Song: Uska Hi Bana Movie: 1920 Evil Returns Singer: Arijit Uska Hi Bana ( 1920 Evil Return’s ) Song Karaoke Download (Original Quality)Lyrics Free Uska Hi Bana Lyrics of 1920 Evil Returns Free, Lyrics, Download Movie: 1920 Evil Returns: Song: Uska Hi Bana: Singer: Arijit Singh: Producer: Vikram This song ” Uska Hi Banana” is a movie of ” 1920 mp3 song uska hi bana 1920 Evil Returns download 1920 Evil Returns Promo Song download Uska Hi Oct 10, 2012 Share with us your experience of watching 1920 – Evil Returns.Aye Khuda Jab Bana Uska Hi Bana Lyrics from 1920 Evil Returns starring Aftab Shivdasani and Tia Bajpai. 1920 – Evil Returns Trailerġ920 – Evil Returns released on 2nd November, 2012. 1920 – Evil Returns Review: The Last Wordġ920 Evil Returns has nothing new to offer, but if you do want to watch a scary movie for the heck of it, then go ahead. The special effects are good in some places but terrible in others. Amar Mohile’s background score gives you a splitting headache at times. Naren Kedia’s cinematography is ordinary. Chirantan Bhatt’s songs are a bit of a saving grace for the film with some nice lyrics by Shakeel Azmi, Junaid Wasi and Manoj Yadav. The film does manage to pick up in the second half and even gives you goosebumps at times.
are such old props that it’s unbelievable that it keeps getting recycled in almost every Bollywood horror film. 1920 – Evil Returns Review: Direction, Music & Technical Aspectsīhushan Patel could have done a lot more with the script but he relies on the done-to-death scare tactics. Vidya Malvade disappoints as Karuna and she looks she’s performing in a school play. Tia Bajpai goes a little too saccharine with the good-girl bit but she does very well as the possessed Smruti. Aftab looks too blank at many places and he seems as eager as the viewer to get the movie over with. But then, he looks the same in the flashback scenes. If the idea was to show Jaidev as a puffy alcoholic who forgot facial expressions as well, then Aftab Shivdasani fits the bill. 1920 – Evil Returns Review: Star Performances Jaidev’s shayari is a nice touch, but when they do it in nail-biting scenes it gets annoying. It doesn’t help that they have the ‘vomit’ and ‘crawling’ scenes blatantly lifted from The Exorcist. By the interval you’re already tired of shadows in the dark and white eyeballs. are nice but it leaves a lot to be desired in the scare department. Vikram Bhatt and Amin Hajee’s story is intriguing and it leaves a lot of space for you to connect the dots in the first half of the film. Who is the evil spirit after? Do they save Smruti? Will Smruti and Jaidev recognize each other? And is someone else in the house keeping a secret? Tia Bajpai, Aftab Shivdasani (1920 – Evil Returns Movie Stills) 1920 – Evil Returns Review: Script Analysis The only person Jaidev can turn to now, is the cemetery keeper. On their way to see a doctor, Smruti gets completely possessed by the poltergeist. Strange things start happening with Smruti vomiting iron nails and seeing ghosts in her room. Jaidev’s sister Karuna (Vidya Malvade) is sceptical of Smruti’s presence in the house and gets even more so when the keeper of the cemetery warns them of an evil spirit in Smruti.īut Jaidev is insistent on keeping Smruti at home since he feels a connection to her. Smruti has lost her memory and neither does Jaidev recognize her. While searching for inspiration for his poetry, Jaidev finds Smruti unconscious on a riverbank and brings her home.
As fate would have it, the evil spirit sabotages her journey and leaves her for dead.Įlsewhere, the loner poet/ shayar Jaidev has taken to drinking believing Smruti will never return to his life. A servant brings her a blessed mirror that will help her escape the house and reach her lover Jaidev (Aftab Shivdasani) whom she had never seen or met, and who also thinks she is dead. The movie begins with Smruti (Tia Bajpai) trapped in her house because of an evil spirit. The very poster of 1920 – Evil Returns reminds you of the classic, and the scenes in the movie attest it further. It’s surprising that almost four decades after it was made, The Exorcist continues not only “inspires” horror filmmakers, but has scenes lifted exactly from it.