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Go Goa Gone 2013 Movie Review


Starring Cast: Saif Ali Khan,  Vir Das, Kunal Khemu,, Anand Tiwari, Puja Gupta 
Director: Raj Nidimoru and Krishna DK
Produced By: Raj Nidimoru and Krishna DK
Release Date: May 10, 2013

Three buddies go to Goa for some fun and play. What they think will be non-stop party-time that becomes a headache, as they neither run into an endless flow of unusual, auto shuffling animals, neither deceased nor in existence, dehydrated for the blood stream of humans. What are these quavers? Nothing,  but one of the alive but the shaken groups. Neither bhoots nor chudails, but they are the zombies.
 

Luv, Hardik, Bunny played by Kunal Khemu, Vir Das and Anand Tiwari wouldn't have seemed so amazed if they had known that the revered Ramsay Bros were the makers of India's first film zombies. But there's one essential distinction between those and these: Go Goa Gone is designed to create the laughter lifeline for us and to have a good laugh, and as we know, all fun in the Ramsay scary reveals was intended to be entirely accidental. And that's certainly a first. Raj and DK's freshly-minted creatures can securely take their position at the go of new-age Bollywood's blood-thirsty immortal pantheon.
 

Fittingly amazingly, Bollywood's first zom com zombie comedy gets wide brushstrokes from this very “The show biz industry” category, not the least of which is the zombies, with their empty sight, incredible stroll, and blood-spattered tooth. The establishing ground is Goa, whose seashores are on a stretch of an over-run with filthy, stringy-haired, glassy-eyed people from other countries.

Raj and DK have smartly used the desi Goa talk celebration as the most appropriate site for zombies: the brags are intended to be those drugged-out insane events loaded with acidity leads dance to pot-fuelled state of hypnosis, and we can easily think about how these things could change into terrible site.
The fun arises from the connections among the three people, even though the group of the three friend’s it-self consists of the acquainted types: one hot !@#$%^&*, one lovelorn dweeb, and the third the directly, “let me get out of here” operating firm.


When you listen to one of them who is known to be as Hardik, you know that what the laugh will be. The collections are lively and intelligent up to a factor, and then begin appearing pressured. But these three actors bring it off, even when the humour would wear off. The compulsory lady Puja Gupta , fills up the range without hassle. And with Saif Ali Khan's appearance, in a fantastic wig, black colours and a “god awful” imitation akin to the European feature, the compulsory celebrity converts that also comes in position to make a power play.