Tusshar’s extra‘s’ hasn’t done him any good. There are a couple of scenes where she is supposed to come off as innocent but comes off as stupid. In sequences where she is with other models(during the hunt), Minissha looks really short and plump and not 20.
And definitely not model material to win a model hunt, considering she was competing against the likes of Pia Trivedi. Minissha Lamba definitely did not look 20. Songs by Sachin Jigar are nothing to brag about and are misplaced in the film.Īs far as actor performances were concerned, none stand out. Imagine a graphic skull placed on for a few seconds on Rishi and Kartik’s face when they run from the climax fight. The overdose of graphics was not required and definitely is a mood killer, especially in the climax. The cinematography is run of the mill, same is with the editing. The direction is average, the script is below average and performances by actors are nothing special. Sagar Bellary is no Priyadarshan who can divert your attention from wafer thin plots using slapstick comedy. Who eventually wins Shabana’s love is the big question. The person passing the training successfully gets to marry Shabana.
In order to marry Shabana and take over the underworld business, they must pass the mandatory training from mentor Munna Military (Sanjay Mishra), the don’s trusted side kick. What they don’t know is Shabana’s uncle (Satish Kaushik) is a don.
They both get assigned to a model hunt event and it is here that they meet and get smitten by Shabana Raza (Minissha Lamba). Rishi is mature, disciplined, avid newspaper reader type while Kartik is a casual- fun loving flirt. They are the exact opposites and compete on everything. The film is about Rishi Malhotra (Tusshar Kapoor) and Kartik Iyer (Shreyas Talpade), two wannabe’s working in the same event management firm. Soft Humor is his forte, as proved by his previous films but this time he has moved onto a slightly different genre, Slapstick Comedy. ‘Hum Tum Shabana’ is his latest offering. Mr Sagar Ballary is the man responsible for the game changing ‘Bheja Fry’. The torch bearer of Hindi Indie cinema is back.