Audio Label Manorama Music

Nee Ko Njaa Cha Movie Reviews

Nee Ko Njaa Cha Review


Story:

Three youth are on a trip to Goa where some unexpected events await them. 'Nee Ko Nja Cha'; a loud, bawdy revelry of three youngsters, features a break-up, a trip to Goa, rediscovering love and realizing their follies. Roshan, Abu and Joe played by Sunny Wayne, Sanju and Praveen take the narrative along with a slew of trivialities soaked in alcohol and double entendre.

Review:

Nee Ko Nja Cha, an incised form of Ninnem Kollum Njanum Chaavum, has its share of fun that is drab at times and most often ridiculous. A youth crying over his lost love is comforted by his pals with a revelation that his girl needed some spice in relationship. Another character's bluff is punctuated with the soundtrack of a goat bray.

The extent of humour in this film is sparse. The crude vernacular dialects tinged with ample reference to sex, sets the tone of the film. The film opens with Joe being ditched by his girlfriend. He rues over his love, slightly cuts his vein and cries aloud. His friends arrange a trip to Goa to comfort him.

The swift-paced narrative is considerably spoilt by Joe's prolonged longings for his girlfriend whom he finds in Goa with a new partner. Endlessly stretched scenes are stitched together to exhibit the pangs of lost love, with misdirected hints of humour that drags the narrative.

Sunny Wayne throws himself into the character of Dr Roshan, a seasoned playboy with calm elegance. He looks sleek, stylish and sometimes genuinely funny. Nee Ko Nja Cha does not come under the series of comedies which demand abandonment of logic and reason. The laughter in this film seldom proceeds beyond a few seconds. Some profound objectives are also met when Roshan goes through the pain and anxieties of an AIDS patient before coming to terms with his own torn identity as a person.

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