Maska
- 2020
- 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Determined to make it in showbiz, an aspiring young actor considers turning his back on the beloved Irani café run by his family for generations.Determined to make it in showbiz, an aspiring young actor considers turning his back on the beloved Irani café run by his family for generations.Determined to make it in showbiz, an aspiring young actor considers turning his back on the beloved Irani café run by his family for generations.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 2 nominations total
Jaaved Jaaferi
- Rustom Irani
- (as Javed Jaffrey)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Maska (Netflix) - Rumi Irani (Prit Kamani) dreams and aspires to be an actor, but has limited talent. What he does have is a traditional, family owned Parsi cafe in South Mumbai that once boasted of an extensive menu and loyal clientele, which he doesn't think much of. Rustom Cafe is currently managed by his mother, the spunky and fiery Diana Irani (Manisha Koirala), who has been able to run it on a skeletal basis with a limited menu who is waiting for her son to take charge and return the cafe to its original glory.
But Rumi has to realise his dreams at any cost and therefore, brokers a deal to sell off the property to a prominent chain for a price that will fund his launch vehicle into the silver screen. He has magic fingers and invests time and effort into the cafe to rebuild its reputation and win back the clientele with the agenda of convincing his mother to sell it off. She agrees under duress and for the love of her son, but is heartbroken.
Maska had a massive potential of becoming an emotional sojourn sans the melodrama. The premise and build up were also pretty strong, with Manisha Koirala, Prit Kamani and Javed Jaffri creating a perfect stage for telling the story of a turnaround. Unfortunately, director Neeraj Udhwani spends far too long on the prologue and Rumi's dalliance with acting and his love for Mallika (Nikita Dutta). He should have made more efforts to showcase Rumi's disillusionment with his acting career, realization of his culinary and entrepreneurial skills, attachment with the family business, appreciation for his mother's expectations and the development of his love for Persis (Shirley Setia), the girl who is instrumental in turning him around. But all of the above is encapsulated in about 20 minutes which makes it a suboptimal and underwhelming climax, albeit predictable right from the beginning.
But do give Maska a chance, it surely makes for a one time watch and appreciation of the fact that it could have been handled better.
But Rumi has to realise his dreams at any cost and therefore, brokers a deal to sell off the property to a prominent chain for a price that will fund his launch vehicle into the silver screen. He has magic fingers and invests time and effort into the cafe to rebuild its reputation and win back the clientele with the agenda of convincing his mother to sell it off. She agrees under duress and for the love of her son, but is heartbroken.
Maska had a massive potential of becoming an emotional sojourn sans the melodrama. The premise and build up were also pretty strong, with Manisha Koirala, Prit Kamani and Javed Jaffri creating a perfect stage for telling the story of a turnaround. Unfortunately, director Neeraj Udhwani spends far too long on the prologue and Rumi's dalliance with acting and his love for Mallika (Nikita Dutta). He should have made more efforts to showcase Rumi's disillusionment with his acting career, realization of his culinary and entrepreneurial skills, attachment with the family business, appreciation for his mother's expectations and the development of his love for Persis (Shirley Setia), the girl who is instrumental in turning him around. But all of the above is encapsulated in about 20 minutes which makes it a suboptimal and underwhelming climax, albeit predictable right from the beginning.
But do give Maska a chance, it surely makes for a one time watch and appreciation of the fact that it could have been handled better.
Very bad dubbing and sound. Also seems that many dialogues were originally in hindi but the makers overwrote them during dubbing in English. The disconnect between lip movements and words spoken is so apparent.
Good story, nice screen play but poor acting of main characters. Manisha was quite good but didn't find good chemistry with other characters.
Idk why people can't review movies at all on this website. This movie doesn't really have good direction, nor acting, ending was kinda pushed quick.
Overall it's supposed to be a feel-good movie but it's definitely one I would not put on my watch-again movies. Don't trust the 10 star rating reviews; they obviously don't know how to watch movies.
Overall it's supposed to be a feel-good movie but it's definitely one I would not put on my watch-again movies. Don't trust the 10 star rating reviews; they obviously don't know how to watch movies.
No doubt it's a feel good movie.But somewhere it was lacking a bit of unstrategic delivery to the audience like you know in the movie like Runaway bride where it felt like everything happened suddenly and not planned. But ya I have never been to any Iranis cafe but now I am definitely gonna make a plan after Quarantine days.
Did you know
- ConnectionsReferenced in Flix Forum: Maska (2022)
- How long is Maska?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 51 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2:1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content