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Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA quirky slice-of-life film where a man decides to compete in a triathlon contest at the age of 69. It stars Anupam Kher in the lead role and is written and directed by Akshay Roy.A quirky slice-of-life film where a man decides to compete in a triathlon contest at the age of 69. It stars Anupam Kher in the lead role and is written and directed by Akshay Roy.A quirky slice-of-life film where a man decides to compete in a triathlon contest at the age of 69. It stars Anupam Kher in the lead role and is written and directed by Akshay Roy.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 3 victoires et 3 nominations au total
Alok A Nath Pathak
- Principal
- (as Alok Nath Pathak)
Avis à la une
The movie depicts a very simple story of Vijay, who's age is 69 and who gets very upset looking at his eulogy written by his friend. He wants to write something special which tells his entire life and what achievements he made. Fun loving, simple family drama but giving a very precious message. Age doesn't matter, every human in this world deserves his/her identity which is like a base of life. Everyone doesn't get a chance to achieve whatever they want in their young age but as it is said there is no time for any good thing to happen. Hence nobody should loose hope and keep trying until last.
Vijay 69 (2024) :
Movie Review -
Anupam Kher plays a 69-year-old Buddha, aka Jawan (not Shah Rukh Khan's film), aka Robert De Niro from the Intern (2015), in Vijay 69. This is a tale of passion we all have at 19, but at 69. Now don't get any wrong ideas with the 69 number, as here we have a cross connection but in a friendly manner. Though it's a film of a man at 69, it also includes an 18-year-old boy who learns a lot from this 69 fella and makes this rivalry look much better than many friendship tales we see in today's times. The film has some fine emotional segments but is harmed by the absurd humour and comical packaging. Did it have to be that funny, I mean in almost every single scene? My answer is NO.
Vijay is a 69-year-old Buddha who has achieved nothing in his life as such. Feeling a bit ashamed of himself, he decides to participate in triathlon and make a record for the eldest man ever to complete all tasks in this competition. In the same colony, we have an 18-year-old boy named Aditya (Mihir Ahuja) taking part in the same competition, and he aims to be the youngest one. This eldest vs. Youngest rivalry turns into a beautiful friendship during the training period, but things still go wrong with Vijay. He has to fight all odds, be it family members, his enemies, medical reports and tests, or sponsorship; can he do that?
Akshay Roy and Abbas Tyrewala have written a decent script that tackles a beautiful subject, but it doesn't really become unique. Vijau has anger issues, as if he's taken his name seriously by watching Amitabh Bachchan movies. He may not be that "Vijay Dinanath Chauhan," but he's sort of close to it considering his age. Using Chuuu word often is a common thing for him, and telecasting it is not an issue because it is "Netflix." Vijay may be the same fella as Robert De Niro from "The Intern," who starts a new career after retirement, but instead of a normal job, Vijay chooses something that is nearly impossible, if not completely impossible (I hope Niro sees it and hugs his friend Kher for this). Like Uunchai (2022), we have those slope climbing scenes, and as expected, Vijay (there was a different Vijay) is struggling to breathe and is low on stamina. All that has become a cliche to be taken seriously. Vijay 69 suffers from this very issue, and then there is its absurd and overly funny humour, which just doesn't stop coming.
Speaking of performances, Anupam Kher has done well. There is not much love for this legend to achieve, but he is still doing so well-putting even young generation actors at shame who are so lazy with the character-driven roles nowadays. Mihir Ahuja is that "my kind of fella," you know, something that many boys go through at the age of 18. He has also done a fine job, that too after standing in front of a giant like Anupam Kher. Chunky Panday's character is relatable, but like I said, the absurd humour doesn't leave any soul in it. It was a pleasure seeing Guddi Maruti, our 90s famous comic girl, back again on screen, and however overexposed her character was, you all feel good for her in the end. Sulagana Panigrahi and the rest of the supporting cast were decent with their roles.
Vijay 69 could have avoided the overuse of comedy and abuses to make it more emotional. In the pre-climax scene, Vijay's daughter comes to him and finally shows her support, and they both get teary-eyed. That was an emotional scene, but you don't feel emotional because the atmosphere is ruined by the absurd humour already. The same goes to many other good scenes, which would have looked much better if the presentation was a little serious. Akshay Roy should have been more sensible because drama is a much more powerful and sensitive genre than comedy. Comedy doesn't have to make any sense, but drama does; we all know that. So, keep them apart and keep them within limits. Don't overuse them and merge them to waste the individual potential of both. Vijay 69 will be an example for others to follow this basic formula. Rest, the technical aspects are fine, right from cinematography, sound design, editing, to production design. Overall, a decent film for the people who are looking for that "one single chance" in the second innings of their lives. Cheers to 69!
RATING - 5/10*
Anupam Kher plays a 69-year-old Buddha, aka Jawan (not Shah Rukh Khan's film), aka Robert De Niro from the Intern (2015), in Vijay 69. This is a tale of passion we all have at 19, but at 69. Now don't get any wrong ideas with the 69 number, as here we have a cross connection but in a friendly manner. Though it's a film of a man at 69, it also includes an 18-year-old boy who learns a lot from this 69 fella and makes this rivalry look much better than many friendship tales we see in today's times. The film has some fine emotional segments but is harmed by the absurd humour and comical packaging. Did it have to be that funny, I mean in almost every single scene? My answer is NO.
Vijay is a 69-year-old Buddha who has achieved nothing in his life as such. Feeling a bit ashamed of himself, he decides to participate in triathlon and make a record for the eldest man ever to complete all tasks in this competition. In the same colony, we have an 18-year-old boy named Aditya (Mihir Ahuja) taking part in the same competition, and he aims to be the youngest one. This eldest vs. Youngest rivalry turns into a beautiful friendship during the training period, but things still go wrong with Vijay. He has to fight all odds, be it family members, his enemies, medical reports and tests, or sponsorship; can he do that?
Akshay Roy and Abbas Tyrewala have written a decent script that tackles a beautiful subject, but it doesn't really become unique. Vijau has anger issues, as if he's taken his name seriously by watching Amitabh Bachchan movies. He may not be that "Vijay Dinanath Chauhan," but he's sort of close to it considering his age. Using Chuuu word often is a common thing for him, and telecasting it is not an issue because it is "Netflix." Vijay may be the same fella as Robert De Niro from "The Intern," who starts a new career after retirement, but instead of a normal job, Vijay chooses something that is nearly impossible, if not completely impossible (I hope Niro sees it and hugs his friend Kher for this). Like Uunchai (2022), we have those slope climbing scenes, and as expected, Vijay (there was a different Vijay) is struggling to breathe and is low on stamina. All that has become a cliche to be taken seriously. Vijay 69 suffers from this very issue, and then there is its absurd and overly funny humour, which just doesn't stop coming.
Speaking of performances, Anupam Kher has done well. There is not much love for this legend to achieve, but he is still doing so well-putting even young generation actors at shame who are so lazy with the character-driven roles nowadays. Mihir Ahuja is that "my kind of fella," you know, something that many boys go through at the age of 18. He has also done a fine job, that too after standing in front of a giant like Anupam Kher. Chunky Panday's character is relatable, but like I said, the absurd humour doesn't leave any soul in it. It was a pleasure seeing Guddi Maruti, our 90s famous comic girl, back again on screen, and however overexposed her character was, you all feel good for her in the end. Sulagana Panigrahi and the rest of the supporting cast were decent with their roles.
Vijay 69 could have avoided the overuse of comedy and abuses to make it more emotional. In the pre-climax scene, Vijay's daughter comes to him and finally shows her support, and they both get teary-eyed. That was an emotional scene, but you don't feel emotional because the atmosphere is ruined by the absurd humour already. The same goes to many other good scenes, which would have looked much better if the presentation was a little serious. Akshay Roy should have been more sensible because drama is a much more powerful and sensitive genre than comedy. Comedy doesn't have to make any sense, but drama does; we all know that. So, keep them apart and keep them within limits. Don't overuse them and merge them to waste the individual potential of both. Vijay 69 will be an example for others to follow this basic formula. Rest, the technical aspects are fine, right from cinematography, sound design, editing, to production design. Overall, a decent film for the people who are looking for that "one single chance" in the second innings of their lives. Cheers to 69!
RATING - 5/10*
Terrible over-acting.. Especially Chunky.. was and will always be one of the worst.. Kher same old antics, contorted faces, yelling.. Of course, it's "tailored" to the Bharatiya audience, so can't blame someone trying to make a quick buck.. and allowing Chunky to get some desperate earning.. The core message is great, but why this utter waste of time if all the people involved in this venture?? Ahh.. comes back to the audience. Oh well, they got what they want (deserve). Sadly, nowadays 90% stuff from Bollywood is this same rubbish. My review could be done in 5-6:words, but I've to reach the target (pun intended).
This is a beautiful movie of determination, grit, friendships, with great actor like Anupam Kher delivering an unforgettable performance. The story is absolutely wonderful of an old man who had potential in his youth to do something but family pressures forced him out to chase his dreams. But at the age of 69 he decides to do something that will forever etch a memory of his in the hearts of his loved ones. The screenplay is perfect and story has a good mix of drama, fun and emotions. The story will make you think that everyone in their lives should do something that is memorable and not give up just due to reasons of age. The movie will bring tears of joy in the climax to almost everybody. Thank you team for such a wonderful experience.
It is a movie that tries to inspire you to achieve some thing great in life and shows that age is a just number if you aspire to make great things in life. Won't say it is a new concept but is a fun watch that doesn't bore you. It has many funny moments that makes you happy and tries to keep you engrossed in the movie.
Loved the chemistry between Anupam Kher and Chunky Pandey, both have acted well and are soul of the movie. On negative side didn't like the climax and the recommendation of minister to re-instate Vijay in the last moment that portion could have certainly be written differently, takes away the whole experience away.
But overall nice movie that makes you happy.
Loved the chemistry between Anupam Kher and Chunky Pandey, both have acted well and are soul of the movie. On negative side didn't like the climax and the recommendation of minister to re-instate Vijay in the last moment that portion could have certainly be written differently, takes away the whole experience away.
But overall nice movie that makes you happy.
Anupam Kher & Chunky Panday Ask Each Other Anything
Anupam Kher & Chunky Panday Ask Each Other Anything
Watch Anupam Kher and Chunky Panday share unheard stories from their debut movies and their journey so far!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAnupam Kher is actually 69 years old and had to wear aging make up to make him look older.
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Détails
- Durée
- 1h 52min(112 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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