Dr. Shaina Mehra is a psychiatrist living in Warsaw, Poland. Her father Brijesh brings a marriage proposal and asks her to meet police officer Himanshu Tyagi, who is the son of a friend of Brijesh. The two meet in a train, where Shaina reveals she had an ex-boyfriend Devi Lal Singh, and talks about her crazy experiences with him. Devi is shown to be intelligent and adventurous, always looking for a kick in his life. Shaina was helping her friend, Vidhi elope with Devi's friend, Jignesh, when she met Devi in Delhi. After a long, hilarious chase, Devi got Vidhi and Jignesh married in a temple, but also helped Vidhi's mother reach the temple for a "kick". Shaina met Devi's family; the two began dating and fall in love. On her suggestion and getting ashamed from her father, Devi got a job in a chemical lab but resigned soon, suffering from the lack of a "kick". Devi tried hiding from Shaina that he is jobless again but she soon discovered it. Shaina scolded him for not being able to earn money, and Devi broke up with her and said that his new "kick" is now to earn money. She has since shifted to Warsaw, having to entertain Brijesh and his desire to see her married.
Himanshu shares his experiences with a thief he hates as he cannot stop him; the robber, Devil, has been targeting the rich people associated with corrupt businessman Shiv Gajra, and is robbing them. Devil is actually Devi. As Himanshu fails in catching Devil, Devi contacts him and insults him by calling him a "loser", which is a clue that Devi gives Himanshu. While with Himanshu in Warsaw, Shaina spots Devi who is there for treatment after losing his memory in an accident. She offers to handle Devi's case, which was referred by Dr. Jayant Verma, and take him home. However, Devi is in fact faking his memory loss; his real plan is to befriend and fool Himanshu and rob Shiv, who will come to Poland. Devi enters a charity function and robs Shiv, but Himanshu and Shaina discover the truth and Devi is ultimately forced to drown himself. However, he escapes.
Devi's true intentions and good deeds are revealed by his father Ratan Lal in a flashback. He tells Shaina that Devi is committing robberies to help poor children who are battling diseases. Devi saved a girl, Jhumki after reading a letter in the hands of her dead parents, and got the most powerful kick when she smiled at him. When Dr. Verma told him that several such children are battling diseases, he decided to save them by robbing to get money for their treatments, knowing that it will give a lot of Kick. Back in the present, Himanshu tracks Devi down to a bar in Delhi and warns him he will be killed if he robs again, but Devi says he will rob a huge party fund on 14 November. He dares Himanshu to kill him on the 14th, otherwise, Devi will be standing in front of him on 15 November and he won't be able to do anything.
On 14 November, after fighting Shiv's henchmen and robbing the money, Devi kills him. Himanshu is set up with officers to shoot Devi, but several kids block his shot. Himanshu realizes the robberies were for the kids after a teacher informs him that the children are going to pray for their saviour and its Children's Day today. On 15 November, Devi joins the police force. He arrives at the police station and stands in front of Himanshu, who is unable to do anything about the situation, therefore completing his challenge. Himanshu is taken off of the case and it is given to Devi, who is now a police officer. Devi then thanks Himanshu, saying that he was never against him, but he is against the corrupt system.
Producer Sajid Nadiadwala initially signed A. R. Murugadoss as the director,[6] but he was replaced by Shirish Kunder after Murugadoss was unable to direct the film.[7] Apart from Ileana D'Cruz,[8] who starred in the original 2009 film of the same name,[9] Deepika Padukone,[10] Anushka Sharma,[11][12] Sonakshi Sinha,[13] Priyanka Chopra,[14][15] and Angela Jonsson[16] were considered for the female lead. After much discussions, Jacqueline Fernandez was signed on to act in the film.[17] US-based Abhijat Joshi, who had written the scripts for Munna Bhai M.B.B.S. and Lage Raho Munnabhai was approached to write the script in 2009. Nadiawala wanted the script to be prepared during the release of 3 Idiots, when Joshi had come back to India.[18] Chetan Bhagat eventually wrote the script for the film which is based on Vakkantham Vamsi's script.[19]
Nadiadwala and his team visited South Korea in September 2011 at the invitation from the Korea Tourism Organization, and he signed an agreement to shoot portions of this project and others in that country.[7] The shooting of the film began on 27 July 2013 in Scotland,[20] where Khan shot a car crash scene and helicopter crash scene in Glasgow.[21] Some scenes were shot at Mehboob Studios in February 2014[22] and at the Film City studio in Mumbai.[22] In October 2013, while the shooting was in progress outside the city of Mumbai, the Film Studio Settings and Allied Mazdoor Union asked Sajid to pay them wages for one and a half shifts, which he refused. The workers stopped shooting for a week and only resumed when Sajid agreed to the worker's demands.[23] The shooting of the movie Roy had to be postponed due to Fernandez's commitments to this movie.[24] Fernandez started learning the Urdu language specifically for the film with a coach who was hired by Khan.[25] While shooting was underway in Mumbai in March 2014, Khan's body double, Ajay, was injured while shooting a stunt scene. He was supposed to jump from the first floor of a house onto a railway track, but went through the sugar glass, injuring his face.[26] He required hospitalization.[26]
The film's climax was shot in Poland at the Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw.[27][28]Khan wanted to shoot part of the film in United Kingdom, but he was refused a visa by the authorities.[29] Umbrella (disambiguation).
The soundtrack album featuring 18-tracks were composed by Himesh Reshammiya, Meet Bros. Anjjan, and Yo Yo Honey Singh. The film's score was composed by Julius Packiam. The album was released on 2 July 2014.[30] Sajid bought the rights to Rajiv Rai's movie Vishwatma's song Saat Samundar. It was a tribute to Sajid's first late wife and Bollywood actress Divya Bharti which the song was based on. Since this was his first movie he directed he wanted to do a tribute to his late wife Divya, and wanted her to be part of it. Salman Khan danced to the song "Saat Samundar Par" as a tribute to Bharti. The lyrics were written by Kumaar, Shabbir Ahmed, Mayur Puri, Yo Yo Honey Singh, Jasmine Sandlas.
Kick generally received mixed to positive reviews.Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama gave the film 4.5 stars and predicted that it would become a blockbuster.[50] Sarita Tanvar from DNA gave the movie 4 stars and called it "a non-stop entertainment and Salman Khan at his best."[51] Saurabh Dwivedi from India Today also gave the film 4 stars and stated, "This film will rule over everybody's hearts and minds. The film is replete with all things about Salman, and it's a complete paisa vasool watch. It's a masala offering for families, students, kids, and everyone in between."[52] Times of India also gave a positive review and rated it with 3.5 stars. They stated "Kick is Bollywood biryani, a masala movie spiced with the superstardom of Salman Khan, garnished by charming Jacqueline, smouldered over the wry talent of Randeep Hooda. Kick is not for lovers of fine filmi foie gras, but for those who want a hearty Eid banquet to enjoy".[53] Subhash K. Jha gave 4 out of 5 stars and said "Nadiadwala ensures there are enough tailor-made sequences to accentuate Salman's super-heroic persona".[54]
Rachit Gupta from Filmfare gave the movie 3 out of 5 and called it "a brainless romp".[58] Shubha Shetty Saha from Mid-Day gave the movie 2 out of 5 and called it "a bizarre movie".[59] Anupama Chopra from Hindustan Times gave the movie 2.5 out of 5 and called it "an outrageously silly film".[60] Rajeev Masand from CNN-IBN gave the movie 2.5 out of 5 and said "it doesn't make much sense".[61] Rahul Desai from Mumbai Mirror gave the movie 2 out of 5 and called it "harebrained, patronizing and regressive at most points".[62] Suhani Singh from India Today gave the movie 1.5 out of 5 and called it "unimaginative and unoriginal".[63] Saibal Chatterjee from NDTV gave the movie 2 out of 5 and said "it provides a kick only sporadically".[64] Shubhra Gupta from The Indian Express gave the movie 2 out of 5 and called it "unjhelable".[65]
I know we have seen similar attempts to convert old film cameras to digital before. This is a bit different and has a working prototype. I came across this and thought it was interesting. I actually saw a YouTube demo of a working model of an adapter to allow you to mount a cellphone camera to the back of an old film camera. (I tried a few searches on PN and did not find any hits to it being discussed here before so here goes.)
Assembling and collimating a copy camera can be a substantial part of the external time of the process. A dedicated film scanner does the hard lifting in this regard, but they're not being made or supported any more. Despite all the early attempts to hybridize film and digital cameras, the ultimate solution was a dedicated digital camera. The remaining problem is how to present the film to the camera, which has largely been solved by a resurgence of copy adapters, including the Nikon ES-1 (slides) and ES-2 (slides and film strips), used with a macro lens and digital camera.
I'm still shaking my head in disbelief that some idiot(s) would think that strapping a smartphone to the back of a film camera was in any way analogous (sorry!) to shooting film. And getting fuzzy Holgaesque images to boot.
Why is that thing for 35mm? I can't have been the only guy buying digital bodies going with lenses from film days. A toy dedicated to experiencing old film cameras might be more fun on TLR with chimney finder or LF attachable.
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