Chef Quick Movie Review: Saif Ali Khan's movie is a dish that's hard to resist
In Chef, Saif Ali Khan is doing some of his most natural work here and he is in top form.
Saif Ali Khan returns to his guy-next-door witty man avatar with Raja Krishna Menon's Chef. Along with Saif, is an extremely diverse cast comprising of Svar Kamble, Padmapriya Dinesh Prabhakar, Chandan Roy Sanyal and Milind Soman. Chef is the Hindi adaptation of the 2014 Hollywood movie by the same name which then starred Jon Favreau, Emjay Anthony, Sofia Vergara, Robert Downey Jr. and Scarlett Johansson.
Chef is slated to release tomorrow and our critic is watching the special show of the movie in a theatre right now as you read this. As the interval is on its way, our critic is all praises for the cast, direction and content.
Here is the quick movie review of Chef by our film critic: Chef is a dish that’s hard to resist. Saif Ali Khan and his director Raja Krishna Menon take the Hollywood hit to serve it desi style. An exasperated chef takes a trip to meet his estranged wife and son and finds himself in turn. It’s a dish served with such heartening emotions and comes straight from the heart. Saif is doing some of his most natural work here and he is in top form. We’d missed him, hadn’t we? Padmapriya plays an equal with panache but it’s the young kid Svar Kamble who is fantastic. The story has its own elements and is quite different from the original. Let’s not compare for starters. Menon takes an independent route, using gastronomic delights to decode matters of the heart. Till interval, it coasts along breezily.
Chef is a dish that’s hard to resist. Saif Ali Khan and his director Raja Krishna Menon take the Hollywood hit to serve it desi style. An exasperated chef takes a trip to meet his estranged wife and son and finds himself in turn. It’s a dish served with such heartening emotions and comes straight from the heart. Saif is doing some of his most natural work here and he is in top form. We’d missed him, hadn’t we? Padmapriya plays an equal with panache but it’s the young kid Svar Kamble who is fantastic. The story has its own elements and is quite different from the original. Let’s not compare for starters. Menon takes an independent route, using gastronomic delights to decode matters of the heart. Till interval, it coasts along breezily.
Read the full movie of Chef here: Chef Movie Review: Finally, Saif cooks up a delicious storm at the movies
Saif Ali Khan returns to his guy-next-door witty man avatar with Raja Krishna Menon's Chef. Along with Saif, is an extremely diverse cast comprising of Svar Kamble, Padmapriya Dinesh Prabhakar, Chandan Roy Sanyal and Milind Soman. Chef is the Hindi adaptation of the 2014 Hollywood movie by the same name which then starred Jon Favreau, Emjay Anthony, Sofia Vergara, Robert Downey Jr. and Scarlett Johansson.
Chef is slated to release tomorrow and our critic is watching the special show of the movie in a theatre right now as you read this. As the interval is on its way, our critic is all praises for the cast, direction and content.
Here is the quick movie review of Chef by our film critic: Chef is a dish that’s hard to resist. Saif Ali Khan and his director Raja Krishna Menon take the Hollywood hit to serve it desi style. An exasperated chef takes a trip to meet his estranged wife and son and finds himself in turn. It’s a dish served with such heartening emotions and comes straight from the heart. Saif is doing some of his most natural work here and he is in top form. We’d missed him, hadn’t we? Padmapriya plays an equal with panache but it’s the young kid Svar Kamble who is fantastic. The story has its own elements and is quite different from the original. Let’s not compare for starters. Menon takes an independent route, using gastronomic delights to decode matters of the heart. Till interval, it coasts along breezily.
Chef is a dish that’s hard to resist. Saif Ali Khan and his director Raja Krishna Menon take the Hollywood hit to serve it desi style. An exasperated chef takes a trip to meet his estranged wife and son and finds himself in turn. It’s a dish served with such heartening emotions and comes straight from the heart. Saif is doing some of his most natural work here and he is in top form. We’d missed him, hadn’t we? Padmapriya plays an equal with panache but it’s the young kid Svar Kamble who is fantastic. The story has its own elements and is quite different from the original. Let’s not compare for starters. Menon takes an independent route, using gastronomic delights to decode matters of the heart. Till interval, it coasts along breezily.
Read the full movie of Chef here: Chef Movie Review: Finally, Saif cooks up a delicious storm at the movies
























































