Hum Kaun Hai Movie
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Hum Kaun Hai Movie Rating: 4,5/5 5074 votes
Well, at least they've copied a decent flick. But this lifted skeleton of a plot is about all Hum Kaun Hai? has going for it. A frame-by-clumsy-frame interpretation of Nicole Kidman's The Others, the movie has one slightly hysterical Dimple Kapadia, one befuddled Amitabh Bachchan, and a terror that fails entirely to strike. Sad but true.
Sandra (Dimple Kapadia), and her two children, Sara and David, live in a lonely house that has a high turnover of domestic help. Not surprising, since Sandra is spooky enough to make anyone reconsider the seeming merits of minimum wage. She has a strange set of rules that must be enforced with utter rigidity. Any failure to follow said rules will result in the death of her two children or a violent migraine attack for mommy. Quite a cheery little home. The curtains shan't be drawn, the piano shan't be tuned, a door shan't be opened until the one before it's been locked.
And make sure no one goes into flashback mode, featuring the Big B and Dimple lying uncomfortably under a tree and quoting sugary shayari at each other. Curioser and curioser.
Just a week after the help have abandoned them, three mysterious strangers land up on Sandra's doorstep for the position of nanny, housekeeper and valet. They seem to fit into the house with disturbing ease, like it's where they've always belonged. Maushmi Chatterjee, who plays the nanny, is uber-creepy with a grin pasted perpetually on her matronly mug.
The first half of the movie proceeds with a languid weirdness, unfolding one tentacle of 'terror' after another. Sara, the daughter, for instance, sees strange people moving about the house, much to the frustration of her mother. The nanny and her friends seem keen on covering up some graves in the garden. The mother wanders about the house in black lace and candlelight, investigating things that go bump in the night. Like all this wasn't enough, Sandra's long lost husband, Frank (Amitabh Bachchan. Frank?) returns home from the battlefield, and emerges from a dense fog to walk calmly into family life.
The children seem to go along with it. Mandatory papa aa gaye, papa aa gaye scene here. But marital relations seem rather strained as Frank regards all Sandra's vehement hugs and coddles with the famous Bachchan expression that spells: ain?
We can't divulge anymore of the story or the screenplay, without making you snort out your Coke through your ears. The plot is totally paisa vasool, but it demands so much by way of balance and mood that Hum Kaun Hai? just doesn't deliver. There's a Bees Saal Baad feeling to the whole thing that will amuse and startle you in turns. But it doesn't hold, it doesn't absorb, and nope, it doesn't live up.
Sandra (Dimple Kapadia), and her two children, Sara and David, live in a lonely house that has a high turnover of domestic help. Not surprising, since Sandra is spooky enough to make anyone reconsider the seeming merits of minimum wage. She has a strange set of rules that must be enforced with utter rigidity. Any failure to follow said rules will result in the death of her two children or a violent migraine attack for mommy. Quite a cheery little home. The curtains shan't be drawn, the piano shan't be tuned, a door shan't be opened until the one before it's been locked.
And make sure no one goes into flashback mode, featuring the Big B and Dimple lying uncomfortably under a tree and quoting sugary shayari at each other. Curioser and curioser.
Just a week after the help have abandoned them, three mysterious strangers land up on Sandra's doorstep for the position of nanny, housekeeper and valet. They seem to fit into the house with disturbing ease, like it's where they've always belonged. Maushmi Chatterjee, who plays the nanny, is uber-creepy with a grin pasted perpetually on her matronly mug.
The first half of the movie proceeds with a languid weirdness, unfolding one tentacle of 'terror' after another. Sara, the daughter, for instance, sees strange people moving about the house, much to the frustration of her mother. The nanny and her friends seem keen on covering up some graves in the garden. The mother wanders about the house in black lace and candlelight, investigating things that go bump in the night. Like all this wasn't enough, Sandra's long lost husband, Frank (Amitabh Bachchan. Frank?) returns home from the battlefield, and emerges from a dense fog to walk calmly into family life.
The children seem to go along with it. Mandatory papa aa gaye, papa aa gaye scene here. But marital relations seem rather strained as Frank regards all Sandra's vehement hugs and coddles with the famous Bachchan expression that spells: ain?
We can't divulge anymore of the story or the screenplay, without making you snort out your Coke through your ears. The plot is totally paisa vasool, but it demands so much by way of balance and mood that Hum Kaun Hai? just doesn't deliver. There's a Bees Saal Baad feeling to the whole thing that will amuse and startle you in turns. But it doesn't hold, it doesn't absorb, and nope, it doesn't live up.
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102 Ratings3.25/5
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Hum Kaun Hai Story
Hum Kaun Hai is horror-thriller movie. After the mysterious disappearance of her maid, butler, and gardener, Mrs. Sandra Williams, the wife of Major Frank, who lives in a palatial house with two children, Sara and David, writes a letter to the local employment agency to get replacements. Martha Pinto, in the company of Edgar and Maria, a dumb woman, apply for these vacancies.
Sandra hires them, explains that her children's eyes may be damaged by sunlight, the curtains are to be drawn at all times, as she gets migraines by any loud noise everyone must remain quiet, there is no electricity and all work must be done during the daytime, and the entire house is candle-lit. The staff get busy with their work, and it is then Sarah tells her mom that she has noticed other people in the house that are visible to her only, and she draws the picture of a male, a female (his wife), their son, Vicky, and an elder woman with magical powers.
Sandra disbelieves her, but when she starts feeling someone's presence in her house, as well as hearing noises, she decides to investigate. She finds out that the letter she had to the employment agency is still lying in the mailbox. She must now find out how Martha, Edgar and Maria came to know of the vacancies, and of the presence of a album with dead people's photos. Watch as events beyond her control unfold, leading her, Sara and David face to face with the other unseen people in this household.
**Note:Hey! Would you like to share the story of the movie Hum Kaun Hai with us? Please send it to us (popcorn@oneindia.co.in)
Sandra hires them, explains that her children's eyes may be damaged by sunlight, the curtains are to be drawn at all times, as she gets migraines by any loud noise everyone must remain quiet, there is no electricity and all work must be done during the daytime, and the entire house is candle-lit. The staff get busy with their work, and it is then Sarah tells her mom that she has noticed other people in the house that are visible to her only, and she draws the picture of a male, a female (his wife), their son, Vicky, and an elder woman with magical powers.
Sandra disbelieves her, but when she starts feeling someone's presence in her house, as well as hearing noises, she decides to investigate. She finds out that the letter she had to the employment agency is still lying in the mailbox. She must now find out how Martha, Edgar and Maria came to know of the vacancies, and of the presence of a album with dead people's photos. Watch as events beyond her control unfold, leading her, Sara and David face to face with the other unseen people in this household.
**Note:Hey! Would you like to share the story of the movie Hum Kaun Hai with us? Please send it to us (popcorn@oneindia.co.in)
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