Kisi Ka Bhai Kisi Ki Jaan (2023) in Google Drive free
“Kisi Ka Bhai Kisi Ki Jaan has it all; a good screenplay, performances which emote real life emotions, character arc that spiral close to reality and a direction which knows where it is headed!!!”
Sorry about that; that was written by ChatGPT when I prompted it to write about the movie (These Ai Models you say). Let me take over...
Kisi Ka Bhai Kisi Ki Jaan has all the things mentioned but just ruined them. Salman Bhai patches an emotionless, expressionless deadpan face reaction throughout the movie and always speaks the dialogue in the same emotionless pitch and tone.
The three brothers, played by Raghav Juyal as Ishq, Jassie Gill as Moh, and Siddharth Nigam as Love, are the side characters who speak their dialogs with cues to speak one after another in this pattern: Love, Moh, and Ishq.
The plot is thin as a soap bubble but starts to thicken a bit after intermission (I was wondering if the plot was getting a little bit decent as I found out the plot was taken as a remake from the Tamil movie Veeram starring Ajith Kumar).
The sheer use of playing with the emotions of audiences comes into full action here; scenes that are played out as an imagination or a thought projected inside the mind of another character feel like too much emotional exploitation to evoke despair.
Even the movie guides us to blow the whistle, anticipating same inthe live movie theaters when they see Bhai throwing a leather jacket in mid-air and jumping off just to fit into it in the perfect time just before the landing.
Farhad Samji as a director once again fails; I feel like he is Harry Maguire of Hindi movies, and he is directing the next Hera Pheri 3 (God Save Us).
The good aspects of the movie were one decent action sequence in the train and the meta cameo of someone, which was endearing to see, but the sudden placement was darn jolting out of nowhere to find out who you’d want to watch the movie with, I guess or not.
Overall, KBKJ is part Chennai Express, part Hami 3 Bhaai, and part Fast and Furious because the movie welcomes us to the south, where Bhaijaan takes care of his three brothers, which ultimately gives us the impression that “It's about the family."