Bhangra Paa Le Cast & Crew:
Banner
RSVPRelease Date
15 Nov 2019Genre
DanceProducer
Ronnie ScrewvalaDirector
Sneha TauraniStar Cast
Sunny Kaushal
Rukshar Dhillon
Shriya Pilgaonkar
Parmeet Sethi
Sheeba Chaddha Executive Producer
Choreographer
Vijay Ganguly Aadil Shaikh Sahaj Singh Bosco Martis Caesar GonsalvesMedia Relations
Publicity Designs
Website
Certification
Music Director
Jam8 Rishi Rich Keeran A-BazzLanguage
HindiSinger
Mandy Gill
Cinematography
Jitan Harmeet SinghEditor
Antara LahiriAction
Screenplay
Dheeraj RattanDialogue
Dheeraj RattanSound
Music Company
Tips Music FilmsCostume
Lyricist
Mandy GillProduction Designers
Movie Review
Rating :
Verdict : Flop-
Bollywood dance and musical extravaganza’s usually come with a weak narrative or none at all, but Bhangra Paa Le tries it and fails miserably. If you’re looking for groovy dance moves and good music, it’s a sure shot winning pick for you, but if you’re looking for story, acting, narrative or meaning, well, sadly it has got none.
Directorial debut of Sneha Taurani shuffles between two time zones so frantically that at one point, you just lose track whether you’re watching a dance and musical drama or some reincarnation silliness.
There is a scene where a soldier pulls up a drum and start beating it in the middle of dusty battlefield during the ongoing World War II, and cut to, a modern day college in Amritsar, where girls are auditioning for a spot in a Bhangra troupe. The lead dancer of this college troupe is also Sunny Kaushal.
Sunny thinks he has found the perfect female counterpart when he lays his eyes on Simi (Rukshar) racking up a storm with her dance. The bubbling romance turns toxic when Jaggi realises Simi is a member of the rival college’s troupe, with equal ambition. She too wants a spot on the Bhangra Battle in London in order to put some personal ghost to rest.
Hence the conflict Arises! And the story goes downhill from here! And we’re made to sit through a series of songs, repetitive choreographed dance routines, and a great deal of exposition and the end, you feel happy that it ended and now you can go home!
Sunny, plays Jaggi and Captaan, dances his heart out in the numerous set pieces but lacks the charisma. Newbie Rukshar lacks the smoothness of a dancer but her sweet act as the self-assured Simi is fun to watch. The film also features Shriya Pilgaonkar as Captaan’s (Sunny) love Nimmo waiting for his return to Malwa village.
In spite of best efforts by the actors, a weak script, poor direction, boring choreography, and different time zones – it will burn your brain rather than the dance floor.