When Emily Dickinson wrote “The guts desires what it desires,” it hit residence for many people. Like Dickinson mentioned, human wishes and fixations are sometimes past rationale and reasoning. JioCinema’s newest authentic, Jo Tera Hai Wo Mera Hai, relies on the identical idea. The movie tells the story of a person referred to as Mitesh (Amit Sial), who has had his coronary heart set on Utsav, a beautiful Bungalow in Mumbai, for years. Like a love-struck teenager, he retains scrolling via images of the villa on his cellphone, daydreams about it, and does not thoughts holding up site visitors simply to get a second to admire the villa in its full glory.
The one impediment that stands in the best way of his childhood dream home is Govinda (Paresh Rawal), the perpetually cranky proprietor of Utsav, who pelts undesirable guests away and stays together with his family assist on the villa. He’s nicely conscious of the place’s magnetism and might’t stand the sight of brokers hovering over him, ready for him to conform to promote the place. A discover outdoors his villa reads “Trespassers will likely be killed”. Govinda, all the time seen in a khadi kurta together with his cloudy hair, is a tricky nut to crack.
Nonetheless, when Mitesh’s obsession takes over, he decides to make his means into Govinda’s tightly wound life. His concept is to comply with the outdated man round, strategically construct a relationship with him, win his belief, and finally persuade or con (no matter fits higher in the mean time) him into freely giving the villa.
What follows subsequent is a sequence of comical efforts at fulfilling this troublesome mission. Mitesh is able to go to any extent for the villa, even when which means coping with harmful criminals or lacking his child’s celebration for it. Being a person of vice, who lies via his tooth, gambles and cheats, this is not precisely a short lived shift of morals for him.
Sial’s portrayal of Mitesh is spectacular and retains the temper of the movie mild. From his expressions and physique language to his comedian timing, Sial has aced the function. He even manages to carry a contact of innocence to Mitesh, who’s in any other case a poster boy of flaws.
Nonetheless, it was Paresh Rawal who stole the present for me. The veteran actor has as soon as once more delivered a stellar efficiency, including to his numerous portfolio of roles. His character’s crankiness, insecurities, and idiosyncrasies resonate via the display screen. In a scene, he will get suspicious of Mitesh’s intention and but chooses to disregard it due to the undivided consideration he’s getting after ages.
Sadly, nevertheless, the screenplay offers Rawal and Sial a really restricted room to shine. Whereas the actors made essentially the most of what was given to them, the movie stops far wanting utilising them to their fullest potential. I might have beloved the movie to discover Govinda’s loneliness and contact upon his recollections together with his deceased son, who is continually spoken of within the movie.
Jo Tera Hai Wo Mera Hai basically tries to indicate the omnipresence of greed throughout age, class, or gender. Even with its comical strategy, it succeeds in establishing how greed usually results in one digging their very own grave. Virtually all characters within the film harbour greed for one thing. For some it is cash and property, for others it’s lust and companionship.
Whereas Jo Tera Hai Woh Mera Hai makes an sincere try at displaying the depths of greed, it suffers from a very simplistic tone that glosses over the harsher realities of the world. Had it not sugarcoated the portrayal and tried to satirise as a substitute, the movie would not have felt like a preachy, bedtime story concerning the immorality of greed.
Raj Trivedi’s movie may very well be an excellent choose for when you’re on the lookout for one thing light-hearted and simplistic. Its classes in morality may go well with a youthful viewers, however if you’re on the lookout for one thing with somewhat extra emotional depth, and even simply all-out laughs, we recommend you skip this one.
Score: 6/10