Ghajini, AR RahmanT-Series



It may be that one of Bollywood’s most respected actors, Aamir
Khan, known for his studious portrayal of characters and his keen eye
for original scripts, has finally been influenced by Hollywood. Ghajini
is the story of a man who wakes up to find his girlfriend dead and his
short-term memory frayed. So, like Guy Pearce in Memento, he takes to
tattooing questions and notes on himself to figure it all out. The film
has been afforded the best of Bollywood talent when it comes to the
soundtrack, however.

Unfortunately, in spite of the music
director AR Rahman and singers such as Sonu Nigam it is at best soft,
bearable, sincere but mediocre. That is not to say the music is bad.
Given the amount of uninspired scores the industry churns out every
week, Sonu Nigam’s haunting rendition of Guzarish with Javed Ali is
lovely. Shreya Ghoshal’s playful take on Latoo (A Dazed State) is fun
with Rahman turning to a mix of tango to deliver a danceable track on
the album. Ghajini is Rahman’s fourth soundtrack release this year, and
for a man who is mostly known as a musical prodigy, this has been a
fantastic year, with releases such as Jodhaa Akbar and Jaane Tu Ya
Jaane Na, which have set musical benchmarks. But Ghajini, with all its
promise, fails to deliver just the right emotional slant that is needed
for a film with so much energy and acting prowess.


sbhattacha...@thenational.ae



http://www.thenational.ae/article/20081224/ART/452995397/1007/rss







Krish.



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