Monthly Archives: March 2024

Alibaba Aani Chalishitale Chor review: Vivek Bele’s dialogues deserve special mention  

Subjects about friendship never get old. Most of the times, these are emotional films about a group of friends who face an internal adversity only to reconcile in the end. Aditya Ingale’s Alibaba Aani Chalishitale Chor is also a story about a group of friends and what happens amongst them, but there is a twist. It’s a comic drama with a dash of adultery.

The movie is based on the play of the same name (which this writer hasn’t seen). It tells the story of three couples, played by Subodh Bhave-Shruti Marathe, Anand Ingale-Madhura Welankar, Atul Parchure-Mukta Barve and a single guy (Umesh Kamat), who are a part of a group of friends in their 40s.

The seven of them decide to venture out of the city on a farmhouse for a weekend of relaxation and partying. At night, when all of them are merrily dancing, the lights suddenly go off. During that brief moment, one can hear a loud kiss, followed by the sound of a hard slap. Nobody knows who kissed whom and who slapped whom and whether the kiss and slap are related. This single incident is enough for everyone to doubt their respected spouses.

On top of that, each one of them get an e-mail from a stranger who has started a blog that publishes secrets among the people of their group and after eight days, he or she will reveal what exactly happened that night.

Alibaba Aani Chalishitale Chor is a rare movie where the dialogues score the highest. Vivek Bele, who also wrote the play, has come up with hilarious lines that get you in splits regularly, especially the theories about what happened that night. A lot of the conversations happen over the phone and these are also filled with humour. You are reminded of his previous work on a film on similar lines in the form of Badam Rani Gulam Chor (2012).

The dialogues have been rightly complemented by the actors. After Vaalvi, one again gets to see the funny side of Subodh Bhave and he proves his versatility yet again. Mukta Barve is seen in a different role for the first time and she too scores high. Umesh Kamat, as the only single person in the group, gets good scope and he latches onto it. Anand Ingale, Atul Parchure and Madhura Welankar provide funny and mature acts too. Shruti Marathe is decent.

The movie has a funny and enjoyable first half which also establishes the tale well, makes you laugh and curious about what happened during that fateful moment. But for a good amount of time in the second half, the story doesn’t move much, except creating more curiosity. You still don’t lose interest because of the funny lines.

Also read: Kennedy review: Anurag Kashyap’s political cum crime drama is impressive

But what really hurts the film is the finale, for which you have been waiting eagerly. The major reveal in the end takes you by surprise but it isn’t exciting or interesting enough. The same goes for the message given. The film would have been a much better entertainer if it had scored well in the climax.

Overall: Alibaba Aani Chalishitale Chor is a one-time watch because of the humorous lines.

Rating: 2.5 out of 5

Director: Aditya Ingale

Producers: Nitin Prakash Vaidya, Nikhil Vadarkar, Viraj Londhe and Sandeep Deshpande

Writer: Vivek Bele

Cast: Subodh Bhave, Mukta Barve, Shruti Marathe, Anand Ingale, Madhura Welankar, Atul Parchure and Umesh Kamat

Sachin-Kambli’s unknown match-winning partnership: 50 Years of Wankhede

The Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai completes 50 years this year. It is an extremely revered site for cricket lovers from the city. In fact, it can also be called a place of worship for them for the numerous memories they have had here over the years. As the stadium completes 5 decades, I am reminded of the very first time I entered this place to watch a match way back in 1998.

It was a Ranji One-Day West Zone League match between Mumbai and Gujarat. It was my brother’s eighth birthday, so apart from both of us, our parents also joined us. Our major reason for going for this match was to see the likes of Sachin Tendulkar and Vinod Kambli bat together.

Apart from them, the Mumbai team also comprised of some other well-known names like Amol Muzumdar, Pravin Ambre, Abey Kuruvilla, Paras Mhambrey, Jatin Paranjpe, Ramesh Pawar, etc. It was a star-studded Mumbai line up back then.

Although this was my first visit to the Wankhede, it was the second time I set foot inside a cricket stadium. The first time was in the same year at the Brabourne Stadium for a match between Mumbai and Australia. Myself, my father and brother got to see Sachin score his first double hundred in first-class cricket in the match where eventually Mumbai beat Australia (read more about that match HERE). I was expecting a similar experience at the Wankhede.

Photo for representational purpose only. Source: Deccan Chronicle

There was nothing known as ‘October heat’ that would continue till November back then. Hence, it was a pleasant Sunday November 22 morning on the day of the match. The excitement inside me knew no bounds. As we entered the stadium, it took me a while to believe that I was indeed inside the Wankhede for the first time. For some time, I was just looking around the stadium.

I was hoping to see Mumbai’s star batsmen chase the target and that’s what happened. Mumbai won the toss and sent Gujarat into bat. Kuruvilla and Mhambrey ensured that the opposition never got going. They were eventually reduced to 181 for 9 in their 50 overs. This was some sort of recovery after they were 15 for 3 at one stage. There were some fun moments when Kuruvilla stood near the boundary where we were sitting and there was some funny banter from the crowd.

The excitement in the stadium knew no bounds when Mumbai’s captain Sachin Tendulkar came into bat with Rajesh Sutar. Mumbai lost Sutar early at the score of 11. But the fall of wicket was met with cheers of joy as that gave us a chance of watching Sachin and Kambli bat together. Me, and a lot of others, were in the stadium for precisely this reason. Their on-pitch pair instantly reminds us of their historic 664 run partnership during an inter-school Harris Shield tournament in 1988.

The beloved duo from Mumbai didn’t disappoint as they started going after the Gujarat bowling and we got to see an array of attacking shots from both. To see the two in action play a wide range of shots on my very first outing at the Wankhede was something I can’t explain in words. A sixer Kambli hit near the stand where we were seated is still fresh in my memory and the moment of the match for me.

Both Tendulkar and Kambli reached half centuries in quick time. The former eventually got out but not after scoring a delightful 51 of just 36 balls with 8 fours and 2 sixes. Kambli continued the onslaught and he ended up with 90 not out of just 61 balls. His innings contained 10 fours and 3 sixes! Mumbai went onto chase the target in just 25.5 overs with just 3 wickets down.

I couldn’t have asked for a better first visit to the Wankhede.

This was also probably the last match-winning partnership in a limited overs match between Tendulkar and Kambli. If not that, it is surely a lesser-known one. The match wasn’t recorded as first-class matches hardly got live coverage in those days. Hence, there is not much about the match on the internet, except scorecards like THIS one.

That makes it all the more special.

Also Read: When team Mumbai almost AGAIN defeated Australia