Look at Phone Bhoot Review:
Repulsiveness satire is the new flavor in Bollywood and Telephone Bhoot is the most recent desi adaptation of Ghostbusters after the capture of Bhoot Police. The quirky story, intended for teenagers of all ages, unfolds like a visual comic strip and provides enticing opportunities for politically incorrect and subversive concepts in popular culture.
The uneven writing of Ravi Shankaran and Jasvinder Bath lacks some of the attention to detail that production designers put into creating the eerie universe centered on Gullu, Major, and Ragini. However, the plot sets us up for a roller coaster ride through the politics of salvation.
There are a few funny punches that work really well together, but there are also a lot of empty shots that are just fired for effect or to finish the rhyme. The diversity of the ghost world is also explored in the film, with a Tamil spirit being exorcised by a photo of Rajinikanth and a Punjabi spirit being controlled by a cheery bhangra number! Because a Bengali witch cannot pronounce moksha, the language remains a source of ridicule even after death. For those who might get lost on their way to the other side, there is also an Aslam holding up the lantern of the good man.
Phone Bhoot First Day Box Office Collection:
Whether it’s a Stree or the more recent blockbuster starring Kartik Aaryan, Bhool Bhulaiyaa 2, the horror-comedy genre has been largely successful at the box office. On the other hand, the brand-new Phone Bhoot has had a poor start.
The film starring Katrina Kaif, Ishaan Khatter, and Siddhant Chaturvedi earned Rs 2.05 crore on its first day of release, as stated by trade analyst Taran Adarsh. The Gurmeet Singh-directed film was released in as many as 1400 theaters, but only 10 to 12 percent of those theaters saw it.
“#PhoneBhoot records low numbers on Day 1… Biz did pick up towards evening shows, but not enough to record a healthy total… All eyes on Day 2 and 3… Fri ₹ 2.05 cr. #India biz,” Taran Adarsh tweeted.
In point of fact, the movie has not been successful commercially or critically. Shubhra Gupta, a film critic for The Indian Express, gave the film one star and called it “painfully unfunny.”
Phone Bhoot is doing slightly better than Janhvi Kapoor’s Mili and Huma Qureshi-Sonakshi Sinha and Janhvi Kapoor’s Double XL, which failed to even reach Rs 1 crore at the ticket counter. Phone Bhoot is doing slightly better. Even though it is a dubbed Hindi release, reports suggest that Rishab Shetty’s Kantara is doing much better at the box office.