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JANBY C.

YBAÑEZ
Bsed-English/3rd Year

REFLECTION

PRINCE OF PERSIA
Prince of Persia was an enjoyable movie . It has very strong
moral worldview stressing loyalty, brotherly love, doing the right thing,
and free market values. The hero Jake Gyllenhaal , act as Dastan was
first adopted by the King .Growing up on the streets of Persia, Dastan
required a lot of skills and qualities just to survive. After the king
whiteness his courage he decides to adopt him. Ten years later the
Persian army attacks the city of Alamut believing that they supply
weapons to the enemies of Persia. During the battle he finds the Dagger
of Time. While they celebrate their victory, Dastan gets fooled into
poisoning the king. As everyone thinks he killed the king he flees with
Princess Tamina.
While on their way they get attacked by a group of bandits but
manage to get away and go to King Sharman’s funeral. There Dastan
finds out that Nizam was behind the kings death and that he wants to use
the Dagger with the Sands of Time to rule the world.
I was totally surprised after watch this movie . I firstly want to
watch another movie but my friends invite me to watch this movie .
Finally , I found out that this movie is awesome . This kind of movie are
suitable to people who love action, adventure, romance, and magical.
This is a good story for all teenagers .
The technology used in this movie is awesome . Directors know
how to take the audience to enjoy this film. The film is actually adapted
from history (meditologi) but with amore advanced age, history is
altered slightly with the use of quality technology. Script, actors, and
cinematography is very great. By using Dolby Digital Sound System , its
make this movie more real and adventurers.

CIRKUS

‘Cirkus’ is a busy film filled with a battery of characters put


together with a purpose to make us laugh, but is far from that.
Entertaining the audience with slapstick comedy and drama is a
tightrope that Rohit Shetty has successfully walked before but this time
he seems to have tripped several times along the way.
The dull start indicates that the trailer of Cirkus didn’t create any
excitement among the audience, as a Rohit Shetty comedy with Ranveer
Singh warranted a much bigger start on just the face value.
A square and B square are the names of the “twins, who are later
christened as Roy (Ranveer Singh) and Joy (Varun Sharma) by the two
different couples, who adopt them. Thus, unknowingly putting in place a
recipe for disaster and confusion that is bound to play out when these
four boys grow up and bump into each other. That’s precisely the one-
line story (if we can call it that) of this Rohit Shetty film that’s supposed
to be a comedy of errors but is abysmally low on that ingredient.
Set in the picturesque green hills of Ooty and carefully created
colourful and unreal set pieces that look like a theme park, ‘Cirkus’ is
based in the late 60s or early 70s era, as the film desperately tries to pay
a tribute to the cinema of the time. Many classic Bollywood numbers
pop up in the background at every given opportunity and the only thing
louder than the yesteryear costumes of the actors, is their acting. It’s an
all-out slapstick comedy but the problem is not that, as Bollywood has
seen several films in that genre that have taken the audience along with
it for a joyride. It also includes some films from Rohit Shetty’s stable.
Collectively, barely a scene or two manage to evoke the kind of
laughter we are used to experiencing in a Rohit Shetty film. Sample this,
our hero Roy is immune to high voltage shocks and his showstopper act
at his ‘Jubilee
Cirkus’ is to dramatically make two live wires kiss each other,
with his bare hands. But every time he does that his judwaa bhai
experiences a massive electric shock and so does anyone who touches
him. All is well with him once the act is over. If you can get past this,
then you’d perhaps have a little less discomfort in sitting through the rest
of the plot that involves caricatures, good actors wasted in stereotypical
characters, unfunny dialogues, and situations that literally go nowhere.
The screenplay offers nothing fresh in terms of comedy and punchlines
and suffers from abject repetition.
Ranveer Singh tries to do his best in portraying both his
characters, but sadly both the parts lack enough conviction. Deepika
Padukone’s cameo in the song ‘Current Laga Re’ is a highlight that
comes as a true respite. Varun Sharma’s comic timing is criminally
wasted here and, in the end, it’s upto the ever-so-dependable Johny
Lever (as Polson bhai) to bring in some much-needed organic laughter.
The ace comedian creates more rib-tickling moments in his few minutes
of screen time than the entire cast put together. Pooja Hegde looks
resplendent in her sombre role of Roy’s wife Mala. Jacqueline
Fernandez steps in to add the glam quotient as Roy’s girlfriend and does
just that. Sanjay Mishra once again takes one for the team in a role that
isn’t funny, but the actor makes up for the lack in the writing and the
missing punchlines, which is a recurring problem of this unfunny mess.
I would rate the film a 6/10.

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