

The Verdict: If you want to spend time on cheap scares, Google ‘Exorcist spot the difference game’ and save yourself the money you’d waste on 'Raaz 3'. Romantic songs burst out more unexpectedly than the horrific faces that populate the film.Įverything about the story is unbelievable, from a gravestone that reads ‘Caritopher Crusto’ to a dreamscape where graffiti going ‘Vote for Dipak’ is scribbled on a wall.
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That is about all that the movie gets right. The story involves several scenes where Hindu idols are buried, and seeks to escape the ire of the fundamentalists by cutting the shots in the right places. Helping them along is one of the Undead, a creature called Tara Dutt whose cloying tirades complement his carnal lust. She also chooses to depend on the morally upright Aditya Arora (Emraan Hashmi) to do her dirty work. Shanaya Shekhar (Bipasha Basu), who seems to have more reasons to hate Sanjana Krishna (Esha Gupta) than the film has the time or inclination to explain, turns to the dark forces when God deserts her.
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The imported Hollywood concepts - snow on a TV screen accompanied by a threatening voice, coulrophobia (that’s Google for ‘fear of clowns’), the chandelier scare from The Phantom of the Opera - fall flatter than anything else in a movie that brings us heroines in skimpy clothes, in all their 3D glory. In his latest offering, Vikram Bhatt collaborates with the other Bhatt khandaan to make an asinine film. Even the godawful graphics of the creature movies of the Eighties would scare me into having nightmares. No, not even the dub - an actual remake, where an ayah played a significant role. Hell, I was freaked out by the Tamil version of 'Omen'. I can’t look at kids or dolls for days after watching those B-grade movies involving ghosts that possess children and toys.

Cast: Bipasha Basu, Emran Hashmi, Esha Gupta
