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Haseena parkar movie review
Haseena parkar movie review






haseena parkar movie review

The exciting reason for the audiences was its plot that caters a point of view. We think Shraddha is the only reason why people will go out and watch this film. Going through three hours make-up sessions to making it at the sets of the film right on time, Shraddha's dedication for the role and magnificent transformation brings such an unusual role to life superbly. Shraddha Kapoor's effort and hard work for the role is truly praiseworthy as she plays Haseena from her younger days to the point she becomes the 'Aapa' of the underworld. Directed by Apoorva Lakhia, 'Haseena Parkar' showcases a complete point of view of India's most wanted criminal Dawood Ibrahim's sister. It's not just Shraddha's difficult character role, or the story of Mumbai underworld's 'Aapa' but aslow-pacedd biographical film that fails to raise the interest of the audiences at the first place. The film had stellar performance from 'Shraddha Kapoor' as Aapa but that's not enough. Shraddha Kapoor starrer 'Haseena Parkar' which is Apoorva Lakhia's comeback film downfalls with an unconvincing storyline and some hard to believe narrations here and there.

haseena parkar movie review

While the cinematography and background music is average, the only saving grace is Priyanka Sethia’s portrayal of public prosecutor Rohini Salian (changed in the film to Roshni Satham) who had handled the J J shootout case, while Rajesh Tailang as defence lawyer as Shyam Keswani is passable.Shraddha shines as 'Aapa' but the film fails. Characters are barely fleshed out, though the body count grows with every passing episode of the brothers’ escapades, marking it as one of those non-menacing gangster films. Real-life brother Siddhanth Kapoor as reel brother Dawood is probably a couple of shades more impressive than Farhan Akhtar’s recent reprisal of the Don in ‘Daddy’.īut it is clearly the script that bogs down the film.

haseena parkar movie review

The terribly miscast Shraddha Kapoor does her best to fit the character of Haseena Parkar, but even with the tanned and deglamourised look (the result of some heavy makeup) it barely says much of her acting skills. If there’s anything to be learnt from the film, it is that Haseena married a restaurant owner and a small-time Hindi film stunt artiste – Ibrahim Parkar (Ankur Bhatia in a watchable role), who was gunned down by the Gawli gang in 1991.

#Haseena parkar movie review serial

In-between the flashbacks of the 70s, when Dawood and his brother Sabir made their presence felt in the city’s underworld taking on the Pathan gang and instilling terror in the public besides handing the police personnel their overtime paycheques, comes the forlorn figure of Haseena in a burkha standing in the witness box taking her own sweet time in replying (all in the negative) to the prosecutor’s questions on her brother’s involvement in smuggling, the 1992 J J Hospital shootout, the 1993 Mumbai serial blasts, all of which warrant fleeting flashbacks. After the Mumbai (Bombay, then) police had made life difficult for the Don and he had to make a hurried getaway to Dubai, sibbling Haseena gradually took over the mantle -settling disputes, allegedly having a share in real estate dealings, extortion, etc.ĭirector Apoorva Lakhia, whose filmography boasts of the gangster film ‘Shootout at Lokhandwala’among others, has attempted the biography of one among the family of 12 children of former Mumbai constable Ibrahim Kaskar, who lived in the Nagpada area. In the dying moments of the film come the unintended guffaws from the audience - not the only time though - when the subject of the biopic makes a tongue-in-cheek (or should one say tongue-in-prosthetics) remark to the court that the presiding magistrate has no jurisdiction over the matter at hand.įor the uninitiated, Haseena Parkar was (having passed away in July 2014) the younger sister of India’s most wanted, Dawood Ibrahim.








Haseena parkar movie review