T
he year was 2006. Yashraj Films had returned with a Dhoom 2, the only film which still willingly casts the enigma that is Uday Chopra. Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra had given the youth both a battle cry and a new eye candy in the form of Siddharth with Rang De Basanti, and Vishal Bhardwaj retained his throne as the Bard’s biggest fan with Omkara. 2006 was also the year that witnessed the debut of Shirish Kunder with the musically charged albeit puzzling Jaan-E-Mann. Directed like a musical, Kunder’s romantic comedy of errors featured an eclectic cast of Preity Zinta, Salman Khan, and Akshay Kumar (as a NASA astronaut no less) and though the film sank without a trace, it left in its wake the idea that a razzmatazz film with a stellar cast, tremendous production values, and an immensly hummable soundtrack could substitute for a plot. A full year later, the Shaad Ali Sehgal-directed Jhoom Barabar Jhoom released with the exact same recipe, looking like an upgraded tribute to Jaan-E-Mann, and the audience readied themselves for a treat. The cast was rock solid and the director after the success of Saathiya and the entertaining madcap crime comedy Bunty Aur Babli and its casting coup of bringing Amitabh Bachchan and Abhishek Bachchan together for the first time on screen had acquired the enviable reputation of being the man with the Midas touch. With a catchy soundtrack by Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy, beautiful lyrics by Gulzar, sensational choreography by Vaibhavi Merchant, and stunning cinematography by Ayananka Bose, and Anurag Kashyap and Tigmanshu Dhulia as script consultants for the film, the stage was set. Abhishek Bachchan, Preity Zinta, Lara Dutta, Bobby Deol, and Amitabh Bachchan, looked forward to catapulting their careers to the next level. As life would have it, the next level turned out to be rock bottom. Jhoom Barabar Jhoom, a dazzlingly unsatisfying meta-musical, would go on to acquire an iconic status in the hall of “Worst Movies Made About Nothing” far outrunning even disasters like Humshakals and RGV ki Aag. Featuring an orgy of blinding lights and outlandish outfits (the Persian carpet disguised as a jacket that Amitabh Bachchan wears in the film along with the hat spiked with ostrich feathers deserve a special mention), it single-handedly ended up creating a frightening ripple effect in the lives of everyone associated with the film, a fate unheard before, in the land of Bollywood.
This deadly ripple effect later came to be known as the curse of Jhoom Barabar Jhoom. The first two victims of the curse of Jhoom Barabar Jhoom were the back-up leads, Bobby Deol and Lara Dutta, which was ironic because without a plot or any logical unfolding of events, the two actors went out of their way and their individual reputations, to deliver endearing and assured performances in a film that was the least deserving of it. As Satvinder, a lovable, momma’s dancer-boy, and Anaida, the ridiculous wig-loving assistant manager at the Ritz with a scary Hindi accent and a tolerable French accent, Bobby Deol and Lara Dutta, tapped their comic timings to lace the film with some laughs. After the film, Bobby Deol went back on his reputation to play a wooden statue with piercing eyes in Dostana, gave two forgettable performances in Thank You and Players, and ultimately resorted to home productions with his father, and his dhai-kilo-ka-haath-owning elder brother to desperately resurrect his career, in vain. The stigma of being a part of Jhoom Barabar Jhoom got so painful, that Deol ultimately had to switch careers – he gave DJing a shot – after being turned into countless memes and inspiring a parody Twitter account that eventually became more popular than him. But, even in his new profession, his past refused to leave his side, and he remained jumbled in controversy.Such was the power of Jhoom Barabar Jhoom’s jinx that it even crushed Shaad Ali’s invincibility to a painful defeat.
Preity Zinta, who had tenaciously climbed the ladder of Bollywood, did a fast climb down, perhaps paying the heaviest price. Image Credit / YRF
Surprisingly, the only person who walked away unscathed in the film’s wake turned out to be none other than Amitabh Bachchan. Image Credit / YRF

