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    « Fakira (1976) | Main | Khamosh (1985) »

    May 05, 2007

    Comments

    Daddy's Girl

    I fully agree with you - Abhishek is very good, delightful even, in comic roles like Roy in 'Bluffmaster' and Bunty in 'Bunty aur Babli', where he gets to make the most of his gangly, goofy charm.
    The entire cast was very good in this film, I thought - although I felt Priyanka was a bit bland.
    I also love the music of 'Bluffmaster' - I thought the songs were perfect for the film, and I find myself listening to some of them over and over, whenever I'm the mood to let my hair down and just dance.

    Beth

    I love Abhishek when he's funny,
    Like he is here - and also in Bunty.
    I love Abhishek when he's not,
    like in Yuva or Umrao - the man's still hot.
    I love Abhishek in a house
    I love Abhishek with a mouse.
    I love Abhishek here or there
    I love Abhishek anywhere.
    I may not like green eggs and ham,
    but damn I love that handsome man.

    (Procsrastinate? Who, me?)

    carla

    Beth - वाह वाह! शाबाश!

    Daddy's Girl - you are probably right that Priyanka was the weak link - but fortunately she wasn't bad enough to seriously detract.

    babasko

    Oh I luuuuuurve Bluffmuster! Its my absolut and utterly most favorite movie in the whole wide world ever. And ever. :D

    favorite line: "Dekho Boss. Devdas ek idiot ta!"


    Teehee!

    Hustle Fan

    The whole story was a total lift from a episode of a UK TV series Hustle. he original, as you must expect, was far better.

    Shame on bolly =wood for so blatantly lifting plots and calling them their own.

    carla

    Please. If anything, Bluffmaster is inspired by the Argentinian movie Nine Queens, not by a TV series that came out less than a year before Bluffmaster did.

    I also suppose you aren't familiar with the 1963 Hindi film "Bluffmaster" which also featured a charming con artist at the center of its story.

    You didn't *really* think a 2004 TV series (or a 1963 film for that matter) invented the idea of a con artist as the hero of a story, did you?

    "Shame on Bollywood" is cute too - as if "Bollywood" has some kind of monopoly on borrowing themes from other sources.

    maxqnz

    Speaking of similar story lines, I thought Bluffmaster bore a striking resemblance to the Nic Cage film, Matchstick Men, but as much as I enjoyed Cage's film (a rarity for me), I preferred the BW version. This movie, Malamaal Weekly (Waking Ned Devine) and Salaam-e-Ishq (Love Actually) are all excellent examples of BW movies that are as good or better than their "inspirations" because of the way they have been infused with the elements that make BW special. I enjoyed all 6 of these movies, but in every case if I had to choose I would choose the BW version. There are pointless and blatant BW ripoffs of other filmsbut Bluffmaster isn't one of them.

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