

Rudolf on Suicide rates of the world and…Īrnav badaya on Abandon veil Pratibha Patil te…īakul Patel on British Rule in India and Nazi…ĭaslondon on British Rule in India and Nazi…Ĭopywrong: Media Com… on A major newspaper steals a blo…įabian Fialho on India’s most notorious s…ġ)The information on this blog is not given for any commercial purposes. Sex Surveys and research tell us how badly India needs sex education.


And titillating audiences is a must isn’t it! What a sad compromise to play to the gallery. Such a girl wouldn’t dance to the director’s sexy number. It would have been far more believable for him to have a girlfriend who was smart, cunning and a gold-digger. He is serious, smart, a loner and something of a nerd. if she was part of a playboy’s entourage it would have been believable but Ranveer isn’t portrayed like that. I did wonder however why a rich and bright industrialist should have a stupid (steady!) girl-friend who flaunts her body at every opportunity. I wasn’t comfortable with this stereotype and didn’t find it funny. She is supposed to be funny too…because she acts like a dimwit.

A feather–headed girl-friend Malaika (Amisha Patel) hangs around him – mainly to titillate audiences. And well fate throws him into the company of four children – all orphans. This two and a half hour movie is about a rich guy, Ranveer Talwar (Saif Ali Khan) and a lonely one at that. In fact it reminded me of so many movies (both English and Hindi) that it was too tiresome to list them all here. So while TPTM may not be a copy, nothing in it seems original. But the theme, of a magical nanny who charms children, is like Mary Poppins. Kohli also denies that the movie is based on Mary Poppins and to be fair to Kohli, the story-line is different. But where the kids are concerned, I think Amisha Patel’s vulgar dance number could make them uncomfortable. Adults will not find it as entertaining as the kids. India is a far superior film, it was a superhero film which could be enjoyed equally by adults and children. In an interview to Rediff, Kohli actually compares TPTM to Mr. Why should any director make a kiddie film with this kind of scene? I wonder what the director (Kunal Kohli) was thinking of…the dance has no class, and is crass and vulgar. That dance number of hers is likely to put many a cabaret girl to shame. Her role is more suited to an adult movie. It’s Amisha Patel’s character which doesn’t fit. There is even a lecture about patriotism, civic sense and world peace! It’s got four child characters, and like many children’s films, there is magic and fantasy. The most important thing to know about Thoda Pyar Thoda Magic (A little Love, a Little Magic) is that it is a children’s film.
