Janasheen, the two-and-a-half-hour film, deals with Lucky's lack of a definitive father figure. Built around this father-son equation is a convoluted story involving everything from super bike racing in Australia to the 1981 Afghanistan war.
Saba Karim (Feroz Khan) is a fugitive from Afghanistan. His dead son bears a striking resemblance to Lucky. Saba is also the kingpin of the underworld across the globe. A devout Muslim, he owns a pet tiger
Jessica Ferreira (Celina Jaitley looking horrible with a pallid tone to her face all the time) is someone who has loved Fardeen since her childhood. She is a violinist with a tragic past. (She sings songs which seem like lullabies at a night club/pub).
She is also a witness to the murder of Fardeen's father, but has her own reasons to keep quiet about it. When Fardeen comes back to India to settle matters, he is faced with more than he can handle. How he silences his inner demons forms the rest of the film. Kashmira Shah as a punk and Johny Lever as a club manager drop in to provide some scenes to further the storyline. There is also a third angle of Pinky Hirwani, who is Fardeen's friend and is in love with him. Archana Puran Singh plays a foster mother to Fardeen. Johnny Lever plays the uncle/friend/karate champ/animal lover with his usual facial contortions.
Fardeen is eye candy and breezes through the film with his signature nonchalance. Celina Jaitley could not have chosen a better film. All she has to do is look good, which she does, and cry, at which she isn't very convincing. The minimum acting skills required for this role suit her fine.
The music of the film seems moody. It sounds good once in a while, but often too loud. The production values are impeccable, minus the continuity errors, which plague most films.
Overall, the film is eye-candy.