Up for the third time to entertain the audience through a sex-comedy, the famous Kyaa Kool Hai Hum installment is back with Tushar Kapoor and Aftab Shivdasani this time. Directed by Umesh Ghadje, KKHH3 doesn't disappoint us on the glamour front, but on the core story, which is the major weakness.
Known for playing around the American Pie like comedy, KKHH3 fails to neither impress the bold audience nor do the hardly strained puns actually work. Though Tushar and Aftab's gimmicks do tickle our funny bone now and then, the half-baked songs did come as a stopper to the already elongated screenplay. With filmmakers like Paul Verhoeven, who can show woman like goddesses on screen, the costumes and the make-up never gel at any moment here. Needless drone shots and average art-direction makes it a tiring experience to watch the film in spite of attractive girls walking around.
If not for the thought-provoking humour and few appreciable performances, KKH3 might have ended up even worse. Thanks to the very little creativity in the situation driven comedy at the start of the movie, the film engages in parts. Krishna Abhishek, as the sidekick to Tushar and Aftab scores the maximum when timing comedy is needed to save the story. Screenplay compromised at a larger degree, and the use of outdated comical ideas irritates the audience creating unsettling viewing experience.
Though the core and the basic intention of the story makes a lot of sense, the writers could have made the film less character-driven. Interesting scenarios and hilarious dialogues could have saved the film from being a dud. Sajid-Wajid song’s come at wrong intervals and hence the impact is very poor. Exaggerated circumstances and illogical moments do test the viewer’s patience. Even stalwarts like Shakti Kapoor has a minimal role to play in the proposed laugh-riot.
Some solid writing might have definitely helped KKH3 gain some viewership, but the boring treatment spoils the overall quality of the film. Marketed as the first porn-comedy film in India, the makers should have capitalized on such a platform in making a really funny movie mocking on the so called Indian taboos. Watch it for Mandana Karimi, Gizele Thakral and Claudia Ciesla.