nickname. Kher and Kapoor deliver wonderfully warm and comic supporting turns. Saif Ali Khan, who looks kind of like an Indian Gael GarcĂ­a Bernal, balances comedy and drama with unusual subtlety and grace, while Mukherjee, with a sexy rasp in her voice, makes an engaging romantic foil and expertly conveys Rhea's growing maturity over the course of the film. That maturity is matched by the film's relative emotional honesty. While it's sweetly romantic, Hum Tum gratifyingly avoids melodrama. All the major characters are essentially likeable and believable, and the hero doesn't even get beaten up. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide
 

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