

Despite the sexual tone, adult jokes, impish humor, the movie, at no juncture, gets offensive, distasteful or objectionable. But then again, I am a part of that audience. Like always, I find myself trying too hard to make sense of films that weren't intended to be taken that seriously. Along with being mockery telemarketing, Rohit Shetty brand of films, and almost everything else that can be considered intelligent, Kyaa Super Kool Hain Hum ends up being a mockery of story writing itself.

What I found the most hilarious was they actually tried to have a plot to string all of this together. The songs are peppy and energetic but the lyrics felt like they were trying too hard to make sense. The women, have to sit pretty and look gorgeous and they do that all well. Yes, there is a lot of dog-mating talk in the film. You can imagine how sorry I felt when I saw Anupam Kher address dogs as humans and sulk when he sees them mate. They've had to regress mentally by a good 20 years. Riteish Deshmukh and Tusshar Kapoor try hard, you can see the amount of energy such a performance needs, yet all you can feel is sad for them. But all I could think was, really, THAT was funny?īut, this was soon overcome by feeling bad for the lead male actors. It is a release to have such a hearty laugh. However, when there was laughter, it was so hard that I, for a second, wished that I could enjoy the 'non-veg' jokes the way some of the people in the audience were. They were just drab spans of few minutes each when you could sense the boredom in the theater, assisted ever-so-slightly with a loud remark, "stop boring us." There were a lot of slack times when there was no puerile pun, no supposedly adult joke, no mockery of gay people. Yet, it wasn't as much as I thought there would be. Sure, there was lots of loud cackle in the theater. Milliblog - "Kya Super Ordinary Hain Hum soundtrack."ĭunkdaft - "Thankfully with only four songs the soundtrack is average, the soundtrack doesn't harm coz after all its for a senseless movie." Don't be too surprised if you see me copping out of this one. Yep, that's the amount of justification I find myself giving to the other me who is grumpy about having to spend 2-3 hours in a theater knowing that there is a near-zero chance of enjoying it unless you call, the tiny hope that Riteish Deshmukh and Tushar Kapoor's comic timing carrying the film, a chance.Īnd well, we can take solace in the fact that the actors themselves are embarrassed. Only with Kya SuperKool Hain Hum, I'm not even curious about how bad they've fallen. These arguments stand true for any film that I know is not my type. And secondly, it feels like a call of duty – how can I not review a film just because I think it's going to bad it would be unfair to just watch films that I want to watch. It is hope – hope that their brand of sense of humor might get a laugh or two out of me. Yet, I wouldn't say it is masochism that would lead me to the theaters next Friday.

Needless to say, I am so not looking forward to the film. The innuendos and the toilet humor come rushing back. We are soon going to be face-to-face with Kya SuperKool Hain Hum. Only, that the writer decides to turn director and refuses to let you do any of that. And when you step out of the theater you want to scrub off any residual memory there might be lying around. One of those embarrassing ones where you wouldn't want anyone you know to see you in the theater. Kya Kool Hain Hum was one of those films that you wanted to forget while you were watching it.
