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Jumbo
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Cast : Akshay Kumar, Lara
Dutta, Dimple Kapadia, Rajpal Yadav, Gulshan Grover
Producer : Percept Picture Company
Music Director : Ram Sampat
Lyricist/s : Munna Dhiman, Asif Ali Beg & Israr Ansari
Singers : Kunal Ganjawala, Joi Barua, Sonu Nigam, Sona
Mohapatra, Sukhwinder Singh & Krishna
Release Date : 25 December 2008 |
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JUMBO (originally a Thai film KHAN KLUAY (2006) and THE BLUE
ELEPHANT (ENGLISH 2008)), a fun-frolic joy-ride opens up new
chapter of animation in Bollywood where voices of bankable
actors makes all animated characters sing, dance and act.
It's much on the strategic mindset and guidelines of flicks
like THE INCREDIBLES, ICE AGE etc that collaged grand face-values
of actors with the techno-flashy CGI animation. Akshay Kumar
plays the boisterously fervent voice-over of lead character
JUMBO, the baby elephant who strolls out from his parents
to become a war-elephant! Ram Sampath, a controversial musical
figure (KRAZZY 4 controversy) is the man behind musical substance
for this flick and this time he complete a hat-trick of working
for Akshay Kumar's flicks. Barring the exceptions of films
like HANUMAN and KRISHNA, animation films have never made
it big in audio markets. Does this internationally acclaimed
animation extravaganza have the desired musical buzz to create
thump in the marquee? Can Ram Sampath's techno-wizardry be
breaking out jinx for ''not-so-successful'' genre of animation
flicks? Just listen to it...
Carnival is all set to explode with Akshay Kumar taking the
centre-stage in his thriving jiving dancing attire in funky
hip-hop stylized ''Everything Gonna Be Alright''. Kunal Ganjawala's
boisterously voluble tones resonate high with rhythmical jingle
grooves to create out an everlasting euphoric feel. Ram Sampath
composes it like a catchy commercial jingle, mixed with trendy
hip-hop rhythms with bountiful synths and electronic sounds.
Munna Dhiman's wordings are sportive and zesty to core that
gives this child-fiction entertainer a rollicking promotional
boost on all circuits. It's one flashy melodic aspect that
will surely be creating a word and awareness for this kid-loving
fun-fare.
Ice Ice Baby! Baby Elephant ''Jumbo'' makes large-hearted
presence with all his ''doodley-doo'' acts with funky hip-hop
and loads of thriving electronic punches in the title track
''Dil Mera Jumbo''. Upcoming singer Joi Barua (sounding similar
to Adnan Sami) varying pitched vocals are suited to hilt in
serenading out playfully frolic sentiments with all peppery
emceeing and enthused chorals. Asif Ali Beg's fervently zippy
wording (''J se hai jigar baby, U se ultra cool yo, M se hai
Mastana, B is for the best of friends, O is number one yeah''...)
deserves special mention for being creatively sporadic and
meticulous enough to make impact on ears in its jumbled English
and Hindi lyrical verbatim. A promising title track that should
do wonders when it strikes chord with multi-colored sporty
animated characters on silver screen! Love blooms and that
too in kid-loving animation flick with Sonu Nigam leading
out from front with Sona Mohapatra in ''Chayee Madhoshiyan''.
Sampath creates sounds and rhythms that are close to ''Tumhi
Dekho Na'' (KABHI ALVIDA NA KEHNA) and ''Suraj Hua Madham''
(KABHI KHUSHI KABHI GHAM) with a surround-sound mushy ambience.
Sonu Nigam is expectedly brilliant in all varying mood but
Sona Mohapatra?s peculiar tones are bit off beat in this context.
It's ''club'' remix filled with transcendental ''trance''
mode sounds too contemporary but still carries enough zing
that can really burn up the floors.
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''Badhte Chalo'', a fiery climax track emanating out the
zest of marching contingent comes out as decent hear. Sukhwinder
Singh adds jingoism of ''Chak De India'' (CHAK DE INDIA) in
his throaty outburst in a composition that sounds analogous
to ''Chale Chalo'' (LAAGAN). Munna Dhiman's motivational spark
in wordings have the melodramatic finesse but it will be it's
vibrant on-screen presence that will cast major spell for
listeners.
Krishna poignantly expressive vocals in booming baritones
make the final countdown for the album with the feel of war-fare
in situational soundtrack ''Jaye He''. The song is melodramatically
appealing for it's in thunderous orchestration with loud drumming,
rigorous percussions signifying out the pop-patriotism of
the fighting contingent on battle field. Like ''Badhte Chalo'',
it has rip-roaring motivational lyrical works by Munna Dhiman
but the feel is completely situational.
JUMBO comes out as an above average musical fun-fare where
Ram Sampath makes his reasonably solitary modest entry of
this year. The album prospers heavily with its promotional
track ''Everything Gonna Be Alright? with two impressive numbers
''Dil Mera Jumbo'' and ''Chaye Madhoshiyan'' hitting the deck.
In terms of commercial success and substance, it won't be
as triumphant or phenomenal as HANUMAN but is likely to draw
better business than the bulk of recently released animation
flicks.
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