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    Reviews

    “A cerebral joyride”
    Karan Johar, filmmaker on REDIFF

    “Among the most charming and creative Indian independent films”
    J Hurtado, TWITCH

    ★★★★✩
    “You don’t really need a big star cast… you don’t even need a big budget to get the techniques of filmmaking bang on…”
    Allen O Brien, TIMES OF INDIA

    ★★★★✩
    “An outstanding experience that doesn’t come by too often out of Indian cinema!”
    Shakti Salgaokar, DNA

    ★★★
    “This film can reach out the young, urban, upwardly mobile, but lonely, disconnected souls living anywhere in the world, not just India.”
    Namrata Joshi, OUTLOOK

    “I was blown away!”
    Aseem Chhabra, MUMBAI MIRROR

    “Good Night Good Morning is brilliant!”
    Rohit Vats, IBN-LIVE

    ★★★✩✩
    “Watch it because it’s a smart film.”
    Shubha Shetty Saha, MIDDAY

    ★★★✩✩
    “A small gem of a movie.”
    Sonia Chopra, SIFY

    ★★★✩✩
    “A charming flirtation to watch.”
    Shalini Langer, INDIAN EXPRESS

    “Interesting, intelligent & innovative”
    Pragya Tiwari, TEHELKA

    “Beyond good. Original, engrossing and entertaining”
    Roshni Mulchandani, BOLLYSPICE

    * * * * *
    Synopsis

    ‘Good Night Good Morning’ is a black and white, split-screen, conversation film about two strangers sharing an all-night phone call on New Year's night.

    Writer-Director Sudhish Kamath attempts to discover good old-fashioned romance in a technology-driven mobile world as the boy Turiya, driving from New York to Philadelphia with buddies, calls the enigmatic girl staying alone in her hotel room, after a brief encounter at the bar earlier in the night.

    The boy has his baggage of an eight-year-old failed relationship and the girl has her own demons to fight. Scarred by unpleasant memories, she prefers to travel on New Year's Eve.

    Anonymity could be comforting and such a situation could lead to an almost romance as two strangers go through the eight stages of a relationship – The Icebreaker, The Honeymoon, The Reality Check, The Break-up, The Patch-up, The Confiding, The Great Friendship, The Killing Confusion - all over one phone conversation.

    As they get closer to each other over the phone, they find themselves miles apart geographically when the film ends and it is time for her to board her flight. Will they just let it be a night they would cherish for the rest of their lives or do they want more?

    Good Night | Good Morning, starring Manu Narayan (Bombay Dreams, The Love Guru, Quarter Life Crisis) and Seema Rahmani (Loins of Punjab, Sins and Missed Call) also features New York based theatre actor Vasanth Santosham (Bhopal: A Prayer for Rain), screenwriter and film critic Raja Sen and adman Abhishek D Shah.

    Shot in black and white as a tribute to the era of talkies of the fifties, the film set to a jazzy score by musicians from UK (Jazz composer Ray Guntrip and singer Tina May collaborated for the song ‘Out of the Blue), the US (Manu Narayan and his creative partner Radovan scored two songs for the film – All That’s Beautiful Must Die and Fire while Gregory Generet provided his versions of two popular jazz standards – Once You’ve Been In Love and Moon Dance) and India (Sudeep and Jerry came up with a new live version of Strangers in the Night) was met with rave reviews from leading film critics.

    The film was released under the PVR Director’s Rare banner on January 20, 2012.

    Festivals & Screenings

    Mumbai Film Festival (MAMI), Mumbai 2010 World Premiere
    South Asian Intl Film Festival, New York, 2010 Intl Premiere
    Goa Film Alliance-IFFI, Goa, 2010 Spl Screening
    Chennai Intl Film Festival, Chennai, 2010 Official Selection
    Habitat Film Festival, New Delhi, 2011 Official Selection
    Transilvania Intl Film Festival, Cluj, 2011 Official Selection, 3.97/5 Audience Barometer
    International Film Festival, Delhi, 2011 Official Selection
    Noordelijk Film Festival, Netherlands, 2011 Official Selection, 7.11/10 Audience Barometer
    Mumbai Film Mart, Mumbai 2011, Market Screening
    Film Bazaar, IFFI-Goa, 2011, Market Screening
    Saarang Film Festival, IIT-Madras, 2012, Official Selection, 7.7/10 Audience Barometer

    Theatrical Release, January 20, 2012 through PVR

    Mumbai
    Delhi
    Gurgaon
    Ahmedabad
    Bangalore
    Chennai
    Hyderabad (January 27)

    * * * * *

    More information: IMDB | Facebook | Youtube | Wikipedia | Website

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Archive For June, 2007

RIP: Director Jeeva

June 26, 2007 · by sudhishkamath

He met me for an interview before leaving to Russia for the shoot of ‘Dhaam Dhoom.’ It turned out to be the last one he ever gave.

I woke up this morning to learn that the director of 12B, ‘Ullam Ketkume’ and ‘Unnale Unnale,’ passed away in his hotel room at St. Petersburgh during a shooting schedule of the action entertainer starring Jayam Ravi, Kangana Ranaut and Jayaram.

May his soul rest in peace.

He wanted to do a Take Two and expressed his desire to do one on his return from Russia. He may not have been the most original filmmaker, but he was a man with many dreams and one of the few who defied the star-system. He gave Arya, Pooja, Asin, Shaam and Vinay their first big break.

I reproduce below the interview that appeared only last week, after being held at the desk for over a fortnight.

Though the reviews have been mixed, cinematographer-turned-director Jeeva feels vindicated after the box-office success of ‘Unnale Unnale.’

“It has definitely reached the audience I had in mind. The market in A centres is as big as B and C. It’s just that they don’t go to the theatres because nobody makes films for them. But for ‘Unnale Unnale,’ we have got reports of students going in huge groups. I’m very happy about it.”

12B was a bold, though inspired, debut but the film didn’t do all that well at the box office. His second film, a fairly decent ode to college and friendship, ‘Ullam Ketkume’ was hit by production delays and his Hindi remake of ‘Run’ ran out of theatres.

Maybe, that’s why he wanted to be really sure of getting it right the fourth time. Maybe, that’s also why ‘Unnale Unnale’ is among the most ‘inspired’ of all his films.

That’s among the first questions we ask him: Why does Unnale Unnale seem to be inspired from so many romantic comedies in Hindi and English?

“Suppose you are studying medicine as a medical student, you will go to the library, read up related books,” says Jeeva. “So when we make films, we watch all kinds of films… so many films for reference. It is just a point of inspiration. If I didn’t make characters say ‘Day One,’ (a narrative gimmick seen before in ‘Kal Ho Na Ho’) I would’ve had to show the calendar, which has been used in so many other films.

So maybe one or two things, not completely. Overall, it is a different film.”

“Just like how there are only seven notes in music, there are only a few stories you can tell,” he explains. “We’re not giving proper films for the people in the city. So they watch Hindi films and English films. I wanted to make a classic romantic film in Tamil. It is a realistic film, not a typical fantasy film.”

How did he arrive at the choice of Vinay as the lead?

“I wanted to cast a character in the film. Not a hero. Vinay and Sada suited the characters.

I saw him in an ad, he was very convincing,” says the filmmaker who had earlier launched Shaam, Arya, Asin and Pooja.

No auditions? “Anybody can act. Even you can.”

Tanisha, however, had to be cajoled into doing the film but the script did the trick. “Tanisha is fresh, young and bubbly. She was the right person for the role. First, she was like: ‘What you people only call us for glamour…’ So I told her to read the script and then tell us. Once she read the script, she agreed.”

The idea for ‘Unnale Unnale’ was born out of gender wars. “Men versus Women. That was the starting point. There have been lots of films on the subject. ‘When Harry met Sally,’ ‘Before Sunrise,’ ‘Before Sunset’… ‘French Kiss’ is my favourite. We also borrowed a lot of dialogues from the internet. There are so many interesting jokes on the net.”

Jeeva was convinced that there was one set of movie-going audience that was not watching Tamil films. “There is a huge vaccuum of films catering to the youth. Coimbatore, Trichy, all A centres shows are continuously full. The college goers are enjoying the film. Everybody recollects and connects to what has happened to them in life.”

His next film, ‘Dhaam Dhoom’ is for all centres, meant for a larger audience. The film stars Jayam Ravi, Kangana Ranaut, Lakshmi Rai, Jayaram. The music by Harris Jayaraj and art by Thotta Tharani. “One schedule in Pollachi is over. We have another schedule in Russia.”

Jeeva is also quick to justify his choice of foreign locations, like Australia in ‘Unnale Unnale.’ “When you go to Bombay, you look for people you can associate with, people from the South. Similarly, when you go out of the country, you look for Indians. People become closer when out of country.”

Now that formula-filmmaking has brought him success, does he plan to take the road less travelled 12-B route again?

“12B wasn’t promoted properly. The market is ready for different kinds of films. I want to prove myself first and then with my own money, I’ll make different kinds of films.”

Jhoom Barabar Jhoom: Of ear-plugs and eye-candy

June 24, 2007 · by sudhishkamath

Cast: Abhishek Bachchan, Preity Zinta, Lara Dutta, Bobby Deol
Director: Shaad Ali
Genre: Musical
Storyline: Two of Bollywood’s Usual Suspects wait for a train Before Sunset.
Bottomline: A stage-play that pretends to be a musical

Shaad Ali’s idea of a musical is to have the same song play on loop for over 20 minutes non-stop. Okay, different variants of the title song actually.

Plus, there’s a variant of that when the film opens, another when the film is halfway through and yet another when the curtains come down, all accompanied by Bachchan doing an item sporting a double-necked guitar and costumes stolen off the ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ set.
With the extended mixes playing half a dozen times in the film, no prizes for guessing why the film’s called ‘Jhoom Barabar Jhoom.’

With nearly one hour of the 132 minute-film being dominated by naach-gaana, the rest dedicated to dialogues smattered with the native tongue of South Hall – Punjabi – be warned that this is only for those in the mood for eye-candy and the title-song playing on loop.

You will pretty much predict the entire story before the first act ends. After that, you have nothing to do but wait agonisingly to be proven right, the loud soundtrack giving you not a chance to catch 40 winks. The blessed song keeps coming back.

Long-winded conversations can be interesting, like the Before Sunrise/Before Sunset series have already proved.

But wait, what’s with Yashraj’s fascination with those Richard Linklater’s films? In 1995, Aditya Chopra inspired by ‘Before Sunrise,’ made Raj and Simran fall in love over Eurorail and made them spend a night together before their train next morning. For Kunal Kohli’s ‘Hum Tum,’ Yashraj borrowed the opening sequence from ‘Before Sunset’ with a few nods to the earlier film (apart from many to ‘When Harry Met Sally’) and now 12 years after Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge, Yashraj returns to churn out yet another remix of ‘Before Sunrise,’ with a touch of ‘The Usual Suspects.’

The outcome?

Preity’s sagging face reflects the audience’s hopes as the film meanders along like a one-act stage play with musical flashback interludes borrowed from the Farah Khan-Sirish Kunder school of storytelling.

Bobby’s inadequacy steals adjectives about the script, if at all there was one.

Screenwriter Habib Faisal’s theatre background shows. You can’t have two people talk sitting over a table for half the movie if you don’t have the lines to back this misadventure.

Abhishek’s Bling-it-like-Bachchan act would have been adorable, if not for that Amritsar-Born-Confused-Desi-in-London accent. O Blimey!? Surely Sunny Paaji was more convincing saying ‘No If, No But, Only Jat.’

You can swear that Lara is the only good thing and use some of that swearing to react to the rest of the ham-fest.

Yes, Shaad Ali has been very brave to try and do something different but not everything different is worth watching on the big screen.

Shankar-Ehsaan-Joy may have done a swell job on the music but this overdose is strictly for party animals. ‘Jhoom Barabar’ is a film you won’t mind watching on MTV with its kitschy choreography. It is a concert you won’t mind watching on stage if these very stars are performing live.

As a film, however, it’s an extremely excruciating experience… extended.

http://sudermovies.blogspot.com

The Prestige: A simple hat-trick, well-disguised

June 24, 2007 · by sudhishkamath

Cast: Christian Bale, Hugh Jackman, Scarlett Johansson, Michael Caine, David Bowie
Director: Christopher Nolan
Genre: Drama/Suspense/Thriller
Storyline: Two rival magicians are obsessed over outdoing the other.
Bottomline: One helluva trick!

“Now you’re looking for the secret… but you won’t find it because you’re not really looking. You don’t really want to know the secret… You want to be fooled.”

Those lines from ‘The Prestige’ are as much about filmmaking as much as it is about magic.
‘Are you watching closely’ asks the tag line. But if you resist the multiple distractions intended to misdirect your attention and do watch it closely enough, you might find the secret early on in the film because Christopher Nolan has decided that the best place to hide something well, is in plain sight.

So it’s best to watch this beautifully crafted piece of celluloid willing to be fooled, willing to be distracted and mislead.

Based on Christopher Priest’s novel about two rival magicians obsessed with outperforming the other, ‘The Prestige’ is as much about magic as it is about obsession, jealousy and vengeance. Angier (Jackman) and Borden (Bale) are rivals trying to steal the show. Each other’s show, that is.

A knot in the plot turns the rivalry personal and each goes all out to outdo the other.
Christopher Nolan borrows a few tips from magic to style his narrative pretty much the same way a trick is performed. Given the advantage of being able to bend time and space on film, Nolan also employs his signature back-and-forth storytelling to make it all the more fascinatingly complex.

After all, a good trick is about telling a story in three acts: The Pledge, The Turn and The Prestige. A magician takes something ordinary, makes it something extraordinary, and then pulls something out of his hat, something you never saw coming (The Prestige).

The Prestige is the most difficult part of the trick because the audience knows you’re going to trick it and is watching closely. More so in a film that, unlike a stage trick, lasts infinitely longer, a medium whose construct, unlike magic, requires that you do place all your cards before the audience, just to be fair and make it more participative.

A lot of what Nolan does to the film is pure magic. Career-best performances by both Christian Bale and Hugh Jackman trying to outdo each other (both of them are equally solid), Michael Caine and David Bowie cast to make ordinary roles extra-ordinary characters and a sassy Scarlett Johansson to distract and deceive.

The quality of writing is top-notch, the editing clever enough to conceal and cinematography every bit deserving the Oscar nomination. Clearly, one of the best films of the year.

It’s only when you watch the film a second time, you realise how simple it really was.

But then, like Borden says: “The secret impresses no one. The trick you use it for is everything.”

http://sudermovies.blogspot.com

Casting & Crew Call: New Projects at the MADE IN MADRAS inkOperated Film School!

June 20, 2007 · by sudhishkamath


Wanna make films?

If you have the next one year of your life free AND if are looking to learn on the job, join the MADE IN MADRAS inkOperated Film School (which I must admit is a full fledged con-job; filmmaking is a con-job).

Over the next one year, the producers of THAT FOUR LETTER WORD will be producing half a dozen shorts and one feature length film. We’ve already finalised scripts for three fake Grindhouse trailers and the full length feature and are currently on the lookout for cast and crew for the same.

If you want to be part of the crew, be warned that this is not something you can do in your free time, the work involves full-time effort. Even worse, you will not be paid until all projects are completed. You may want to sign up only if you’re looking for hardcore experience behind the scenes as assistant directors or production executives. People interested in art, production design, costumes, screenwriting and make-up most welcome.

As part of the cast, we’re looking for:
1. VIV: EIGHT TO TEN-YEAR-OLD, short, brown-skinned or fair, chubby, confident little actor who can speak flawless English, without any sort of an accent.

2. SHWETA: TEN TO TWELVE-YEAR-OLD, tall, fair, slim, talkative, bubbly actor who should be able to talk flawless English and fluent Hindi. Role requires her to dance well.

3. SURAJ: 22-YEAR-OLD, athletic, intense good-looker with boyish charm, who should be equally convincing as someone who is 18-20 and someone who CAN look 24. Should be able to speak flawless English and fluent Hindi. The role requires actor to dance, drive and ride a bike under difficult road conditions.

Apart from these characters, we are looking for attractive girls in the age group of 20-23 for guest roles in the film and the trailers, actors of foreign nationalities (any colour), people who look like zombies (acting skills not necessary) and enthusiastic volunteers to play corpses (all you will be asked to do is drop dead with ketchup smeared on your body).

Do email madeinmadras at gmail dot com specifying if you are applying for CAST or CREW in the subject line. With a coupla photographs, if you’re applying for CAST.

MADE IN MADRAS inkOperated Film School has just one teacher. Cinema, itself. We’re learning and we want company. The more the merrier.

Spread the word. Starting July 1st, you will have the time of your life. Good or bad. Mostly bad. And, some good. In that order.

Sivaji: A review of reviews

June 18, 2007 · by sudhishkamath

I’m not gonna take names of critics or link blogs since I just wanted to address points made in other reviews. My arguments are against criticism of the film and not against the authors. So if you think this is about your review, please don’t take this personally.

First, get this. Superstar can act. He’s proved it enough times. He does not need to prove it anymore. I had written in an earlier post how there is a rigid dichotomy between the function of an actor and a matinee idol.

While an actor is expected to change colours and showcase his artistic range, an icon is expected to consistently embody all those traits that people love about his personality and reprise them in whatever story he is a part of. Because he’s an icon, a superhero – THE reason why people go to watch that kind of cinema.

Obviously, the gratification superheroes provide is different from the kind of gratification actors provide. Sometimes, though not always, even the audience differs. We’ve always had a Sivaji for every MGR, a Kamal for every Rajni, a Vikram for every Vijay (at least, until Vikram decided to change roles from actor to icon!)

Let’s not forget that Superstar has done his share of intelligent classy cinema in the past.

Now, he’s into something more intelligent. Reaching out to a huge far-from-homogenous mass of people. We’re talking about a diverse bunch that takes the aruval out over culture, chastity, caste, class, colour, ideology, politics, religion, language, state boundaries and water among other things.

Why should Superstar reach out to this huge a mass again?

Because that’s what superheroes and icons do.

They reach out to stand up for what is right, to fight for the oppressed majority.

They reach out to assure people that no matter how screwed up and complicated life maybe, there’s always one person they can turn to.

Or, at least fantasise that there’s someone who’s gonna kick bad asses and spread hope.

The word associated with superheroes, my friends, is fantasy. The thing about the format of a fantasy, as a genre, it does not need to delve into plausibility, rational thinking, logical reasoning or what people call a “tight” screenplay.

Think fantasy again.

Think about the free-flowing Alice in Wonderland that probably gave you no idea where in the burrow it was heading.

Think Superman who turned the planet back in time after losing Lois Lane.

Think James Bond, who gets his ass covered by women who bare their ass most of the time.

Think Peter Parker, who recently blubbered when Mary Jane broke up with him.

Think Captain Jack Sparrow.

Wait a minute, Captain Jack Sparrow runs away all the time. He got fooled by a woman, got himself handcuffed to the Black Pearl at the end of ‘Dead Man’s Chest.’ When he realises there’s no way out, he goes down fighting, with his head held high.

Does that make him any less heroic? Or does the fact that Shriya saves Sivaji at the end of what was a light-hearted comic segment? Interestingly, Superstar does hop around around like Captain Jack Sparrow as he sees the train approaching and then when Shankar changes gear from the comic to the serious, Superstar stands his head held high, ready to embrace death, much like Sparrow. The point really isn’t that Shriya saved him. The point is that she was willing to die for him.

A Superstar is timeless. His age does not matter. How does Bond remain the same age when the world around him changes as suggested by technology? How many years did Peter Parker be a college kid? How many years did Superstar live in America to earn Rs.200 crores? What’s his business model? Why does Peter Parker take Mary Jane on his scooter when he can just swing around the buildings in the dark of the night? Superheroes have a comic book license that excuses them from having to answer such smartasses. Things said have to be taken for granted. That’s common sense.

To get back to the analysis, this is not just a Superstar movie.

This is as much a Shankar film as much as it is Superstar cinema. Shankar is one of those few idealist filmmakers who believe that cinema can bring in reform. After addressing capitalist educationists (Gentleman), corrupt bureaucrats (Indian), lazy-ass politicians (Muthalvan) and indifferent apathetic citizens (Anniyan), he wants to address a more basic function that involves the common man. Paying taxes. He knows most people think taxes are unfair, a “fine” for doing fine. He hates the fact that there are many among the rich who don’t pay taxes. Now, how do you make the prospect of paying taxes more attractive to the common man?

You get a brand ambassador, someone they all like, to tell them: “Listen up guys, Black money is bad. Not paying taxes is bad. We’re not a poor country. The richer get richer, the poor get poorer because the rich get away not paying tax and the poor need to keep paying for getting anything they want – starting from basic education.”
That’s a noble thought, a well-intended message, that in order to reach a mass of Superstar crazy fans needs to be said within the format of a six-song six-fight routine, with the mandatory happy ending.

Why is the happy ending so important?

Kamal Hassan could afford to die in ‘Indian’ and ‘Nayakan’ because he’s an actor. An actor becomes immortal when he dies in a film. People give him a standing ovation. A Best Actor award. But, a superhero is reduced to a mere mortal when he dies in a movie. Which is why Shankar and Mani Ratnam knew they had to keep him alive in ‘Thalapathy’ and ‘Sivaji,’ no matter what the odds against them were.
It’s not a compromise. It’s common-sense. It’s what people go to fantasies for. To see their hero kick butt.

So why is Sivaji among the most memorable Rajnikant films ever despite a rather weak romantic track?

Oh, let’s think about that critically slaughtered romantic track again. There’s clearly a shift in Superstar’s philosophy. From ‘Thou Shall Choose Who Loves You Over Who You Love’ (that emerged in Valli and continued till Baba… Listen to Dippu Dippu:
thaedi cheLLum kaadhaL/kaadhaliLLai nanbaa/uNmai kaadhal soLLava/
naLLa kaadhal enbadheNNa/thaedi vandhey kaadhalae) to ‘Best To Live With Who You Love Than What You Get.’ (Kadachavangaloda Vaazhradhoda Pudichavangaloda Vaazharadhuthaan Santhosham).

A complete volte-face.

Why? I guess it is to make Superstar contemporary from being a pragmatic chauvinist to a die-hard romantic because Shankar’s brand of idealism needs a romance to die for. Colour is such an important part of the South Indian’s psyche. Shankar exploits that complex inherent in his audience by having their icon endorse their ‘Fair and Lovely’ aspirations. ‘Velai Thamizhan’ (mentioned in the Style song) is part of that fantasy of the dark-skinned man’s obsession over fair and lovely maidens from Mumbai (starting from Nagarrth Khan known as Khushboo, Rishibala Naval a.k.a. Simran Bagga, Namrata Sadanah a.k.a. Nagma, Jyotika Sadanah and now Shriya Saran). Shankar turns that sentiment into a feel-good fantasy by coating it with the comic treatment and then making the girl say that the dark colour is the best part of their favourite hero. He’s trying to tell them that even if by some miracle they do manage to turn fair, it’s still ‘coool’ to be dark.

Let me get back to the observation with which I started this piece. Stars or Icons are known to consistently embody all those traits that people love about their personality and reprise them in whatever story they are a part of.

Not all the traits Superstar has been known for are politically correct.

Now, Superstar has been criticised by politicians and health activists that he has glamourised the Cancer stick. Superstar, in his last two outings, has tried to make amends – Biscuit in Chandramukhi and Chewing Gum in Sivaji. Superstar’s heroines, over the years, have often been dependents – college students or village belles, often being slapped by the hero. This sort of unabashed chauvinism might not work in the 2000s and in an attempt to make it progressive, Shankar gives us a middle-class working woman. It’s also contemporary because finally, the woman is an equal with who Sivaji shares his life and secrets, and she’s also capable of saving him.

Yes, she’s still the meek submissive lover but hey, things can’t change overnight in Tamil cinema.

I was amazed at the focus of Shankar’s screenplay (I hated his character mix in Anniyan!). He begins Sivaji with the classic Flashback structure, establishing the intentions of the protagonist in the very first three scenes. At the airport, we know he’s come to settle down in India with the line-up of girls waiting to snare him. At the get-together later, we know he wants to get to the root of poverty that he has seen (the beggar at the crossroads sandwiched between the scenes of his arrival and his declaration of intent) – empowering through education.

Once he lays down the agenda for the film, he gets to the other objective of the protagonist – his search for a life partner, an epitome of everything Tamil. He then addresses the social problem of families being so fiercely protective of their space with a strict regard for boundaries that they don’t encourage the courting ritual. Romance needs healthy grounds to blossom. And since at the basic level, marriages in India are about the union of families than just two individuals, he shows us how one family manages to woo the other through a light-hearted comic segment (not all of which I approve – certainly not the bit where Thalaivar goes red with chillies and washes it down the basin graphically but Shankar has always loved to show us what’s gross). This track is smartly paralleled with the protagonist’s efforts to build the college facing hurdles with the ground realities of red tape that leads to corruption… that further escalates politics. He shows us the rich have become too powerful to take on. No matter how much money you have, they can still pull you down and leave you penniless. It doesn’t get tighter than this.

At the interval block, his twin intentions of getting the right girl and building the college are the lowest point. Things can only get better from here and as that coin turns, so does his fate and Shankar flips mode from reality to fantasy. Now, this is the part we’ve been waiting for. The part that Shankar absolutely revels in. The part that puts Sivaji in the list of his most memorable films.

We see Rajni fight his way back, like in Annamalai, like in Padayappa, like in Baasha, he gets his chance to payback… Line for line, coin for coin… “Kooti kazhichu paaru, Kannakku Seriya Irukkum… Yenkitta Kannakku Pesuraanga. Yedu Vandi!”

Now, all those films were about personal triumph, this one is a little larger than that. It’s about a triumph for the society, issues are large and complex and they need to be simplified with comic book storytelling. The villain needs to be someone you hate with all your guts and having a despicable soft speaking scum is a nice touch. After all those Perarasu films, I was turning deaf with all the yelling.

Settling a score is what most films have been about. And seriously, who does it better than Superstar. What makes Sivaji memorable is that it also plays out like a Best of Rajni compilation. It has features his best looks, get-ups, gestures, dialogue delivery, plot-devices and also enriches his existing repertoire of style, facilitating a connect with the Rajni we know from the past to the Superstar he has become to what he could be – the reformer, a Sivaji (the actor par excellence) who could also be MGR (the messiah).

Entertainment has never been so explosive. The last act is pure dynamite. Climax is at its orgasmic best if you’re a Rajni fan. Something that works like a charm especially because of the extended foreplay in the slightly flawed first half.

To Shankar’s credit, even those stray scenes of mediocrity are salvaged by a classy Vivek whose timing in Sivaji is probably a career-best. Jalra has never made itself more audible during a one-man orchestra in concert.

Now that I’ve taken my critic’s hat off, Thalaivaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah!!
😀

Sivaji: A review of reviews!

June 18, 2007 · by sudhishkamath

I’m not gonna take names of critics or link blogs since I just wanted to address points made in other reviews. My arguments are against criticism of the film and not against the authors. So if you think this is about your review, please don’t take this personally.

First, get this. Superstar can act. He’s proved it enough times. He does not need to prove it anymore. I had written in an earlier post how there is a rigid dichotomy between the function of an actor and a matinee idol.

While an actor is expected to change colours and showcase his artistic range, an icon is expected to consistently embody all those traits that people love about his personality and reprise them in whatever story he is a part of. Because he’s an icon, a superhero – THE reason why people go to watch that kind of cinema.

Obviously, the gratification superheroes provide is different from the kind of gratification actors provide. Sometimes, though not always, even the audience differs. We’ve always had a Sivaji for every MGR, a Kamal for every Rajni, a Vikram for every Vijay (at least, until Vikram decided to change roles from actor to icon!)

Let’s not forget that Superstar has done his share of intelligent classy cinema in the past.

Now, he’s into something more intelligent. Reaching out to a huge far-from-homogenous mass of people. We’re talking about a diverse bunch that takes the aruval out over culture, chastity, caste, class, colour, ideology, politics, religion, language, state boundaries and water among other things.

Why should Superstar reach out to this huge a mass again?

Because that’s what superheroes and icons do.

They reach out to stand up for what is right, to fight for the oppressed majority.

They reach out to assure people that no matter how screwed up and complicated life maybe, there’s always one person they can turn to.

Or, at least fantasise that there’s someone who’s gonna kick bad asses and spread hope.

The word associated with superheroes, my friends, is fantasy. The thing about the format of a fantasy, as a genre, it does not need to delve into plausibility, rational thinking, logical reasoning or what people call a “tight” screenplay.

Think fantasy again.

Think about the free-flowing Alice in Wonderland that probably gave you no idea where in the burrow it was heading.

Think Superman who turned the planet back in time after losing Lois Lane.

Think James Bond, who gets his ass covered by women who bare their ass most of the time.

Think Peter Parker, who recently blubbered when Mary Jane broke up with him.

Think Captain Jack Sparrow.

Wait a minute, Captain Jack Sparrow runs away all the time. He got fooled by a woman, got himself handcuffed to the Black Pearl at the end of ‘Dead Man’s Chest.’ When he realises there’s no way out, he goes down fighting, with his head held high.

Does that make him any less heroic? Or does the fact that Shriya saves Sivaji at the end of what was a light-hearted comic segment? Interestingly, Superstar does hop around around like Captain Jack Sparrow as he sees the train approaching and then when Shankar changes gear from the comic to the serious, Superstar stands his head held high, ready to embrace death, much like Sparrow. The point really isn’t that Shriya saved him. The point is that she was willing to die for him.

A Superstar is timeless. His age does not matter. How does Bond remain the same age when the world around him changes as suggested by technology? How many years did Peter Parker be a college kid? How many years did Superstar live in America to earn Rs.200 crores? What’s his business model? Why does Peter Parker take Mary Jane on his scooter when he can just swing around the buildings in the dark of the night? Superheroes have a comic book license that excuses them from having to answer such smartasses. Things said have to be taken for granted. That’s common sense.

To get back to the analysis, this is not just a Superstar movie.

This is as much a Shankar film as much as it is Superstar cinema. Shankar is one of those few idealist filmmakers who believe that cinema can bring in reform. After addressing capitalist educationists (Gentleman), corrupt bureaucrats (Indian), lazy-ass politicians (Muthalvan) and indifferent apathetic citizens (Anniyan), he wants to address a more basic function that involves the common man. Paying taxes. He knows most people think taxes are unfair, a “fine” for doing fine. He hates the fact that there are many among the rich who don’t pay taxes. Now, how do you make the prospect of paying taxes more attractive to the common man?

You get a brand ambassador, someone they all like, to tell them: “Listen up guys, Black money is bad. Not paying taxes is bad. We’re not a poor country. The richer get richer, the poor get poorer because the rich get away not paying tax and the poor need to keep paying for getting anything they want – starting from basic education.”
That’s a noble thought, a well-intended message, that in order to reach a mass of Superstar crazy fans needs to be said within the format of a six-song six-fight routine, with the mandatory happy ending.

Why is the happy ending so important?

Kamal Hassan could afford to die in ‘Indian’ and ‘Nayakan’ because he’s an actor. An actor becomes immortal when he dies in a film. People give him a standing ovation. A Best Actor award. But, a superhero is reduced to a mere mortal when he dies in a movie. Which is why Shankar and Mani Ratnam knew they had to keep him alive in ‘Thalapathy’ and ‘Sivaji,’ no matter what the odds against them were.
It’s not a compromise. It’s common-sense. It’s what people go to fantasies for. To see their hero kick butt.

So why is Sivaji among the most memorable Rajnikant films ever despite a rather weak romantic track?

Oh, let’s think about that critically slaughtered romantic track again. There’s clearly a shift in Superstar’s philosophy. From ‘Thou Shall Choose Who Loves You Over Who You Love’ (that emerged in Valli and continued till Baba… Listen to Dippu Dippu:
thaedi cheLLum kaadhaL/kaadhaliLLai nanbaa/uNmai kaadhal soLLava/
naLLa kaadhal enbadheNNa/thaedi vandhey kaadhalae) to ‘Best To Live With Who You Love Than What You Get.’ (Kadachavangaloda Vaazhradhoda Pudichavangaloda Vaazharadhuthaan Santhosham).

A complete volte-face.

Why? I guess it is to make Superstar contemporary from being a pragmatic chauvinist to a die-hard romantic because Shankar’s brand of idealism needs a romance to die for. Colour is such an important part of the South Indian’s psyche. Shankar exploits that complex inherent in his audience by having their icon endorse their ‘Fair and Lovely’ aspirations. ‘Velai Thamizhan’ (mentioned in the Style song) is part of that fantasy of the dark-skinned man’s obsession over fair and lovely maidens from Mumbai (starting from Nagarrth Khan known as Khushboo, Rishibala Naval a.k.a. Simran Bagga, Namrata Sadanah a.k.a. Nagma, Jyotika Sadanah and now Shriya Saran). Shankar turns that sentiment into a feel-good fantasy by coating it with the comic treatment and then making the girl say that the dark colour is the best part of their favourite hero. He’s trying to tell them that even if by some miracle they do manage to turn fair, it’s still ‘coool’ to be dark.

Let me get back to the observation with which I started this piece. Stars or Icons are known to consistently embody all those traits that people love about their personality and reprise them in whatever story they are a part of.

Not all the traits Superstar has been known for are politically correct.

Now, Superstar has been criticised by politicians and health activists that he has glamourised the Cancer stick. Superstar, in his last two outings, has tried to make amends – Biscuit in Chandramukhi and Chewing Gum in Sivaji. Superstar’s heroines, over the years, have often been dependents – college students or village belles, often being slapped by the hero. This sort of unabashed chauvinism might not work in the 2000s and in an attempt to make it progressive, Shankar gives us a middle-class working woman. It’s also contemporary because finally, the woman is an equal with who Sivaji shares his life and secrets, and she’s also capable of saving him.

Yes, she’s still the meek submissive lover but hey, things can’t change overnight in Tamil cinema.

I was amazed at the focus of Shankar’s screenplay (I hated his character mix in Anniyan!). He begins Sivaji with the classic Flashback structure, establishing the intentions of the protagonist in the very first three scenes. At the airport, we know he’s come to settle down in India with the line-up of girls waiting to snare him. At the get-together later, we know he wants to get to the root of poverty that he has seen (the beggar at the crossroads sandwiched between the scenes of his arrival and his declaration of intent) – empowering through education.

Once he lays down the agenda for the film, he gets to the other objective of the protagonist – his search for a life partner, an epitome of everything Tamil. He then addresses the social problem of families being so fiercely protective of their space with a strict regard for boundaries that they don’t encourage the courting ritual. Romance needs healthy grounds to blossom. And since at the basic level, marriages in India are about the union of families than just two individuals, he shows us how one family manages to woo the other through a light-hearted comic segment (not all of which I approve – certainly not the bit where Thalaivar goes red with chillies and washes it down the basin graphically but Shankar has always loved to show us what’s gross). This track is smartly paralleled with the protagonist’s efforts to build the college facing hurdles with the ground realities of red tape that leads to corruption… that further escalates politics. He shows us the rich have become too powerful to take on. No matter how much money you have, they can still pull you down and leave you penniless. It doesn’t get tighter than this.

At the interval block, his twin intentions of getting the right girl and building the college are the lowest point. Things can only get better from here and as that coin turns, so does his fate and Shankar flips mode from reality to fantasy. Now, this is the part we’ve been waiting for. The part that Shankar absolutely revels in. The part that puts Sivaji in the list of his most memorable films.

We see Rajni fight his way back, like in Annamalai, like in Padayappa, like in Baasha, he gets his chance to payback… Line for line, coin for coin… “Kooti kazhichu paaru, Kannakku Seriya Irukkum… Yenkitta Kannakku Pesuraanga. Yedu Vandi!”

Now, all those films were about personal triumph, this one is a little larger than that. It’s about a triumph for the society, issues are large and complex and they need to be simplified with comic book storytelling. The villain needs to be someone you hate with all your guts and having a despicable soft speaking scum is a nice touch. After all those Perarasu films, I was turning deaf with all the yelling.

Settling a score is what most films have been about. And seriously, who does it better than Superstar. What makes Sivaji memorable is that it also plays out like a Best of Rajni compilation. It has features his best looks, get-ups, gestures, dialogue delivery, plot-devices and also enriches his existing repertoire of style, facilitating a connect with the Rajni we know from the past to the Superstar he has become to what he could be – the reformer, a Sivaji (the actor par excellence) who could also be MGR (the messiah).

Entertainment has never been so explosive. The last act is pure dynamite. Climax as its orgasmic best if you’re a Rajni fan. Something that works like a charm especially because of the extended foreplay in the slightly flawed first half.

To Shankar’s credit, even those stray scenes of mediocrity are salvaged by a classy Vivek whose timing in Sivaji is probably a career-best. Jalra has never made itself more audible during a one-man orchestra in concert.

Now that I’ve taken my critic’s hat off, Thalaivaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah!!
😀

http://sudermovies.blogspot.com

Three’s a Crowd

June 16, 2007 · by sudhishkamath

Suderman reads between the lines of the third-term report cards of Spider-Man, Shrek, Pirates, Danny Ocean and friends.

Spidey found himself tied up in multiple knots. Shrek has some serious thinking to do about family planning. The Pirates have come a full circle at World’s End. And, Danny Ocean and team have turned number 13 into a lucky charm.

No matter what critics have said, box office figures only seem to further encourage the high-profile class of 2007 to come back again for yet another term. The universal appeal of these unforgettable characters have transcended megabytes of hardcore criticism from all around the world and reached out to a starved lot of loyalists.

True, the ‘triquels’ this year have been a mixed bag. But these films have more in common than you would think – ‘more’ being the key word there.

Considering that none of these four were designed as a trilogy (three films broken down into first, second and third acts) and yet had ambitions of creating a franchise (more adventures of the same guys), the function of the first part was to introduce you to a bunch of people you would fall in love with and package the film around a set of values that would define the world they are set in.

If Spidey was about celebrating the superhero by showing us the human face of the person behind the mask, Shrek, an anti-thesis to fairytale stereotypes, was about creating new ones to further the fantasy of the underdogs. If Pirates was designed to capture the free-spirited happy-go-lucky old-world charm in a bottle of rum with Captain Jack Sparrow onboard as a mascot, Ocean’s was Soderberg’s way of unwinding with the boys and rewinding to the spunky sixties – to an era of good old-fashioned heists.

Sam Raimi, Andrew Adamson, Gore Verbinski and Steven Soderberg successfully brought alive on screen characters who are timeless – a comic-book superhero, a fairytale stereotype turned on its head, a comic hero born out of pirate-lore and a retro bunch of good-looking, smart-thinking, well-dressed-up robbers.

Thanks to perfect casting, these memorable, adorable characters banked on the charming personas of some very fine actors – Tobey Maguire, Kirsten Dunst, Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy, Johnny Depp, Keira Knightley, Orlando Bloom, George Clooney and Brad Pitt. By the end of the first installment, the lines between the actors and the characters they were playing, were blurred. With the success of the second, it was proven to the makers that the first wasn’t a flash in the pan.

Then came the summer of 2007, and the stage for the third act – the acid test for any franchise. Had the characters indeed become legendary that people would come back just to see them do their thing? Going by the box office success, maybe they have.

Let’s examine the plot-lines of the third installments again. Spidey had to fight the evil within him but there were two villains too many for MORE conflict. Shrek just had to deal with the prospect of responsibility and kids but the makers ensured they accommodated everyone from the first two parts – that’s everybody from the telephone directory of fairyland – for MORE entertainment. Pirates just had to bring back Captain Jack Sparrow from World’s End but the producers packed enough crooks in it to spoil the brawl, all for MORE action. And, Oceans 13 had to come up with something MORE difficult to pull off. The word is ‘more’.

“People want more of it? Let’s give them more of the same thing,” seems to be mantra and the plot just an excuse to unleash more of the same set of values that the franchise is built around.

Which is why the critics have had a problem while fans queued up to meet their favourite heroes again.

If the triquels have taught us anything this summer, it is that a film belonging to a franchise is like a re-union or an alumni meet.

You already know the guys, their friends and family. You aren’t there to judge them anymore.

You already know who they are and what they do. You just want an opportunity to catch up with their lives, their adventures. You want to feel good about having them around. The more the action, the more the fun, the better the re-union.

Besides, they are not just entertainment anymore. They are company. People need people.

What better people to turn to, in regular intervals, than your favourite heroes going about their lives, inspiring you to do good and bringing cheer to your life. And, not just during those 100 plus minutes, but for days after they sign off as they make you wait in anticipation till they’re back again – with a brand new excuse, another pretense of a plot – just to make you happy.

http://sudermovies.blogspot.com

Sivaji Premiere: Live updates: Spoiler-fest!

June 14, 2007 · by sudhishkamath

Click on the title to listen to the interview that Superstar gave ahead of the premiere on Times Now.

I’m messaging from the premiere of Sivaji. These updates shall continue for as long as my girlfriend is awake and can type them in.

9.45 – Spotted- Aishwarya Rajnikanth, Parthipan, Dharani, Priyadarshan, Thotta Tharani. I realise everyone I know is alloted different theatres. My photographer is alloted Santham, Baradwaj Rangan has got seats in Seasons, Sreedhar Pillai has the seats for Sathyam Balcony.

10:08 – Inside six degrees. Everyone has been given party poppers. Movie yet to start.

10.20 – Trisha is sitting right behind me. Great, I can get at least one quote for my story on Saturday morning.

10.30 – Sultan is Rajnikant’s next film. It’s an animation film directed by Soundarya Rajnikant produced by Ocher Studios. It has music by A.R.Rahman. Thalaivar is animated but Superstar has lent his voice himself. Releasing 2008. The trailer began with showing shoes of a warrior and then goes to reveal Thalaivar with a sword.

10.32 – People burst party poppers spouting out confetti, supplied by Sathyam, as the alphabets S-U-P-E-R-S-T-A-R followed by R-A-J-N-I appear.

10.35 – Thalaivar with a mask over his face gets out of the police van to be escorted to prison as thousands of people watch in horror. His first soundbyte however is inside the van when a police officer politely suggests that he wears the mask lest people get emotional seeing him and we hear: “Um”

10.40 – Superstar plays a software systems architect NRI who has saved up for 25 years before returning to India with noble intentions. Flashback begins with the eligible bachelor sporting an orange tie with a beige suit and jeans, being recieved by his parents and Vivek, his maama, at the airport. With dreams of starting a free medical college and hospital for students. Adiseshan (Suman in Ray Ban) is his adversary, a Jeppiar-like character, who lives of capitation fee collected from students.

10.45 – Nayantara has never looked hotter before. She’s skinny and pretty, two things we didn’t even imagine she could be. She does the opening intro song ‘Ballelaka’ as Thalaivar dances with extras who have their tummies painted with tigers and Thalaivar’s face of course.

11.00 – Bubble gum is the cigarette replacement. Vivek interrupts Thalaivar before he delivers a punchline saying that he shouldn’t bother because every other boy on screen is unable to control his finger movements. And then, Vivek comes up with some cheeky ones that rhyme Katpadi with Deadbody and Pogo with Go Go! (Something like Kozhaindaga Paakurathu Pogo, Sivajiya paathu nee go go). The best one however is “Sixukku Aparam Sevenu, Sivajikku aparam Yevenu?”

11.15 – Shriya sizzled in that ‘Vaaji Vaaji’ song. She is sooo hawt!! And thalaivar’s comedy doesn’t seem to work much, at least not in that scene where he’s washing his mouth after eating a plate full of chillis! Please cut this scene out, Shankar. Not good for his stature.

11.35 – Thalaivar turns white!! That’s a well concealed suprise considering the lyrics are such a giveaway. Listen to the ‘Style’ song again! After seeing the blonde stills we were prepared for the worst but it’s not that bad, trust me. Shriya is well… yummy!

11.55 – Riches to rags. All he is left with is one buck, given to him by Adi who completely ruins him and recommends begging for a future. Thalaivar has tried doing good the right way. That didn’t work. So now he tosses up that coin to let it decide his fate: Heads (Singha vazhi) or Tails (Poo vazhi). No prizes for guessing what it spells out.

12 Midnight – Interval. Interesting interval block setting up stage for a rocking second half but the first half alone, seen in isolation, is just about ok that shines through a few sparklers here and there.

Talking points during interval: The wooing segment is clearly the downer. Thalaivar has often advocated that ‘Thou Shalt Choose One Who Loves You Over The One You Love.’ Now, he does a volte face. Clearly, the one defining quality about all successful films has been that he does not chase the girl. Shankar turns that on its head this time. Like Suresh Krissna did earlier (and unsuccessfully) in Baba.
Also, Shankar knows that colour (or lack of it) is a huge part of the Tamil psyche. He exploits it to create a feel good mood.
The other thing that Shankar totally understands is the impact of corruption on the middle-class. This time instead of focussing on how the middle class are affected, he shows us how difficult it is even for the rich and those willing to do good are impaired by the complexities of bureaucracy and red tape.

12.30 – That coin flipping style is a class act. Thalaivaaaa!!! Only he can reinvent himself like this!

12.40 – Another super punchline when this bunch of goons catch hold of him and say: Thaniya maatikittae paathiya? And Superstar says: “Panningathaan kootama varum…” He then dislodges five of them with one single kick sending them flying all around him before completing: “Singham… single ah varum” *Whistle Whistle*

1.00 – Adhiradi is awesome!! The best picturised Rajni song I’ve ever seen… A Robert Rodriguez guns and guitars tribute. And Thalaivar looks smashing as never before! And Shriya… Slurp!! Trisha behind me surely must be envying her buddy there. Shriya’s simply the single sexiest siren since Simran scorched our screens.

1.15 – There’s also this Peter Jackson visual effects tribute as fx-crazy Shankar sends a Superstar’s car crashing into King Kong’s mouth! Whoa!! I’ve never felt younger before… Thalaivaaaaah once again! I forgot to mention Thalaivar earlier did some wonderful imitations of MGR, Sivaji and yes… Kamal Hasan… Check him out doing Nethu Raathri… 😀

1.25 – Okay, there’s this really corny twist coming up… as cheeseball as it gets in our movies… In fact I saw this coming in the first half of the film when Raghuvaran brings back to life a boy who was electrocuted and soon explains to Thalaivar how that is possible. Lotsa folks out there are gonna roll their eyes when this happens and the biggest critics will call this film trash just because of this twist. But for us willing believers, this is a splendid excuse for Shankar to unleash yet another new look: the mottai boss who’s called not Sivaji but… find out for yourself! *clap clap*

1.45 – Mottai Boss rocks! And the style associated with the character… I can’t stop grinning and I realise I’ve been grinning for the last one hour.

1.50 – Trisha tells me she loved the film. “He’s so hot,” she says. Great, I have my quote.

2.00 – I wait for Baddy till the show at Seasons gets over. Turns out that he didn’t like it much. In fact he called the first half “excruciatingly boring”. For me, I can’t wait to watch it again. And I’m doing exactly that in five hours from now.

*This post was updated only by 5 a.m. because I realised pretty late that my girlfriend did put up a Live Update on the blog before she went off to sleep and hence didnt get a chance to update my messages. Review will be up in 24 hours. Though to be honest, Superstar films shouldn’t be reviewed. Only idiots will look for logic and contest plausibility in a superhero tale. But do come back, ill give it a shot anyway*

Borat: Sexual learnings on a feminism

June 6, 2007 · by sudhishkamath

Just watched Borat yet again. This clip reminds me of an old post I made in the Elder Brother Column soon after watching the ‘movie-film’ the first time.

Ignore that post if you aren’t a Borat fan (the language may offend you) but I like this bit where Elder Brother tells Borat Sagdiyev:

“Feminism is about the equality of the sexes and not about the similarity… Men and women, though equal, are different. Saying the contrary is a grossly incorrect gender generalisation.”

Yeah, I should update the Anti-Agony column more regularly.

It’s fun to bitch about women in my own exclusive space where Shonali doesn’t get to defend em!

All in good humour, sweethearts. You know we men (well, at least, most of us) love you (well, most of you).

Test Podcast: Chinmayi chats with Gangai Amaren

June 4, 2007 · by sudhishkamath

Click on the Title link for the podcast file.

Singer-RJ-TV show host-psychologist-voiceover artiste and blogger Chinmayi talks to music director-songwriter-director-RJ Gangai Amaren. They had the most explosive Take Two we’ve have ever recorded and since the text transcript couldn’t do justice to the 83-minute-conversation, here’s the uncut version. Chinmayi countered his dynamite arguments quite sensitively. Especially, when he decided to criticise his maestro-brother Ilaiyaraja.

Listen to it with headphones for best results! Works fine on Firefox and if you have Quicktime. Some of my IE user friends seem to have problems. Any idea how to make it work across platforms/browsers?

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