Movie Review: Rockstar (2011)
November 15, 2011 at 4:07 pm 16 comments
The trailer for Rockstar presented the movie as a typical rom-com in which a dork melts an ice queen’s heart before the interval, only to have obstacles to their love thrown in their path for the second half of the movie. Rockstar is less conventional than that. At times, it’s an extended music video, at others a hypnotic tale of passion. It’s not always successful, but director Imtiaz Ali deserves credit for trying something different.
As in Ali’s two previous hits — Jab We Met and Love Aaj Kal — Rockstar features a hero unable to articulate his feelings for his beloved, even if it means losing her to another man. This time the tongue-tied protagonist is Janardhan (Ranbir Kapoor), a dorky college kid with superstar ambitions.
Cafeteria-owner Khatana (Kumud Mishra) tells Janardhan that his life has been too easy, and that all musicians must suffer for their art. Janardhan’s real problem is a lack of charisma and a fondness for unflattering sweater vests, but that’s not much of a movie set-up.
Janardhan humiliates himself in a clumsy effort to woo the most popular girl in school, Heer (Nargis Fakhri), who’s already engaged to a rich guy from Prague. The two become pals, and she gives him the stage name “Jordan.” She also gives him an opportunity to express his feelings for her and perhaps forestall her marriage. He doesn’t take it, and Heer heads to Prague.
To this point — about the first hour of a 2-hour 40-minute movie — the story is laid out rather predictably: the kids have fun in seedy back alleys and amidst beautiful scenery in Kashmir, the setting for Heer’s wedding. The snowy mountain passes and gorgeous costumes are a real highlight.
Things veer from the expected during the film’s second hour. It begins not chronologically, but rather with a reporter investigating Jordan’s early career. It’s two years after Heer’s wedding, and Khatana recounts the emotion collapse that preceded Jordan’s rise to Indian rock stardom. An international music competition brings Jordan to Prague where he and Heer rekindle their interrupted romance, despite her now-married status.
Much of this storyline unfolds through A.R. Rahman’s incredible soundtrack. The second hour of Rockstar is primarily a string of music videos, the lyrics of Jordan’s music (voiced by Mohit Chauhan) providing insight into his emotional growth in way he can’t express in conversation. Thankfully, the lyrics are translated really well, allowing the story to unfold in an intriguing way.
Kapoor and Fakhri are terrific together. Their love scenes are sexy and passionate. Fakhri’s big screen debut is a promising one, as she plays Heer with the right mix of vulnerability and strength.
It’s unfortunate, then, that the movie ends the way that it does. While the movie’s main character is clearly Jordan, the second hour of the film gives equal weight to the choices both he and Heer must make. As the movie shifts into its third and final timeframe, Heer’s choices are taken from her, reducing her from a lead character to a mere catalyst for Jordan’s emotional growth.
That disservice to Heer’s character — along with an awkward bridge between the final shot of the movie and the closing credits, made up of scenes of Jordan and Heer in happier times — left me with mixed feelings about the movie. It’s uneven (and too long, of course), but the solid performances, beautiful scenery and intriguing story-telling mechanism make it worth a trip to the theater.
Links
- Rockstar Official Website
- Rockstar Trailer
- Rockstar at Wikipedia
- Rockstar at IMDb
- My Review of Love Aaj Kal
- My Review of Jab We Met
Entry filed under: Reviews. Tags: 2011, 3 Stars, A. R. Rahman, Bollywood, Hindi, Imtiaz Ali, Indian, Jab We Met, Kumud Mishra, Love Aaj Kal, Mohit Chauhan, Movie Review, Nargis Fakhri, Ranbir Kapoor, Rockstar, Runtime, Trailer.

1. English Songs | November 16, 2011 at 8:53 am
Excellent information., your site gives the best and the most interesting information. This is just the kind of information that i had been looking for.., I’ll go ahead and bookmark your site to return to the future.. THANKYOU
Regards:
Super heavy Songs
2. Tanay | November 16, 2011 at 8:44 pm
So kathy, my prediction was right. U loved the movie
3. Kathy | November 16, 2011 at 9:12 pm
You were right, Tanay, though I won’t go so far as to say I “loved” Rockstar. I loved Imtiaz Ali’s previous movie, Love Aaj Kal. I just liked Rockstar a lot (though I think I understand why you found it boring).
4. Tanay | November 17, 2011 at 4:20 am
Ya it was boring. Have u noticed kathy, that this movie its writer are trying to prove or u can say justify extra marital affair. Love after marriage that happens but getting physical again n again??? Thats lust not love. Ha ha ha…. Seriously what a movie. That girl in the whole movie going to strip clubs, watching porn etc. N where is her husband? He is missing.
5. Kathy | November 17, 2011 at 4:02 pm
Heer’s husband doesn’t get enough screentime, and neither does her immediate family, for that matter. I love Shernaz Patel, the actress who plays Heer’s mother.
As for the movie condoning extramarital affairs, I think “Rockstar” sends the opposite message. It treats extramarital sex in the same way that horror movies from the 1980s treated sex in general. As soon as the audience saw a couple of teens making out in the backseat of a car, they knew that Freddy or Jason would show up to chop the teens to bits. (Spoiler Alert) After Heer consummates her affair with Jordan, she becomes seriously ill. When they have sex again, it kills her.
6. Tanay | November 17, 2011 at 6:49 pm
Hmm ok i agree. But u loved the movie so much that u can’t hear anything against it
7. Abhi | November 18, 2011 at 6:51 am
Kathy,i actually didn’t like the movie much. The end was so cliched and kitschy.I loved the first half,with the lead couple doing all crazy things in a typical imtiaz ali fashion.But 2nd was a downer making it boring.But its watchable because of Ranbir’s excellent performance and ARR’s superb music.Nargis irritates,her acting is unconvincing to say the least.
8. Kathy | November 18, 2011 at 9:05 am
I agree about the ending, Abhi. Part of the problem with making movies that are over two-and-a-half hours long is that it’s hard to sustain any one emotional tone for that length of time. It forces the director to try and include every type of emotion in one movie, and that’s just as hard to do. If Rockstar was about 30 minutes shorter, it might have been a little more emotionally cohesive.
9. shekhar | November 19, 2011 at 2:40 pm
hi kathy, I liked this movie a lot, may be because of the performance and the music. It stayed with me for a long time. especially the chemistry between the couple and the second half performance of ranbir.
I would like to recommend you few movies and am curious about the reviews –
1)shaitan
2)gulal
3)Raat gayi baat gayi
4)no smoking
10. Kathy | November 19, 2011 at 6:51 pm
Thanks for the comment and suggestions, Shekhar. I’m still waiting for Shaitan to become available on Netflix or YouTube in the U.S., and I’ll have to check on the availability of the three other titles as well.
11. BCaldeira | November 19, 2011 at 9:06 pm
Hi Kathy .. this is my 1st time on your website ,,, it interests me that an American has got so finely tuned to Indian emotions. I saw Rockstar last night and have just read a few reviews by well known Indian critics … yours was quite simply head and shoulders above the rest in terms of sheer quality ..
I normally go to imdb.com to check out Roger Ebert’s appraisal of a movie … now I will come to your website for Bollywood
12. Kathy | November 19, 2011 at 9:56 pm
Thanks, BCaldeira! That’s one of the nicest comments I’ve ever received. I’m glad you like the site, and I look forward to hearing your thoughts on movies in the future.
13. BCaldeira | November 19, 2011 at 11:09 pm
Kathy.. may I recommend Chandni Bar to you .. the lead actress is Tabu who is quite simply India’s greatest actress by some distance
… at the time I saw Chandni Bar I was quite fond of visiting dance bars (the focal point of this film) in Bombay/Mumbai … this movie and particularly Tabu’s performance shook me to the core and I’ve never stepped into once of these bars for the last 11 years..
Tabu is not a prolific actress and to pay the bills she does occasionally act in mediocre stuff but Chandni Bar is a real treat ,,, this is serious stuff .. not a Friday night beer n chips movie for sure …Cheers Bosco
14. Opening November 23: Desi Boyz « Access Bollywood | November 22, 2011 at 8:41 pm
[...] Rockstar carries over at the South Barrington 30, having earned $911,064 in its first two weeks in U.S. theaters. Share this:StumbleUponLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. [...]
15. Opening December 2: I Am Singh and The Dirty Picture « Access Bollywood | December 1, 2011 at 4:07 pm
[...] After earning $702,325 in the U.S. over the 5-day Thanksgiving weekend, Desi Boyz gets a second week at the Golf Glen 5, South Barrington 30 and Cantera 17. The South Barrington 30 is also carrying over Rockstar. [...]
16. Best Bollywood Movies of 2011 « Access Bollywood | January 11, 2012 at 3:46 pm
[...] of films pushed the envelope. Ra.One lead the Hindi film industry’s foray into 3D technology. Rockstar experimented with making a movie feel like an extended music [...]