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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 March 7th, 2008

Thotta: Like a bullet through your brain

March 7, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Genre: Action
Director: Selvaa
Cast: Jeevan, Priyamani, Santhanabarathy, Sampath Raj, Livingston
Storyline: A gangster has to choose between loyalty to those who raised him and his lady love who wants to be a cop.
Bottomline: As standardised as a bullet in a magazine.

There’s not a chance in hell will you forget you watched Thotta.

Selvaa’s idea of making Thotta unforgettable is by making every character say Thotta at least once in every line said in the movie, if not every shot. So it does have a killing effect. Only that by the time you hear it for the hundredth time before interval, you are already dead.

Like that’s not enough, he further goes on to stretch the Thotta-Thupaaki (Bullet-Gun) analogy to groan-inducing levels of repetition and re-iteration. First, the hitman is only as good as the bullet fired by the gun and then, the obvious rejoinder by the hero: that the gun is no good without the bullet.

To continue with that analogy, bullets are replaced after every shot is fired or misfired and that’s exactly been the case with Tamil film heroes this season. The prototype for the season is the gun-toting gangster.

The miracle of cinema is that whether it is Narain or Vikram or Jeevan, it creates an level-playing ground for them to don exactly the same role – What Narain played in Chithiram Pesudadi a couple of years ago, Vikram does in Bheema (though Bheema is original to the extent that it is at least a bold throwback to Brokeback Mountain with our own cowboy gangster tattooing his lover’s name on his chest as a story about a gangster torn between his love for a man and a girl, caught between guns and roses… and pricks and blossoms) and now, Jeevan does that here with great sincerity.

Just like how Bheema was about the second-generation vigilante and the relevance of the prototype in today’s context when the system is all-powerful and does not discriminate against the good bad guy with the gun and the bad bad guy with the gun, Thotta takes the life of an unabashedly evil hitman who kills and makes him fall in love with the good side of life (through the girl who wants to be a cop).

Today, the system finds means beyond the book to get rid of those who break the law under the garb of chance encounter killings. So yes, it does seem very fascinating when the lines blur between good and evil and between those who uphold the law and those who break it. But how many movies do we see with the same story, characters and structure?

To Selvaa’s credit, Jeevan as Thotta underplays quite a bit without over-reacting to situations (except when the dubbing artiste goes over the top in a couple of places) and at least at the story level, the film and the hero get the end they deserve. But not before stuntmen fly around in wires through the jungle. Not before there are half a dozen songs with lyrics like ‘Life is love, love is life,’ each of them sounding suspiciously familiar like a really bad Hindi song interlude from the nineties.

Priyamani does okay but needs to hire a professional stylist, a costume designer and a dubbing artist (especially if that’s her real voice) while Jeevan needs to dub his films himself if he wants to retain his brand of subtlety. The support characters – played by Sampathraj, Livingston, Santhanabarathy, Thalaivasal Vijay and Charanraj – will make it to the great book of clichés and you can’t help but feel sorry for these actors who rarely get a role that lets them explore a few shades and a character graph that takes them places. If that’s the case with the support roles, you can imagine the quality of acting demanded from the Extras. Special mention to those four constables who, in a close-mid shot, cry when the cops say unmentionable things to the girl’s family. They made my day.

Overall, Thotta is racy for most parts, sprinting through the motions we have seen a hundred times before and yet continue to see only because our heroes give us no choice.

Only for the bored and the desperate.

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