DVD
Hum Saath Saath Hain (2 Discs)£4.99 Free DeliveryRRP: £19.99 | You save: £15.00 (75%) Temporarily out of stock. This item will be dispatched as soon as it arrives. |
"A movie like this has a lot to live up to. Produced by Rajshri Productions that brought the successful and delightful Hum Aapke Hain Koun (HAHK) and Maine Pyar Kya (MPK), a taste for more family gatherings and the closeness and frankness amoung the characters. Not that this is another remake of 'HAHK'. Although there are comparable similarities, not to mention references of songs from the actual movie which never fails to delight any audience. Fortunately it 'has' lived up to all the type. Much of the same family oritented themes surface. The Plot: very simple. The three brothers from the oldest to youngest Vivek (Mohnish Bahl), Prem (Salman Khan), and Vinod (Saif Ali Khan) are paired right at the beginning with Sadhana (Tabu), Preeti (Sonali Bendre), and Sapna (Karishma Kapoor) respectively. Neelam also appears in the film as their younger sister and portrays herself as a compassionate, caring and sweet sister. There is a strong family unit among the parents and children. There are obvious strong family ties that hold everyone together. The first song after the intro ""Yai tho such hai kai bhagwan hai"" reveals much more about the family unit and how Vivek (Monish Bahl) has a medical problem. The quiet reserved mature brother has a problem with his right hand, it constantly shakes and he always tries his best to keep it out of sight. This adds much to the sympathy towards his character. And this song is arguably the best one in the film, along with ""Mhare Hiwada Mein Nache Mor"". The first two hours of the film are light-hearted and peaceful but in the third hour theres a sudden turn of events over ""who"" to leave the family business to and this causes much tension and sadness among the family members which seperates the closeness that they have come to share. However, the movie does inevitably end on a happy note. As for the characters themselves, Salman Khan takes a departure from his silly immature character roles and portrays a more responsible, mature, and quiet character which suits him refreshingly in the film. Sonali Bendre is also refreshing to see as the shy, sweet, caring ladki, far different from her many roles in the past, which have clung on the edge of 'vulgar'. Tabu as always is graceful in all her roles as she is here and comes off as classy, although most people would come off as classy with only a few lines in the film, Tabu needed to emerge as one of the stronger and defining characters of the movie As for Karishma she is best suited to be perky and bouncy and as so, she is portrayed as such here. Saif Ali Khan practically steals many of the scenes with his youthful masti appeal and the engergy he puts into his role reflects in his character. He pulls off his goofy and sweet lovable character very well. One feature that really does stand out in the film are the beautifull shiny costumes which add just enough glitter for one Indian film to keep everyone's eyes fixed."

Average rating (1 review)
An excellent family movie.
underworld | 03/08/2008 | See all underworld's reviews (33) »
A good value for money bollywood movie. Good print with optional subtitles. Most shops charge £9.99 for this movie. A definite watch and a good buy. There are two distributors for this movie tiptop video and sparkworldwide entertainment. This is the tiptop video two disc version with special features at the price of £4.99 and the sparkworldwide entertainment is a single disc version with no special features and with a higher price of £6.99. Buy this version as this is better for the value. A definite buy and definitely an excellent family movie.
Mohnish Bahl, Salman Khan, Saif Ali Khan, Tabu, Sonali Bendre & Karishma Kapoor | |
Universal Suitable for All | |
1999 | |
Widescreen 16:9 Anamorphic | |
Hindi - Dolby Digital (2.0) Mono | |
English | |
2 hours and 57 minutes (approx) | |
Region 2 - Will only play on European Region 2 or multi-region DVD players. |
































