8 Bollywood Films that Made A Real Fool Out of Us
As such, what ends up getting on our plate is something that we thought we bought tickets to, until we realise otherwise, and in the midst of the theatre noise, an empty can of soda beside us, we are left wondering, going further, whether to judge a film by its stars or not?
On April Fool’s Day 2019, here is a list of films that were too well advertised for the makers’ own good, and certainly not ours.
Thugs of Hindostan (2018)
The film works on the familiar template of revenge-drama, trying hard to save grace by generating

Race 3 (2018)
Want to destroy a totally decent action-thriller franchise? Drop the original directors and hire Remo D’Souza. Even exploding SUV’s could not provide the film with some semblance of entertainment.

Namaste England (2018)
Parineeti Chopra and Arjun Kapoor pulled off a good one in Ishaqzaade. Not here. Not even close. Going commercial at the cost of script is not advised.

Dhadak (2018)
Sairat set benchmarks for love stories in Indian cinema. Sadly, Bollywood could only step up to the task with a glossy remake in the form of Dhadak, which fails to capture the impact of the original film and instead becomes the tragedy it tries to create.

Zero (2018)
Shah Rukh Khan and Anand L Rai were expected to be a dream of an actor-director pair. It happened with Zero but the film was doing too much, when it should have done too little. Guess L Rai, too, paid the price with this commercial venture.

Gold (2018)
Akshay Kumar’s lustre is fading away one film at a time. Gold was one that failed to impress, as per Kumar’s standards. His Bengali man felt a little too forced.

Yamla Pagla Deewana Phir Se (2018)
The first one was great, the second one decent. Yamla Pagla Deewana Phir Se that came 5 years apart from the middle one, could have done better with some more time, if that is what the writers and director wanted. Now the Dharmendra-Sunny-Bobby-starrer series is ruined.

Batti Gul Meter Chalu (2018)
The pairing of Shraddha and Shahid is good in this one. Although, their forced garhwali lingo, with every line cramming up ‘bal’ and ‘thehra’ adds to the pain the drab story is.

To expect the least, certain films, like the ones enlisted, should come with a caution, instead of