Mallika Sherawat
Hottest & Sexiest Actress of IndiaFilmography!
Check out all the movies Mallika Sherawat acted in and roles she was offered and all the top movies she worked in.
Mallika Sherawat's Filmography
The
Following are the movie's Mallika Sherawat acted in and the details with
whom she acted.zine. She refused the offer, citing her morals and upbringing.
Darna Zaroori Hai
Despite some obvious clichés that can be
expected of a horror movie, ‘Darna Zaroori Hai’ does entertain, although not
scare, primarily because the movie keeps flitting from one interesting story to
another. And each story has some unexpected twist, which, by the way, becomes a
tad predictable after you have gotten the hang of the directors’ intention.
( Amitabh Bachchan, Ritesh Deshmukh, Mallika
Sherawat, Anil Kapoor, Bipasha Basu, Randeep Hooda, Sunil Shetty)
Shaadi Se Pehle
Hearty laughs are only few and far between in this pre-marital,
romantic comedy directed by Satish Kaushik.
Undoubtedly, the storyline and the basic plot of ‘Shaadi Se Pehle’ is quite interesting, although not original.
The movie seems inspired from Amol Palekar’s 1979 movie ‘Meri Biwi Ki Shaadi’.
.
( Akshaye Khanna, Ayesha Takia, Mallika Sherawat, Aftab Shivdasani, Sunil Shetty)
The Myth

Bachke Rehna Re Baba
Comedy and sex can make an excellent combination – laughs punctuated with arousals. The formula did work for Hollywood filmmaker David Mirkin’s movie ‘Heartbreakers’. But the Indian rehash of the movie is simply a damp squib. It neither tickles nor titillates.
Bachke Rehna Re Baba tells the story
of a mausi and her bhanji (aunt and niece). Mausi Rukhmini (Rekha) is
deft at conning rich men. Years of experience have made her discreet
enough to not fall in love with the man she dupes. Her bhanji Padmini
(Mallika Sherawat) is still in grooming stages, still not
emotionally-controlled enough to pull off a con on her own. But she has
oodles of sex appeal.
Kis Kis Ki Kismat
At the outset, Kis Kis Ki Kismat
seems like a crowd-pulling film. It is supposedly a comedy marking the
comeback of Dharmendra, whose comic sense was once unparalleled. It is
sprinkled with sufficient dose of skin exposure (so indispensable in
films nowadays) by sensuous Mallika Sherawat to ‘arouse’ the viewers in
the middle of laughs.
But sadly, the movie simply disappoints.
Reason? There is not good enough story to support the comic acts. The
situations in the movie seem too deliberately created. The writers have
relied too heavily on coincidence and ludicrous situations to invoke
mirth.