![]() ![]() Then there is the cricketing world and underworld bit. Whether it is the childish, yet well defined love story, or the complexities of a man who is clearly suffering from some obsessive compulsive disorder or other. The first good thing about Jannat is that it has a solid storyline. Torn apart by his love for the girl of his dreams, Zoya, and his greed for money, Arjun is left with making a choice between living a normal hard-earned life and an easy, yet deceiving one. He becomes a bookie and soon gains attention in the eyes of underworld don Abu Ibrahim, who buys arms and ammunitions with the money he makes from betting on cricket matches. He is a master predictor of cricket matches. Arjun, the character portrayed by Emraan Hashmi, is a man with, what he calls, a 'sixth sense'. However, its main storyline deals with betting and match fixing in the cricketing world. Essentially, like most Bhatt films, it is a love story. The former set in India, the later in South Africa. Jannat is the directorial debut of Kunal Deshmukh, and among all the flops that have come out of the Indian Hindi film industry this year, Jannat happens to be a huge surprise. He is also credited with having launched budding directors in this new age of Bollywood (Recall : Anurag Basu). And more often than not, his films turn out to be quite entertaining. The best thing about a Mukhesh Bhatt release is that no one expects much from it. ![]()
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