Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Sanjay Dutt | ... |
Rahul
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Sunil Shetty | ... |
Mohit
(as Suniel Shetty)
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Bipasha Basu | ... |
Dhristi
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Dino Morea | ... |
Sunil Trehan 'Sunny'
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Himanshu Malik | ... |
Abhigyan Gupta
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Amrita Arora | ... |
Natasha Singh
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Neha Dhupia | ... |
Mrs. Rhea Trehan
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Rajat Bedi | ... |
ACP Ranbir Singh
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Payal Rohatgi | ... |
Tanya
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Sharat Saxena | ... |
Mayor Raja Bahadur
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Sachin Khedekar | ... |
Defending Lawyer
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Shivaji Satam | ... |
Dhristi's Father
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Yana Gupta | ... |
Dancer (song "Oh! What a Babe!")
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Atul Kale |
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Shashikala | ... |
Dhristi's Grandmother
(as Shasikala)
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A young widow named Drishti lives in a small remote village. She has the gift of reading tarot cards and seeing into the future and so she decides to run a small business telling fortunes. People who come for her help include Riya, who is abused by her husband, Sunny. But when Drishti advises Riya to leave him, Sunny begins to threaten her. Then there is Natasha. She is engaged to Rahul, who happens to be the headmaster of the school that Drishti's eight year old son attends. But one day, a shocked Drishti catches Natasha with another man during a party. A few days later, Natasha goes missing. The police are unable to find her. So Rahul turns to Drishti for help. Drishti, however, has a vision of her dead body, and a lake. She is scoffed upon by the local Assistant Commissioner of Police, Ranbir Singh, nevertheless the police do drag the lake at Natasha's dad insistence and recover Natasha's dead body. The primary suspect is "Sunny", who is arrested, tried in court, found guilty, and ... Written by gavin@sunny_deol2009@yahoo.com
Bipasha Basu is caked with so much makeup t'would make Barbie squirm. Oof. Her acting talents leave a lot to be desired, her Hindustani diction sucks and frankly I do not see her going places in films; at least films with any substance. Sanjay Dutt gives another wooden performance and Suniel Shetty bores with his mentally handicapped style and dialogue deliverance. Moraes does come across as a viable villain and is the most believable in this rather predictable and flat film on communication from the beyond. The most annoying feature of the DVD was the sound that jumped into deafening sound effects and then dropped to very low on dialogue. A horror film it is not. The only thing that made me jump was the sound effects which are jarring.