Cinema Central’s Colourrs Of Love (A) is the story of a depressed sex therapist who needs a psychologist to bring him out of his condition.
Avee (Smaran Sahu) is a sex therapist who is depressed. His mother (Deepika Amin) asks him to meet her psychologist-friend, Rajat (Pawan Chopra). Avee meets Rajat and tells him all. Avee’s marriage had been fixed with Shruti but the latter had ditched him just a month before the marriage was scheduled, saying that she was in love with another guy. After that, Avee had had physical relations with his patient, Rekha, who too had walked out of his life as there was no commitment from either side. Another girl, Nikita (Bhakti Kubavat), enters Avee’s life. After wooing her and having physical relations with her for two months, Nikita leaves Avee as she is already engaged to be married to a boy in Pune. After hearing out Avee, Rajat reasons out with him that both, Shruti and Nikita, had reasons to leave him. He assures Avee that there would be a girl who would come into his life and remain with him forever. Does Avee find a life partner? Is he cured of his depression?
Divyesh Limbani has written a routine story and screenplay, both of which hardly offer anything exciting or novel to the audience. The drama progresses in a predictable fashion so that the viewers often lose interest in the drama. Although Rajat is a psychologist, what he tells Avee is what even a friend or relative would tell someone to pull him out of his depression. In other words, the audience expect that Rajat would come up with something more than ordinary or non-qualified humans would think of, but nothing of the sort happens. Divyesh Limbani’s dialogues are average.
Smaran Sahu is alright as Avee. Deepika Amin acts ably as Avee’s mother. Pawan Chopra is so-so as psychologist Rajat. Devang Tanna is average. Bhakti Kubavat is ordinary in the role of Nikita. Jay Wadhwani’s performance is ordinary. Gurpreet Kaur and Bhumika Barot lend routine support. Harshita Sahu, Pravin Pan Patil and Ruchika Varma pass muster.
Divyesh Limbani’s direction is not up to the mark. There is nothing in his narration which stands out. Music (Tusshar Mallek and Lovenish Sharma) and lyrics (Abhishek Gaur and Lovenish Sharma) are functional. Tusshar Mallek and Lovenish Sharma’s background music is nothing to shout about. Mihir Fichadiya’s camerawork is average. Production designing (Malieka Singh Tak) is barely fair. Divyesh Limbani’s editing ought to have been tighter.
On the while, Colourrs Of Love is too ordinary to make a mark.
Released on 4-10-’24 on Zee5.