Plot
The
film
starts
with
four
protagonists
trying
to
steal
paintings
at
Veer's
house
and
an
angry
ghost
floods
the
whole
house
and
the
four
drown
instantly.
Voila,
the
next
scene
they
rise
up
in
a
pristine
beach
island
in
Mauritius
and
lose
their
way
to
reach
the
city
while
each
one
of
them
get
killed
in
mysterious
ways.
Veer
(Arbaaz
Khan)
a
painter
who
does
art
for
passion,
falls
in
love
with
Rounak
(Sunny
Leone)
who
owns
an
art
gallery
showcasing
the
best
paintings
across
the
globe.
She
also
boasts
of
clients
who
are
ready
to
pay
any
amount
for
art
and
suddenly
end
up
in
bad
company
as
four
clients
try
to
steal
paintings
from
Veer's
house
and
also
thrash
both
Veer
and
Rounak
mercilessly
during
the
melee.
Veer
goes
missing
and
Rounak
searches
for
the
love
of
her
life
while
on
the
other
hand,
the
four
protagonists
are
being
killed
one
by
one,
by
a
ghost
in
Mauritius.
Who
is
that
ghost
and
what's
the
connection
between
these
paintings
and
Mauritius?
And
will
Rounak
find
Veer
or
is
he
dead
and
became
a
ghost?
The
climax
has
a
twist
and
it's
a
breather
from
the
cringe-worthy
film.
Direction
There
in
not
an
ounce
of
directorial
talent
left
with
film-maker
Raajeev
Walia
and
each
scene
is
shot
so
bad,
that
there's
no
connection
between
any
scene
and
has
not
interwoven
it
in
any
aspect.
The
film
is
shot
in
an
amateur
manner
and
you'll
get
a
feeling
right
from
the
start
that
the
next
two
and
half
hours
would
be
a
total
waste
of
your
time.
The
direction
is
a
complete
let
down!
Performance
Of
Sunny
Leone
&
Arbaaz
Khan
Even
melodrama
and
glycerine
cannot
save
Sunny
Leone's
acting
skills
and
fails
to
connect
during
emotional
scenes
and
the
dialogues
are
mouthed
so
badly,
you'll
never
know
when
is
she
speaking
or
crying
or
doing
both
at
the
same
time.
She
lacks
conviction,
timing
and
fails
to
convince
the
audience
that
her
character
is
in
deep
pain.
She
still
has
a
long
way
to
go
to
prove
herself
as
a
remotely
good
actor
in
Bollywood.
Arbaaz
Khan
is
stiff
in
all
the
scenes
and
has
displayed
the
same
emotion,
be
it
anger,
happiness
or
love,
he's
the
same.
Even
during
a
few
hot
and
steamy
scenes,
he
looks
unexcited
or
is
doing
it
just
for
the
heck
of
it.
Despite
playing
the
role
of
a
ghost
in
a
few
scenes,
he
can't
even
scare
anyone
as
his
emotions
are
the
same,
just
like
the
way
he
was
alive.
Sad
acting!
Arbaaz
Khan
Performance
Arbaaz
Khan
is
stiff
in
all
the
scenes
and
has
displayed
the
same
emotion,
be
it
anger,
happiness
or
love,
he's
the
same.
Even
during
a
few
hot
and
steamy
scenes,
he
looks
unexcited
or
is
doing
it
just
for
the
heck
of
it.
Despite
playing
the
role
of
a
ghost
in
a
few
scenes,
he
can't
even
scare
anyone
as
his
emotions
are
the
same,
just
like
the
way
he
was
alive.
Sad
acting!
Technical
Aspects
Tera
Intezaar
lacks
even
basic
editing
and
the
close-up
shots
and
drone
shots
pull
the
film
even
more
down.
It's
like
watching
something
you
recorded
on
your
mobile
phone
during
a
field
trip
and
calling
it
a
movie.
Music
Here's
the
sad
part!
Songs
are
randomly
thrown
in
every
15
minutes
which
is
unnecessary.
The
tracks
aren't
even
peppy
and
foot-tapping
and
even
the
most
glamorous
song
'Sexy
barbie
Doll' is
as
boring
as
it
gets.
Verdict
During
the
end
of
this
movie,
an
important
character
turns
out
to
be
someone
else
-
and
at
that
point
you'll
wish
that
someone
else
was
watching
this
movie
instead
and
not
you!
Tera
Intezaar
is
a
complete
letdown
with
terrible
direction
and
sparkless
acting.
This
one
is
worth-a-miss,
folks!