Another major drawback of the film is in the drivel they passed out as dialogues. It was built up as an intense romantic saga and from where I come, intense romantic sagas need to be fluid and have uniformity inspite of the upheavals that take place in regards to the story. That is a disappointment considering the premise had some potential.ĭirection: Mohit Suri returns to direction after a decent gap, by his standards, and disappoints. All is certainly not well because it does not end well. But Alas, inspite of having a pretty dramatic storyline (partly inspired by Abhimaan and partly inspired by Rockstar) things fall flat towards the end. Things get muddled up when the alpha male ego crops up in RJ. He decides to train Aarohi and they eventually end up falling for each other. It is centered around a down in the dumps Rockstar called Rahul Jaykar or RJ (played by Aditya Roy Kapur) lying about in a bar in Goa wasting his talent and career, when he chances upon the bar singer Aarohi (Shraddha Kapoor). Story: The film deals with the fickle fallacy of fame. The music and the clever marketing campaign has built up the hype, but let’s see analyse if the film is worth all the hype. The Bhatt’s probably decided that it was time to milk the audience of some more of their money and started this franchise instead. Well, this film isn’t one, in the truest sense of the word. It wasn’t a classic and didn’t obviously warrant a sequel. Aashiqui back in 1990 managed to become a huge hit on the strength of it’s music alone.
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