Ulajh
- 2024
- 2 Std. 30 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,0/10
24.717
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Die Reise einer jungen IFS-Offizierin, die einer prominenten Familie von Patrioten angehört und fern ihrer Heimat in eine gefährliche persönliche Verschwörung verwickelt wird .Die Reise einer jungen IFS-Offizierin, die einer prominenten Familie von Patrioten angehört und fern ihrer Heimat in eine gefährliche persönliche Verschwörung verwickelt wird .Die Reise einer jungen IFS-Offizierin, die einer prominenten Familie von Patrioten angehört und fern ihrer Heimat in eine gefährliche persönliche Verschwörung verwickelt wird .
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 2 Nominierungen insgesamt
Empfohlene Bewertungen
I went into Ulajh Premier last night without high expectations, and, honestly, I'm not a big fan of Janhvi Kapoor. However, I left the theatre pleasantly surprised. The film maintained a consistent pace throughout, with plenty of twists and thrills to keep you engaged. One of the highlights is that the movie doesn't waste any time diving into the main story.
The entire cast delivered strong performances, and the sound design and cinematography were top-notch. However, I felt there could have been an additional scene before Janhvi's character goes out with Gulshan to better establish their relationship. Additionally, Gulshan's character could have been more consistent throughout the film. One technical aspect that puzzled me was the choice to use a 16:10 aspect ratio for cinema viewing, which seemed unusual.
Ignore the so-called critic reviews; many seem to thrive on negativity. Give Ulajh a shot-you won't regret it.
The entire cast delivered strong performances, and the sound design and cinematography were top-notch. However, I felt there could have been an additional scene before Janhvi's character goes out with Gulshan to better establish their relationship. Additionally, Gulshan's character could have been more consistent throughout the film. One technical aspect that puzzled me was the choice to use a 16:10 aspect ratio for cinema viewing, which seemed unusual.
Ignore the so-called critic reviews; many seem to thrive on negativity. Give Ulajh a shot-you won't regret it.
There are a lot of paid PR bots here to make this film sound like a great film but its not. Jhanvi was horrible in the film and peiple should not be misguided to watch her on screen. No matter how much of paid PR bots try and give the film excellent review the collections will not come in and they all will be flopped.
This film was a snooze fest and draggy after a good interval. Jhanvi was as usual lazy and underconfident with her lines.
Saving grace is gulshan who stands out almost everytime he comes on screen. He is brilliant with his voice modulation and expressions.
Giving this film 3 stars. And all 3 of them are for gulshan.
This film was a snooze fest and draggy after a good interval. Jhanvi was as usual lazy and underconfident with her lines.
Saving grace is gulshan who stands out almost everytime he comes on screen. He is brilliant with his voice modulation and expressions.
Giving this film 3 stars. And all 3 of them are for gulshan.
Ulajh (2024) :
Movie Review -
Sudhanshu Saria brings a new spy thriller to Bollywood-new because it belongs to a new sub-genre; otherwise, we have had several spy thrillers in Bollywood. Ulajh is Bollywood's first film based on foreign services, which makes it "new," but sadly, the formulas it uses are too "old." Let's see what those formulas are: scapegoat, rat in your own house, honey trap, and fugitive. It's been decades-I mean, too many decades-since old Hollywood made spy thrillers on the same, which later got glamorous with James Bond and so on. The recent classic and the best one has to be "Infernal Affairs" (2002), which was remade in Hollywood as "The Departed" (2006) and won 4 Oscars too. Ulajh could have been that (for India), and it seemed so, at least from the trailer. However, the final output is nowhere close to that classic, and moreover, we don't even get a decent film. That's so disappointing.
Since there can't be any spoilers, let me be brief. Suhana Bhatia (Janhvi Kapoor) is appointed as the deputy high commissioner of India in Britain at a young age, and many call it a power of nepotism. She meets Nakul (Gulshan Devaiah), and soon they get intimate, as both are lonely in this new country and in need of a partner-a friend, to be more precise. Suhana's just cuddling happiness, and it turns into a nightmare when she realizes that she has been used as a scapegoat and will soon lose her position, respect, and family. Will this scapegoat be able to eat the tiger? (as she says in the trailer).
As mentioned earlier, Ulajh has many outdated formulas, and they don't have anything exciting to offer. Moreover, the film is immoderately slow and bores you with many cliches. India vs. Pakistan relations, peace treaty, friendly visit, ISI, R&AW, inside stool pegion, betrayals, and heartbreaks-you get to see all these things, but don't tell me you haven't seen them before. Ulajh messes itself within many taboos that could have been broken, and the pacy screenplay could have saved it from disaster results, but it played too safe to be called a modern Spy thriller. The screenplay just does not hold you. The dialogues are weak, and the characters lack depth as well. Overall, whatever comes your way is either rotten or half-baked.
Janhvi Kapoor's accent bothers again, but this time it's more annoying because she is playing a high-ranking officer. Though too young, there could have been layers that the writer fails to add, and Janhvi herself attempts no such thing as "efforts." The looks and glam appeal don't help here since the character's demand was exactly opposite. Roshan Mathew suffers from low screen space but covers up a lot in the second half. Gulshan Devaiah seems to have enjoyed the satirical and sarcastic character here, but it's pretty hard to digest. Can't reveal much here, but the character graph isn't what you expect at those moments. Meiyang Chang and Jitendra Joshi have done well despite small roles, while Rajesh Tailang and Adil Hussain add their two bits of experience and talent to messy characters.
Being a spy thriller Ulajh should have stayed away from typical Bollywood glamour, songs, and melodrama, but it just can't be helped sometimes. The music comes and goes, only to add a few more minutes to your boredom. I'd like to watch "Shaukan" separately on YouTube (4K) and enjoy Janhvi's sexy moves and dresses, but I wouldn't really want such a song in a thriller movie. Ulajh also fails at editing because the grip to hold you for 130 minutes is not there. The cinematography and sound design were okay. The film has been shot overseas and looks lavish-all thanks to the good production design. Sudhanshu Saria wanted to make "Infernal Affairs" but ended up making "Internal Affairs," or, can I say, "Private Affairs." A female-led spy thriller about a patriotic officer can't get too personal. The audience would lose connect with the character, and it's a simple equation to understand-very well known to every film maker. Had it been more about the nation and suspense and less about private life, family, death-boring India-Pak conflicts, and too much drama, Ulajh would have been a decent flick. For now, all I can say is "Film Ulajh gayi."
RATING - 4/10*
Sudhanshu Saria brings a new spy thriller to Bollywood-new because it belongs to a new sub-genre; otherwise, we have had several spy thrillers in Bollywood. Ulajh is Bollywood's first film based on foreign services, which makes it "new," but sadly, the formulas it uses are too "old." Let's see what those formulas are: scapegoat, rat in your own house, honey trap, and fugitive. It's been decades-I mean, too many decades-since old Hollywood made spy thrillers on the same, which later got glamorous with James Bond and so on. The recent classic and the best one has to be "Infernal Affairs" (2002), which was remade in Hollywood as "The Departed" (2006) and won 4 Oscars too. Ulajh could have been that (for India), and it seemed so, at least from the trailer. However, the final output is nowhere close to that classic, and moreover, we don't even get a decent film. That's so disappointing.
Since there can't be any spoilers, let me be brief. Suhana Bhatia (Janhvi Kapoor) is appointed as the deputy high commissioner of India in Britain at a young age, and many call it a power of nepotism. She meets Nakul (Gulshan Devaiah), and soon they get intimate, as both are lonely in this new country and in need of a partner-a friend, to be more precise. Suhana's just cuddling happiness, and it turns into a nightmare when she realizes that she has been used as a scapegoat and will soon lose her position, respect, and family. Will this scapegoat be able to eat the tiger? (as she says in the trailer).
As mentioned earlier, Ulajh has many outdated formulas, and they don't have anything exciting to offer. Moreover, the film is immoderately slow and bores you with many cliches. India vs. Pakistan relations, peace treaty, friendly visit, ISI, R&AW, inside stool pegion, betrayals, and heartbreaks-you get to see all these things, but don't tell me you haven't seen them before. Ulajh messes itself within many taboos that could have been broken, and the pacy screenplay could have saved it from disaster results, but it played too safe to be called a modern Spy thriller. The screenplay just does not hold you. The dialogues are weak, and the characters lack depth as well. Overall, whatever comes your way is either rotten or half-baked.
Janhvi Kapoor's accent bothers again, but this time it's more annoying because she is playing a high-ranking officer. Though too young, there could have been layers that the writer fails to add, and Janhvi herself attempts no such thing as "efforts." The looks and glam appeal don't help here since the character's demand was exactly opposite. Roshan Mathew suffers from low screen space but covers up a lot in the second half. Gulshan Devaiah seems to have enjoyed the satirical and sarcastic character here, but it's pretty hard to digest. Can't reveal much here, but the character graph isn't what you expect at those moments. Meiyang Chang and Jitendra Joshi have done well despite small roles, while Rajesh Tailang and Adil Hussain add their two bits of experience and talent to messy characters.
Being a spy thriller Ulajh should have stayed away from typical Bollywood glamour, songs, and melodrama, but it just can't be helped sometimes. The music comes and goes, only to add a few more minutes to your boredom. I'd like to watch "Shaukan" separately on YouTube (4K) and enjoy Janhvi's sexy moves and dresses, but I wouldn't really want such a song in a thriller movie. Ulajh also fails at editing because the grip to hold you for 130 minutes is not there. The cinematography and sound design were okay. The film has been shot overseas and looks lavish-all thanks to the good production design. Sudhanshu Saria wanted to make "Infernal Affairs" but ended up making "Internal Affairs," or, can I say, "Private Affairs." A female-led spy thriller about a patriotic officer can't get too personal. The audience would lose connect with the character, and it's a simple equation to understand-very well known to every film maker. Had it been more about the nation and suspense and less about private life, family, death-boring India-Pak conflicts, and too much drama, Ulajh would have been a decent flick. For now, all I can say is "Film Ulajh gayi."
RATING - 4/10*
This is pea brain espionage and spy thriller 😡😡😡 it's downright embarrassing how the plot keeps itself at kindergarten level. And we are of course fools to sit through such shoddy stuff.
For the very first time disliked Gulshan - he was soo miscast. Roshan over acts galore and Jhanvi just looks very confused. Again she is someone I have liked in almost all her movies.
What a waste of 2 hours and the bad news is that there is a part 2 coming 😅 How did they even think they can get people interested for part 2 after what's done here? It's unbelievable how feedbacks are not shared.
Keep away. This is not worth nothing!
For the very first time disliked Gulshan - he was soo miscast. Roshan over acts galore and Jhanvi just looks very confused. Again she is someone I have liked in almost all her movies.
What a waste of 2 hours and the bad news is that there is a part 2 coming 😅 How did they even think they can get people interested for part 2 after what's done here? It's unbelievable how feedbacks are not shared.
Keep away. This is not worth nothing!
Who are these people giving 10 star reviews to this trite? Paid PR or Jahnvi Fan Club?
For someone who is a Deputy High Commissioner for the Indian Embassy in the UK, Jahnavi Kapoor's character is extremely incompetent, naive and downright stupid.
Also, the logistics of the whole thing are extremely stupid. Meaning, Jahnavi's character who is such a high ranking officer does not have any security (not even a PA for company). She comes and goes whenever and wherever she likes. Even the apartment she lives in has one wall which is completely french windows. The first scene I saw that, I knew someone's getting shot at through that window.
She keeps on meeting Gulshan Devaiah unattended. And he keeps on blackmailing her based on these meetings on a continuous basis. But Jahnavi is such an idiot, she just doesn't get it. Why would you go in-person to be blackmailed? Such weak writing.
Such a cast of dumb characters, each one of them. Devaiah's character's tone keeps changing from scene to scene. It was so irritating.
I am through 75 minutes, but I don't think I am gonna finish this movie. I couldn't care less.
For someone who is a Deputy High Commissioner for the Indian Embassy in the UK, Jahnavi Kapoor's character is extremely incompetent, naive and downright stupid.
Also, the logistics of the whole thing are extremely stupid. Meaning, Jahnavi's character who is such a high ranking officer does not have any security (not even a PA for company). She comes and goes whenever and wherever she likes. Even the apartment she lives in has one wall which is completely french windows. The first scene I saw that, I knew someone's getting shot at through that window.
She keeps on meeting Gulshan Devaiah unattended. And he keeps on blackmailing her based on these meetings on a continuous basis. But Jahnavi is such an idiot, she just doesn't get it. Why would you go in-person to be blackmailed? Such weak writing.
Such a cast of dumb characters, each one of them. Devaiah's character's tone keeps changing from scene to scene. It was so irritating.
I am through 75 minutes, but I don't think I am gonna finish this movie. I couldn't care less.
Janhvi Kapoor & Roshan Mathew on ‘Ulajh’ and More!
Wusstest du schon
- PatzerEarly on, the Pakistani prime minister uses Hindi words in his political speech such as "desh" and "shaanti". The word "Chinta" is also said by a Pakistani man, which in fact is never said by a Pakistani citizen, let alone the prime minister in a formal speech.
Top-Auswahl
Melde dich zum Bewerten an und greife auf die Watchlist für personalisierte Empfehlungen zu.
- How long is Ulajh?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box Office
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 90.346 $
- Laufzeit2 Stunden 30 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
Zu dieser Seite beitragen
Bearbeitung vorschlagen oder fehlenden Inhalt hinzufügen