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The opening scene shows Karan (Zayed Khan) discovering Pooja´s dead body (Amisha Patel) in her house. He immediately wakes up Rahul (Arjun Rampal, once again in the role of a blind person) and informs him of his wife´s death. The police investigation begins and many questions are asked. Was Pooja murdered or did she commit suicide? Many flashbacks appear where we are shown how Rahul and Pooja first met. Unknown to Rahul, Pooja was in love with Karan before she met him. Hence trips down memory lane for Karan. He reminisces of their days together and how their intense romance ended so dramatically. Karan´s love for Pooja was obsessive in its nature and he had vowed to take her away from Rahul. Coming back to the present, Pooja´s body goes missing before the post-mortem can be arranged. Looking suspiciously like a murder, the finger of suspicion points at both the men: Karan and Rahul. The climax shows how Pooja´s death took place. The story bubbles with tension and has enough twists and turns to keep viewers guessing until the end. Satish Kaushik keeps the pace just right, making the story very involving. He is still a very ordinary director and this shows in his borrowed style of zooming close-ups and slow-motion action scenes (imitated from Hollywood films). I think the film would have benefited from the inclusion of a very intelligent policeman, which could have been played by another star. Here, we do have a policeman but he is played by Rajesh Vivek. This is a predictable and rather pointless character who never actually does anything useful in the whole investigation. Kaushik´s limited directorial ability is demonstrated in the way that he has handled the policeman character. This character dilutes tension rather than adding to it. It could have something to do with the fact that the policeman is played by Rajesh Vivek. An actor who wastes the potential of his role by reducing it to nothing more than a caricature. The miscasting does not stop here.
Unlike all the others, Arjun Rampal is ideal for the role of Rahul. He has become more comfortable with emotional scenes and therefore is improving as an actor. He does well in the climax where he portrays feelings of anger, sadness and unmerciful grief. Languishing in various indifferent roles since his debut, "Vaada" brings us back to the Rampal that we saw in "Moksha".
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