Director: Rohit Shetty
Stars: Ranveer Singh – Pooja Hegde – Jacqueline Fernandez
Cirkus Story Line
Dr. Roy, who together with his brother Joy oversees the Jamnadas orphanage, is developing a theory that suggests non-biological relationships may one day outnumber blood relationships. To support his idea, Dr. Roy takes either of two sets of identical twins that have been abandoned at the orphanage and will shortly be adopted by different families. One set of twins is adopted by a couple who manage a circus in Ooty, and the other set is adopted by the affluent Shakuntala Devi family in Bangalore. Both families give the twins the names Roy and Joy. One of Dr. Roy’s twins is divinely gifted, therefore he resolves to keep an eye on both families so that the twins don’t collide.
Cirkus Review
A square and B square are the names of the twins, who are subsequently dedicated as Roy (Ranveer Singh) and Joy (Varun Sharma) by the two unique couples, who take on them. Consequently, unconsciously setting up a catastrophe waiting to happen and disarray that will undoubtedly play out when these four young men grow up and catch one another. That is definitively the one-line story (in the event that we can call it that) of this Rohit Shetty film that should be a satire of blunders yet is horrifyingly falling short on that fixing.
Set in the beautiful green slopes of Ooty and painstakingly made vivid and unbelievable set pieces that seem to be an amusement park, ‘Cirkus‘ is situated in the last part of the 60s or mid 70s period, as the film frantically attempts to honor the film of the time.
Numerous exemplary Bollywood numbers spring up behind the scenes at each given an open door and the main thing stronger than the days of old ensembles of the entertainers, is their acting. It’s a hard and fast droll satire however that’s what the issue isn’t, as Bollywood has seen a few movies in that kind that have taken the crowd alongside it for a drive around. It additionally incorporates a few movies from Rohit Shetty’s steady.
By and large, scarcely a scene or two figure out how to summon the sort of chuckling we are accustomed to encountering in a Rohit Shetty film. Test this, our legend Roy is invulnerable to high voltage shocks and his masterpiece act at his ‘Celebration Cirkus’ is to emphatically make two live wires kiss one another, with his exposed hands. In any case, everytime he does that his judwaa bhai encounters a gigantic electric shock thus does any individual who contacts him.
Everything is great with him once the demonstration is finished. In the event that you can move beyond this, then, at that point, you’d maybe have somewhat less distress in enduring the remainder of the plot that includes exaggerations, great entertainers squandered in cliché characters, unfunny discoursed, and circumstances that in a real sense go no place.
The screenplay offers nothing new regarding parody and zingers and experiences miserable redundancy.
Ranveer Singh attempts to give his all in depicting the two his characters, however unfortunately both the parts need sufficient conviction.
Deepika Padukone’s appearance in the melody ‘Current Laga Re’ is a feature that comes as a genuine break. Varun Sharma’s comic timing is criminally squandered here and, eventually, it’s upto the very reliable Johny Switch (as Polson bhai) to acquire some truly necessary natural giggling. The expert comic makes more rib-stimulating minutes in his couple of moments of screentime than the whole cast set up. Pooja Hegde looks brilliant in her dismal job of Roy’s better half Mala.
Jacqueline Fernandez steps in to add the glitz remainder as Roy’s sweetheart and does exactly that. Sanjay Mishra by and by takes one for the group in a job that is actually a major buzz-kill entertaining, yet the entertainer compensates for the need the composition and the missing zingers, which is a repetitive issue of this unfunny wreck.
‘Cirkus’ is a bustling film loaded up with a battery of characters set up with a reason to make us snicker, yet is not even close to that. Engaging the crowd with droll parody and show is a tightrope that Rohit Shetty has effectively strolled before yet this time he appears to have stumbled a few times en route.