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Aishwarya Rai and Hrithik Roshan are not great actors, says the New York Times.

That Aishwarya Rai is a less than mediocre actress is known to all serious Bollywood fans. Do we need the New York Times to tell us that?

Hrithik Roshan is a few shades better than Aishwarya Rai.

But to be fair to Aishwarya and Hrithik, most Indian stars including Shahrukh Khan, Salman Khan, Abhishek Bachchan, Priyanka Chopra and a lot many others are awful at their job. They wouldn’t recognize good acting if it hit them on their face.

The few Indian stars who can act are Aamir Khan, Konkona Sen Sharma, Nana Patekar, Irrfan Khan, Naseeruddin Shah, Pasupathy, Saif Ali Khan and Akshaye Khanna.

Reviewing Jodhaa Akbar in the Saturday’s edition, the NYT, like everyone else, says the film is too long:

Forging a political alliance, Akbar marries Jodhaa, a Rajput princess (a Hindu), and then sets out to win her heart. These royals are played by Hrithik Roshan and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, two rather astonishing specimens of human beauty. Neither is a great actor (emphasis added).

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Jodhaa Akbar is an epic bore athough it’s touted as an epic love story of Mughal Emperor Akbar and Rajput princess Jodhaa, daughter of Raja Barmal, a minor king from a small state called Amer.

Directed by Ashutosh Gowariker (of Lagaan fame), Jodhaa Akbar never once scales lofty heights but struggles in the quicksand of its mediocre story, pedestrian acting, insipid action scenes and awful music.

Simply put, Jodhaa Akbar is not a work of a powerful imagination.

Jodhaa Akbar is also unnecessarily long, so long that Regal Cinemas in Burlington, New Jersey provided an interval (a rarity in the U.S.). The movie is three hours and 24-minutes long!

The movie is like one of those trashy Mills & Boon novels – Boy meets girl. Sparks fly. Boy and girl have disagreement and part. Boy and girl pine for each other. Boy and girl unite.

Add some amateurish war scenes with some elephants, camels and horses to this Mills & Boon kichdi and you have the essence of Jodhaa Akbar.

Neither Hrithik Roshan nor Aishwarya Rai -who play Mughal Emperor Akbar and Jodhaa respectively – distinguish themselves by their acting in Jodhaa Akbar.

In Jodhaa Akbar, Hrithik Roshan displays none of those magisterial traits one would associate with the Great Mughal Emperor Akbar.

Most of the time Hrithik Roshan seemed like he was performing the role of Birbal (Akbar’s court jester).

In several crucial scenes, Hrithik Roshan lets the audience down Continue reading »

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