Released this week in U.P., Om Reels Bioscope Pvt. Ltd.’s Dilphire (UA) is the story of a girl who is saved from trouble by a young man. The two fall in love but the road to marriage is far from smooth.
Pradeep Singh’s story and screenplay are as dull as dull can be. The drama lacks excitement of any kind. Even his dialogues are weak.
Karan Kundra does an ordinary job as Surya. Sheetal Thakur is so-so as Sonal. Rajesh Sharma delivers a fair performance as Gajraj Mishra. Vidya Sinha is effective. Vinay Pathak makes his presence felt as inspector Premchand Tripathi. Rahul Dev has his moments as dacoit Hari Shankar. Alok Nath (as chaiwala Chacha) leaves a mark. Amit Mistry is good in the role of Rashid. Sushmita Mukherjee impresses as Kaushalya. Chandan Anand (as Abhay), Akshay Anand Kohli (as Vijay), Yogesh Tripathi (as Bablu), Neeraj Sood (as Ramdeen), Vinod Nahardih (as a dacoit) and Abhishek Gupta (as Ajay) provide routine support.
Puneet Prakash’s direction is dull. Music (Shivi Kashyap, Sandeep-Surya and Vipin Patwa) is alright. Lyrics are okay. Jayesh Pradhan’s choreography is reasonably good. Subhranshu Das’ camerawork is ordinary. Action and stunt scenes, choreographed by Javed-Aejaz are fairly exciting. Editing is loose.
On the whole, Dilphire is a flop show.