Bollywood Movie “Yeh Saali Zindagi” is Thriller hindi film, directed by Sudhir Mishra and produced by Cine Raas and Sudhir Mishra. Lead roles are played byIrrfan Khan and Chitrangda Singh. Other cast are Arunoday Singh, Aditi Rao Hydari, Sushant Singh, Saurabh Shukla,Yashpal Sharma, Vipin Sharma, Prashant Narayan, Vipul Gupta
Sometimes something kill your life, something save your life, sometimes Love make your life, or love destroy your life. Arun (played by Irrfan Khan) loves Priti (played by Chitrangda Singh) and want to save her life, but she loves Shyam. Meanwhile, Young Gangster Kuldeep (Arunoday Singh), who is on his last jobs when his wife is sacred to walk out on him, thought she is leaving for another man. Priti caught in fight, and Arun save her life, he take risk for everything, but she still love with another person. Some dons come from Bankkok, fight continue.. climax is who gets Girl and who get money? Can you guess this? [Im
Anees Bazmee seems to be re-visiting familiar terrain with his new film. Thank You is heavily inspired by his earlier comic caper, No Entry, where Salman Khan had the onerous task of curing a motley group of errant husbands from their chronic infidelity. This time, it is Akshay Kumar who wields the baton -- or is it the flute -- to underscore the sanctity of the institution of marriage. Is this a case of playing safe for the director who has recently burned his hands at the box office or is it a drought of story ideas that seems to be Bollywood's biggest scourge?
Repetition notwithstanding, Thank You ends up as timepass fare, although it isn't as rollicking as No Entry. The first half of the film seems to be an exercise in nothingness and has you fidgeting in your seat as you try to look for the rare laughs in a script that is supposed to be funny. The bit-on-the-side sequences of the three husbands are hardly hilarious nor does the fuming wives club set the screen ablaze with hysteria. It is only in the second half that the film acquires form and substance and has you grinning at certain goof-ups. Akshay Kumar's elaborate plans to set the three marriages straight provides scope for actors like Irrfan Khan and Suneil Shetty to kick up a bit of fun, although Bobby Deol has hardly any humour tailored into his role. By and large, he remains dour and angry as he begins to suspect his sweet wife Sonam of adultery. The girls, on their part, mostly remain cosmetic with Sonam looking terribly out of sync, Rimmi not being allowed to play her feisty self and Celina being forced to do the disappearing act for a large part of the film.
So what's funny about Thank You? It's the guys who reiterate the worn-out cliche that fidelity isn't an intrinsic part of male physiology. Add to this the high production values -- glitzy locales, jazzy styling -- and Pritam's pop numbers and you have a film that can be an average weekend getaway. Nothing more, not even Mallika Sherawat's item number.
Written and directed by Sohail Khan, Maine Dil Tujhko Diya has the technical finesse and an overdose of stylishly pictured action sequences featuring Sohail. Yet the film ends up as a low-key fare due to the absence of an interesting storyline.
Based on the oft-repeated story of two lovers rebelling against the parental opposition, the film is a mish mash of several Bollywood hits. The script is riddled with mushy dialogues that completely lose their significance due to repeated use.
Maine Dil Tujhko Diya merely drags in the first half, which is full of puerile romantic sequences showing Sohail as the 'protector' of Sameera from the bad guys. The narrative gathers pace post interval with the entry of Sanjay Dutt in a negative role.
The second half particularly boasts of catchy sequences like the battle of brawns between Sohail and Rajpal Yadav.
Sohail, who makes his acting debut with the film, is seen flaunting his beefcake physique throughout the film rather than bringing an emotive sensitivity to his role. He sure doesn't have much of a career as an actor.
Debutante Sameera Reddy just about manages to play the subjugated daughter of an overprotective father. Her facial expressions are bland and her diction needs much sprucing.
Still, Maine Dil Tujhko Diya is worth a watch chiefly because of its glossy look and the presence of fresh faces. To boot is Sanjay Dutt's riveting portrayal of underworld gangster Bhaijaan, a performance that stands out among the pallid performances by the leading starcast.