A love story set in early 1900s Punjab is contained within Phillauri in the form of sepia-toned flashbacks but really it deserves a film of its own. Here, it is couched between a psychedelic opening sequence, a modern coming-of-age tale, and a ghost comedy. The result feels a bit like seeing a grown-up in a bouncy castle — discordant but still kind of fun.
Suraj Sharma is great as the incredulous but compliant young bridegroom. His character, a slacker who is recently back from studying in Canada, struggles with cold feet ahead of marriage. Despite the performance, Kanan’s is the weaker section of the film. His identity crisis suffers from being thinly-written. It is here that the film at times resembles Shaandaar (2015), another project in which writer Dutt was involved, although the humour is far superior here.
After a sincere Hindi film debut last year as a cop in Udta Punjab, Diljit Dosanjh produces another likeable turn, this time as a badass musician who cleans up for the sake of love
Unsurprisingly, Phillauri requires many leaps of the imagination from viewers. The frequent interweaving of past and present, however, is inventive and engaging. The film’s various threads come together neatly closer to the end. But the final act, covered in Disney amounts of glitter, would have benefited from tautness. In its attempt to do many things, the film is unable to go deep enough into any of the stories.
Phillauri: An ethereal romance that plays out in flashbacks
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