Delhii Heights
Dehlii Heights | |
---|---|
Directed by | Anand Kumar |
Written by | Sanyukta Chawla Rajesh Chawla |
Produced by | Prabhu Ganesan |
Starring | Jimmy Sheirgill Neha Dhupia Om Puri Rohit Roy Simone Singh |
Music by | Rabbi Shergill |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Madhu Entertainment |
Release date |
|
Running time | 120 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Delhii Heights is a 2007 Hindi language film written and directed by Anand Kumar and produced by Sivaji Productions. It features Jimmy Sheirgill and Neha Dhupia in the lead roles, with Om Puri, Rohit Roy, Simone Singh, Vivek Shauq and Kamini Khanna playing supporting roles. With Delhii Heights, Rabbi Shergill made his debut in films as music director and lyrics writer.[1]
Plot
Delhii Heights is a high-rise apartment in Delhi, where Abheer (Jimmy Sheirgill) and his wife (Neha Dhupia) live, a married couple who work for rival companies. It's about how their professional lives affect their personal ones. Also, there lives Timmy Kohli (Om Puri), a fun loving Sikh, with his wife Ruby (Kamini Khanna) and two daughters, Sweety (Sakshi Gulati) and (Shaina Ahluwalia). Then there is Bobby (Rohit Roy) and his wife Saima (Simone Singh). Bobby is a compulsive flirt and his wife knows about it. How things take place and how their lives change is to be seen.
Then there is Lucky (Vivek Shauq), a cricket bookie, a hilarious character in itself. Also, there are four boys (Mohit Sehgal, Anuj Sachdeva and Kinshuk Mahajan), residents of Delhii Heights, who keep running after girls and pulling each other's legs.
Cast
- Jimmy Sheirgill as Abheer
- Neha Dhupia as Suhana
- Om Puri as Timmy
- Rohit Roy as Bobby
- Vivek Shauq as Lucky
- Simone Singh as Saima
- Kamini Khanna as Ruby
- Arun Thapar as Rohan
- Mohit Sehgal
- Anuj Sachdeva
- Kinshuk Mahajan
- Sakshi Gulati as Sweety
- Shaina Ahluwalia as Timmy's 2nd daughter
- R. Madhavan as himself (cameo appearance)
- Nitish Bharadwaj (cameo appearance)
Production
The film's screenplay and dialogues were written by Samyukta Chawla, cinematography by Aatish Parmar, art by Sonal, editing by Shrikar Prasad, costumes by Hari Nakai and Varun Bahl, choreography by Remo D'Souza and stunts by Action Prakash, are the other credits. Tamil actor Madhavan was signed on to play a cameo role as himself.[2]
Soundtrack
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Sivaji Productions held the music launch of the film at Taj Lands End. The album was unveiled by the chief guests, filmmaker Ramesh Sippy and Rajkumar Santoshi.[3]
Release
The film opened on 30 March 2007 to negative reviews from critics. Reviewer Raja Sen from Rediff.com noted "there's precious little to watch in this haphazardly put together tale of predictable pitfalls" and that "the characters are barely written, and coupled with a set of superlatively poor actors, this is a tiresome watch."[4] Another critic from the Hindustan Times noted that the film "leaves you with a severe case of shivers, shudders and frights."[5] Another critic Rajeev Masand wrote "it’s a mangled mess of a film that can really come of only one good use — therapists could use it as a test of patience for people working on their anger management."[6]
References
- ^ BBC. "BBC - Shropshire - Entertainment - DELHI HEIGHTS press conference". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
- ^ "What a come back!". 31 March 2007. Retrieved 17 April 2019 – via www.thehindu.com.
- ^ "Delhi Heights music released". radioandmusic.com. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
- ^ "Stay away from Delhii Heights". rediff.com. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
- ^ "REVIEW: Delhii Heights". Hindustan Times. 30 March 2007. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
- ^ "Masand's Verdict: Delhii Heights - Rajeev Masand – movies that matter : from bollywood, hollywood and everywhere else". rajeevmasand.com. Retrieved 17 April 2019.