CHHICHHORE, a story of 6 friends studying at an engineering
college in Mumbai in the 90s, takes us on a nostalgic journey to our college
days. These friends staying in Hostel 4 (called H4. The title has 4 Hs too. Some
numerology stuff going on?) where all the ‘LOSERS’ supposedly stay, reminds us
a lot of the endearing ‘Modern ke launde’ from Jo Jeeta Wahi Sikander. Cut 2,
present day, we see the lead actors Sushant Singh Rajput (Anni) and Shraddha
Kapoor (Maya) in a serious setting. Thereafter, the script jumps between the carefree
college days and the grave present day, seamlessly.
The college and hostel scenes are extremely entertaining.
The crisp and funny dialogues make us roll out in laughter regularly. [Words of
caution: some of the funniest jokes are adult. Curious preteens won’t stop
from asking “Mhanje?” (What does that mean?) Here in the UAE it was
rated PG 15.] Each of the character is unique; for example, ‘Acid’ can’t say a
line without cussing, ‘Mummy’ needs to talk to his mom all the time, and ‘Bewda’
is as the name suggests. Yet, together their chemistry feels authentic. Dunk
parties, drinking, sharing porn magazines, helping a friend win the girl, surviving
on canteen food – the film showcases everything typical about hostel life.
The GC (General Championship), where all the hostels compete
against each other takes center stage in the second half of the movie. Chhichhore
comes from director Nitesh Tiwari (of Dangal fame), so we know when it comes to
sports drama, he is one of the best! Yet, the GC feels like it is going on for
too long; hasn’t the underdogs vs the privileged brats storyline been told umpteen
times in Bollywood? Still, the hilarious one-liners and funny sports slogans, keep
the entertainment quotient, high. One question though, aren’t these engineering
students? At least once they could be shown doing a GT (glass tracing), working
on a lathe machine, preparing for an exam or viva in a PL (preparatory leave).
But no. All they do is talk about the GC. Other than to stress the fact that the
gender ratio in engineering colleges is skewed, the fact that this is an
engineering college bears no significance. It could very well have been a
hostel in a law college.
The scenes in present day are mostly grim. All of them,
except Maya, seem to have aged. Though a job well done with their 40-something
look, the common receding hairline on the men makes one wonder if the makers
just used FaceApp to chalk out their look. Do all engineering graduates start
growing bald by the time they reach 40? 😏
Of the 6 friends, Sushant Singh looks most convincing as a 40-year-old. His body
language and dialogue delivery are spot on.
The movie also touches on the pressures of the modern
education system. It’s not preachy, yet gets the message across.
The music is hummable but doesn’t leave the Pritam mark –
except maybe “fikar not”, which basically feels like Galti-se-mistake v2.0.
Now that I have seen the movie, the other songs have become more enjoyable; the
lyrics seem to have context now. Listen to “Who Din bhi kya din
the” intently, it’s sure to make you want to go back in time.
Overall an entertaining movie with a crisp storyline and
excellent performances by all the actors as ANNI, MAYA, SEXA, BEWDA, MUMMY, ACID
and DEREK. Let me know which was your favorite character. For me it was MUMMY.
He was just too cute!
Rating: 3.8/5
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