REVIEW: Daawat-e-Ishq’

 Subhash K. Jha says Habib Faisal misses the plot

The star cast of film Daawat - E - Ishq, Parineeti Chopra and Aditya Roy Kapoor during promotion of the film in New Delhi on Sept. 17, 2014. (Photo:Amlan Paliwal/IANS)
The star cast of film Daawat – E – Ishq, Parineeti Chopra and Aditya Roy Kapoor during promotion of the film in New Delhi on Sept. 17, 2014. (Photo:Amlan Paliwal/IANS)

Film: “Daawat-e-Ishq”; Cast: Aditya Roy Kapoor, Parineeti Chopra and Anupam Kher; Director: Habib Faisal: Rating: ** 1/2 (two and a half stars)

There are two different films tucked away into this one big under-cooked biryani of a film. “Daawat-e-Ishq” is not as inviting as the title or the film’s promotional events suggested. Food is important to the plot, yes. And hats off to writer-director Habib Faisal for tempering the texture of the tale with a culinary flavour.

You wish food were the driving force in this freewheeling tale of love during the times of biryani. But no, this is not really a film about food. It’s about a Muslim girl’s search for a life beyond finding a suitable match… At least that is what the plot seems to suggest.
Faisal’s special gift as a filmmaker is to portray the Indian middle-class in all its squalid glory. He doesn’t sweep the murk under the threadbare carpet. He takes on the quirks guilt and the conflicts of the ‘muddle class’ headlong.
Till a certain point the narrative in “Daawat-e-Ishq” tells us some pungent home truths about the over-educated’ unmarried middle-class girl’s plight as she is forced to squeeze into an arranged marriage.
Anupam Kher and Parineeti Chopra are so convincing as father and daughter looking for a suitable groom that you tend to forgive the film’s aggressive indiscretions that prop up prominently and intrusively in the second-half.
Yes, there are two films here. The ‘Hyderabad’ film in the first-half is charming effusive and endearing. The second movement takes us to Lucknow where father and daughter put up a big con show to trap an unsuspecting ‘dulha’ for Parineeti.
As the plot progresses, it is tragic to see the film’s early excellence fall apart piece by piece to reveal a plot with little character accommodating characters with a big plot up their sleeve.
Everyone behaves as if he or she is part of a high school play based on H.S. Rawail’s “Mere Mehboob”. They run around exchanging giggle, kebabs and qawwalis.
Is Sajid-Wajid’s music homage to the sound of Laxmikant-Pyarelal in the 1970s or a straight rip-off?
The purpose and intention of doing a film that involves dowry and deception cannot be doubted. Faisal means well. Alas, his storytelling doesn’t convince us of his intentions.
Performance-wise Parineeti and Anupam are a delight. Parineeti again proves herself a natural-born scene-stealer. That’s relatively easy when your co-star is hell bent on being a caricature.
Aditya Roy Kapoor with his kohl-laden eyes and pseudo-Lucknowi drawl is a disaster. His painfully self-conscious performance reduces the film to a pantomime of good intentions.
I came away with the ‘baap-beti’ relationship rather than the love story. As for food, I craved for more.
Burp re burp.