• Currently 3.04/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Comment
  • Email Icon

Bollywood Real-life couples no onscreen sex appeal

08-05-2006 05:51

Bollywood Yet another pair of good looking, madly-in-love Bollywood starlets who promised to burn the screens with their real-life sizzling chemistry have fizzled out onscreen.

"36 China Town", featuring real-life lovers Kareena Kapoor and Shahid Kapur as a hot couple, disappoints. Coming from the stables of director duo Abbas-Mastan, the let down makes one wonder whether real-life couples should be cast together at all.

In more than a few instances in the past, Bollywood stars who have become increasingly public about their love life have disheartened viewers (and directors) with their lack of comfort and uneasiness when it comes to portraying love scenes onscreen.

Shahid and Kareena's off-screen chemistry is far more interesting than that in "36 China Town". In "Fida", their first film together, Kareena shone much more with her other co-star Fardeen Khan than with Shahid.

Watching the awkwardness and discomfort between Kareena and Shahid onscreen, one would prefer the times when a kiss between the hero and heroine in a film was always represented by two roses meeting or a setting sun.

Though Hindi films are no longer shy of intimacy, many Bollywood actors, especially those who are real-life couples, continue to look uncomfortable with such scenes.

Off late, the ones who have pulled off love scenes convincingly have been unlikely pairs like Rahul Bose, who reportedly kissed Laila Rouass so passionately in "Split Wide Open" that her tooth chipped, and Naseeruddin Shah, who kissed Tara Deshpande with fervour in "Bombay Boys".

Before Bipasha Basu hooked up with beau John Abraham, she did not mind going the whole hog in "Jism". But now, there are no sparks between the two onscreen in their subsequent films together - "Aetbaar" and "Madhoshi".

Love booming on the sets of films is as old as the movies. But in Hindi films the chemistry, love, comfort and passion seldom translate onscreen. Pairs like Dharmendra-Hema Malini, Amitabh Bachchan-Jaya Bhadhuri and Rishi Kapoor-Neetu Singh who sizzled onscreen have become a rarity today.

Remember how Aishwarya Rai and ex-boyfriend Vivek Oberoi went out of the way to play-down their onscreen kiss during publicity of "Kyun! Ho Gaya Na". When the film bombed, the lack of screen chemistry between the two was held responsible.

Good pals Kajol and Shah Rukh Khan have superb onscreen chemistry and have given Hindi film aficionados some of the most memorable moments. But Kajol and husband Ajay Devgan were stone cold in "Gundaraj", "Dil Kya Kare" and "Raju Chacha".

Ditto for Akshay Kumar, who sent temperatures rising with Ayesha Jhulka, Raveena Tandon, Shilpa Shetty and now Priyanka Chopra. But with wife Twinkle Khanna he was as cold as a turkey in "Zulmi" and "International Khiladi".

If psychiatrist Stephanie Charters, from King's College London, is to be believed, sexual chemistry is definitely an important ingredient for winning onscreen chemistry.

The point is not that we need to show more for more sizzle onscreen. The point is that our filmmakers need to look into the merit of promoting films based solely on bringing together real-life lovers onscreen.

More about Bollywood Real-life couples no onscreen sex appeal on page 2

Your Comments:

by prvnkmr_kmr - 10:38:39 2nd Jul 2008

i am praveen your are very sweete

Kareena Kapoor

Kareena Kapoor

Share this article: