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  • About GNGM

    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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Posts By sudhishkamath

Mission Istaanbul: Sitting Thru is Mission Impossibul (UNRATED)

August 1, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Genre: Action
Director: Apoorva Lakhia
Cast: Zayed Khan, Vivek Oberoi, Shriya Saran
Storyline: A journalist finds his life in danger as he discovers the truth behind a controversial TV network with a little help from a mysterious commando.
Bottomline: Destined to be the butt of all jokes

Mission Istaanbul is not a joke. It’s a series. Here are a few random thoughts that ran past my mind as I sat there in the dark trying to take Mission Instanbul seriously:

What’s the best season to release the film in the US?
Thanksgiving. Because it would be the biggest Turkey.
* * *
How close are Suniel Shetty, Zayed Khan and Vivek Oberoi to Hollywood after Istaanbul?
Very. They are wholly wooden.
* * *
Why do Zayed and the villain take off their shirts half the time they see each other?
Because they wanted to rub more than shoulders?
* * *
What is Apoorva Lakhia’s idea of terrorism?
Showing us what the world would be like if Suniel Shetty and Zayed Khan played journalists.
* * *
What is Mission Istaanbul in journalistic parlance?
Bad news.
* * *
Is Shweta Bharadwaj a double or a triple agent? Whose side is she on?
She hasn’t found out yet. Has to be the audience’s side. She wants to please everybody.
* * *
Why is Abhishek Bachchan doing an item in this film?
To console Vivek Oberoi that he also does things apart from Oberoi’s ex-girlfriend.
* * *
Why did a soft drink brand  this film and insist on the tagline: Darr Ke Aage Jeet Hai before the action sequence?
It was the competition’s masterstroke.
* * *
Bad guys keep spraying bullets but why don’t Vivek or Zayed ever get hit?
Come on, when have Vivek and Zayed ever even remotely been in a hit?
* * *
What is Shriya Saran doing in Istaanbul?
Trying and hoping to get killed right from the first scene. Is there any other way out of this film?
* * *
Why does Vivek Oberoi keep smiling through out the movie?
He’s the only one who got all the jokes.
* * *
What was Apoorva Lakhia thinking?
He was?
* * *
What is common to Istaanbul and rocket launchers?
It is their destiny to bomb.
* * *
Knock, Knock…
“Who’s there?”
Bull.
“Who Bull?”
Mission…
[interrupts] “Oh! I’m not opening.”
* * *
Knock, Knock…
[No answer]
Knock, Knock…
[Still no answer]
Knock, Knock, Knock, Knock…
[Snore]
Ah! Mission Istaanbul is playing. Even the gateman’s dozed off.

The Dark Knight: Don’t bat an eyelid!

July 29, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Genre: Action
Director: Christopher Nolan
Cast: Christian Bale, Heath Ledger, Aaron Eckhart, Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman
Storyline: Batman wants to retire but Joker wants him to play with
Bottomline: The best superhero movie ever

Heath Ledger probably didn’t care too much about death.

Maybe because he knew he was going to be immortalised as one of the best onscreen villains of all time. Maybe he also knew that the world, at some subconscious level, loved and related to Joker more than Batman.

Because, like Joker observes: “Insanity is a lot like gravity. All it needs is a little… push.” At some level, Joker as “the agent of chaos” is the alter-ego of the common man stifled by the system.

What makes Christopher Nolan and Heath Ledger’s Joker so scary is that they make you realise that this psychopath actually resides in that darkest corner of your heart. Never has a comic book character become someone so real that it could easily be YOU… if put in a situation and asked to make a difficult choice: Like the people of Gotham are asked to, towards the end.

Sacrificing the back-story of Joker’s origin was probably just what Nolan needed to make Joker that enigmatic villain who people, including Batman himself, do not fully understand.

The Dark Knight is Joker’s movie all the way (watch the cinema hall erupt with applause for every single punch line) and Batman just happens to be in it just to remind us that someone’s got to clean up the streets (Batman gets his due too and earns the applause as a matter of right, taking on an adversary as clever and dangerous as the Joker).

Christopher Nolan makes Tim Burton’s 1989 ‘Batman’ (arguably the best Batman film before Nolan took his shot) look like child’s play. Why does Burton’s version seem so amateur now? It was awesome when we watched it as kids. Heath Ledger makes Jack Nicholson’s Joker look like a circus clown. Also, Bale’s certainly a better Batman than Keaton for his ability to play Batman as well as he plays Bruce Wayne.

Here’s why ‘The Dark Knight’ may be the best superhero movie ever.

To begin with, the near-flawless ensemble cast – Apart from the phenomenally talented Heath Ledger and the charming Bale, there’s Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman, Maggie Gyllenhaal (replacing Katie Holmes), Aaron Eckhart (Harvey Dent) with author-backed roles.

Second, though it derives its characters from comics with two-dimensional depth and simplified differentiation of good and evil, Christopher and his brother Jonathan Nolan have fleshed out these characters to an extent that none of them are monotone. They are all complex characters with relatable issues – the superhero just wants to retire and spend time with the girl he loves, the girl herself may just move on with her life, the psychopath does not want to be the only freak in town, the honest guy is unable to deal with the price he’s had to pay to be good (a nice contrast between Harvey Dent and Gordon when people they love are in trouble) and even the loyalists do not approve of all things the superhero does.

Third, the man who was consumed by the dark side of Joker. Heath Ledger plays the role of his lifetime. If Nicholson’s Joker was all cheese, Heath’s is chalk (yeah, we’re talking about the minimalist make-up too). At no point do you see Heath, it’s always Joker. Apparently, Heath improvised quite a bit (especially the part where he starts clapping sarcastically in jail) and absolutely seems to relish the part with his drawling dialogue delivery, smacking his lips at his shot at immortality. He’s lived the role, keeping Joker larger than life yet believably relatable. This is something that could’ve easily gone so over the top, the Nicholson way.

Four, the mix between dialogue and action choreography. There’s enough in there for hardcore action buffs and also plenty for those who like their movies layered and deep. It’s not sitting pretty right on top of IMDB’s top 250 (with a 9.5 rating with over a lakh votes) for nothing.

In the coming months, it would be interesting to see how it fares with The Godfather considered to be the best movie of all time (currently at No.2 with a 9.1 rating with almost three lakh votes).

We could go on talking about it but we need a book. Go watch it, again and again and again.

Contract: Cheap thrills on an underwear-string budget

July 27, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Genre: Action
Director: Ram Gopal Varma
Cast: Adhvik Mahajan, Sakshi Gulati, Amruta Khanvilkar
Storyline: A former soldier seeks revenge, infiltrates an underworld gang to establish contact with terrorists responsible for the death of his wife and daughter.
Bottomline: Only for Varma’s chaddi-buddies.

Contract begins with a line: You may ignore terrorism. But terrorism won’t ignore you. We could say the same thing about Varma. He keeps coming back to haunt us. The man is evil. Only he could’ve made an entire film as an inside joke.

His idea of the underworld has something to do with an encounter cop, streaking through streets of Mumbai, without his underwear.

And this, moments after the hideous looking chap walks out of his bath in a towel and flashes Mallika Sherawat, staring down at him from her photograph (that busty one taken during the Myth premiere). With the kind of money she charges these days, this was the best Varma could do – use her poster.
And before he knows it, the cop does a Ranbir Kapoor-Saawariya-towel-drop and runs around the streets in the buff, chased by the hero of the film. Someone shoots this on his mobile and after the thrilling chase sequence, the cop returns home to complain to Mallika, who still seems to be smiling down at him from her poster.

Contract is all about the ‘underworld,’ the ‘ghusna’ (infiltration) and the ‘maarna’ (‘Wham Bam,’ of course).

We know someone’s going to have a broken back mounting the saddle, “entering the underworld,” when the chief of police (a poker-faced Prasad Purandare) tells our ex-soldier hero mourning the death of his wife: “Ab Jo Kuch Hoga, Hamare Beech Main Hoga. Main Iske Baare Main Kissi Se Nahin Kahoonga” (Whatever happens from now, will remain between us. I will not tell anyone).

The cop wants him to go to prison because that’s where all the gangs go bang-bang at each other. As he eloquently explains: “Underworld ke andar ghusne ki training police se behtar aur kaun de sakta hai” (Who could train you more for entering the underworld more than the police itself) and immediately spells out: “It is supposed to be a joke.” Since most of the film is filled with such juvenile humour about all possible puns the word ‘Underworld’ could accommodate, you hardly get a chance to get serious about the plot. That’s a tragedy because Prashant Pandey’s screenplay comes across as a tribute to crime-dramas like ‘Drohkaal’ or ‘The Departed’ where an honest officer has to go undercover to infiltrate a gang.

Varma botches it up trying to make a masala film out of this seriously explosive material by shooting it like a low-budget student film. One gang leader lives on a boat, another lives in someplace ‘vilayat’ (which looks suspiciously like Goa) and the rest of the film is shot in extreme close-ups. Which is okay if the people featured look good.

Adhvik looks like a cross between Ajith and Simbu and tries hard to be all angst, the chubby girl (Sakshi Gulati) pouts like Namitha unconvincingly and the rest of the gangsters look like they haven’t had a bath all their lives because RGV is gunning for realism in the Satya mould… while trying to make a masala movie ridden with Hindi text book proverbs for dialogues.

Sample: Jahaan Mitthai hoti hai, Makhi aa jaati hai (Sweets attract flies), ‘Mashoor Betey Ke Sau Baap Hotey Hai (Success has many fathers), ‘Jab Sar Katnewala hai toh Dhadi bananey ka kya fayda (What’s the point of shaving your beard when you’re going to be beheaded). Or something as charming as “Har roz ek hi rang ki chaddi pehanta hoon kya” (Do I wear the same colour underwear everyday?) and that’s supposed to mean: “I don’t need to feel the same way everyday”.

After Contract, we can be sure that Ram Gopal Varma is only as good as his screenwriters.

As he admits himself, Satya happened by accident. We know Company was Jaideep Sahni’s genius. Contract looks like a hurriedly made low-budget assembly-line action film that smacks of Varma’s disregard for writing. Wasted potential.

Kismat Konnection: One Minute Review

July 26, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Genre: Romance

Director: Aziz Mirza

Cast: Shahid Kapoor, Vidya Balan, Om Puri, Haider Ali

Storyline: An unlucky architect falls in love with his Lady Luck but has to decide what he wants more.

Ups: It makes you think Lindsay Lohan-starrer ‘Just My Luck’ wasn’t that bad. Kismet is on the same lines towards the beginning and then gets into ‘Two Weeks Notice’ territory with the shopping-mall versus community-centre conflict. Om Puri and… never mind, we forget. Actually, with female company you may not mind this seemingly long film that demands absolutely no attention from you.

Downs:
Shahid Kapoor is back to being Shah Rukh Khan and suggests that Jab We Met may have been a fluke. Vidya Balan is all set to win the Na-Real again for her choice of wardrobe that often gives her arms to match Shahid. No doubt she’s pretty but I wouldn’t dare an arm-wrestling match with Vidya after Kismet. We know Aziz Mirza’s signature is in creating an ensemble but here, it just means more annoying characters than ever. It’s always tricky to make a film based on chance and luck but there’s only so much disbelief you can suspend. Suddenly telling us that nobody, including all architects pitching for the project, knew the disputed property had a strong foundation is not just convenient and lazy screenwriting, it is the kind of stuff that makes you want to walk out in a terribly slow film that tries hard to be sweet.

Bottomline: Miss Kismat. Mat Jao.

Suderman on Chennai Live 104.8 FM

July 20, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

My dear friend Creative Head/RJ Roshni Menon of Chennai Live had called me over to her radio station for her show recently.

Chennai Live 104.8 FM recently launched itself as the city’s first talk-based radio station.

After a few unsuccessful attempts in trying to embed audio, I’ve finally managed to do it. So here we go:

Part 1: On Reviewing, Blogging, That Four Letter Word and Filmmaking

https://madrasink.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/radio-part-1.mp3

Part 2: On Movies playing in Chennai, Favourite Critics and Filmmakers

https://madrasink.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/chennailive2.mp3

Part 3: Personal Favourites – Suderman Recommends

https://madrasink.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/radio-part-3.mp3

If you have a problem listening or if you just want to save it and listen to it at leisure: Complete Radio Show

Sondarya Rajnikant: Why the daughter is The Boss! (Uncut)

July 19, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

What if you are Superstar’s biggest fan and you got a chance to live with Him all your life?

And then, you grow up, dream big and get a chance to direct Him in your very first movie – a ten million dollar baby with Adlabs?

And, though He’s your father, here you are telling Him what to do and calling the shots.

And, apart from being among the hottest single eligible women in the city, you’ve signed an exclusive motion picture production deal with Warner Bros., a deal with Landmark for two books including a biography on the Superstar himself, and are helming Ocher Studios, a three-year-old company that executes about forty per cent of the market’s animation and visual effects projects in this part of the world.

All of this, on your own, without a single rupee from Him.

Well, that much success when you are still twenty-something usually adds a few kilos to the weight of your head. But not her. Sondarya Rajnikant travels light.

So when she breezes in sporting sunglasses, a rudraksh around her neck, a smart deep blue semi-formal shirt buttoned down with jeans to sit down for an interview without a prepared speech or notes to read from, you are impressed. It’s a style statement that incorporates fashion, spirituality, simplicity, business and casualness.

Just back shooting after her first experience shooting for her own film in Vietnam (she spent 40 days shooting the action sequences including a war scene with International stuntmen) and ahead of leaving to Hyderabad to shoot with her Dad for Sultan, she seems to be in a mood to open up about her company, her private life and family.

“The shooting is strictly for reference. What we shoot, we edit and then motion-capture,” she explains. “I expect perfection. So even if we could shoot just one guy and replicate it for an army, we shot with 100 guys. Just for reference.”

She’s certain Sultan is going to break new grounds in animation. “We’re attempting something as realistic as Beowulf. I’ve always been interested in visual effects and I knew I wanted to direct but I didn’t want to do the usual things. Why travel the road already taken? I have always felt that everybody has looked at India as an outsourcing hub. But it’s time we produce content that’s as good as Japanese content or Chinese content.”

She recalls how the film was originally conceived as ‘Superstar’ and then titled ‘Hara’. “The main character is still called Hara. We know Hariharan is Ayyappan. But we’re releasing in Hindi and the people at Adlabs told us they would say ‘Haara’ (as in flop). So I told this to Appa, he took a minute to think over it and said: Call it Sultan. It’s universal for a story about a warrior.”

How come she wasn’t bitten by the acting bug?
“There was a time when I came back from Australia and I was getting a lot of offers. Good friends in the industry gave me scripts. My parents were not for it or against it, they left it to me. But I had just started Ocher. So I took it to my Dad, said ‘Appa, the story is good but I want to do this (Ocher)’ and he asked me to think what exactly I wanted to do… That’s when I realised this (Ocher) is what I want to do, it’s a blessing when you get to do what you are passionate about. So many people are stuck with jobs they don’t want to do.”

Being the youngest in the company where all, but one, employee are less than 40 years old, Sondarya says she’s never had a problem with responsibility. “I was Cul-Sec in school, I was class leader… In the university too, I’ve been the group head. I have always been the person who leads, never the one who follows.”

Being a leader needs vision and Sondarya can see far enough, her self-belief further vindicated when she convinced Warner Bros to sign along the dotted line. “It was a lot of work but we signed the third time we met.”

On the state of films:
Every other hero wants to be Superstar. But isn’t her Dad responsible for this himself? Creating an iconic status so desirable that everybody wants to get there.

“Yes, he’s responsible,” she laughs. “The most aped part is how he walks swiftly towards the camera… Everybody is doing it. He’s an inspiration but there can be only one Rajnikant. We are going through a phase where it is easy to get in to films but the question is how many films are you going to last? That’s why I say the script is the hero. We’re trying to do films with good scripts, not necessarily hero-centric films. We’re trying to cover a market that’s not been touched. We’re starting production on Venkat Prabhu’s Goa in October. We want to encourage performing actors, different genres… not aruva all the time. Everybody wants to be a don like Baasha, everybody wants ten people to walk behind them. We hope we can change that.”

Ocher has already signed up Ajit for the Billa sequel (or is it going to be a prequel? Wait and watch, she says mysteriously) next year, is doing a Telugu film with Mahesh Babu and Puri Jagannath apart from Venkat Prabhu’s Goa and Sondarya has plans to direct a live-action film once she’s done with Sultan.
* * *

The daughter calls the shots

The daughter calls the shots

Growing Up – the personal story:

“My father used to do 14 films in a year though now he does one every three years. My mother never made us feel his absence. My sister and me used to fight a lot. For clothes, in particular. Mother had to come and separate us. We are very close. Mother insisted we stayed in the same room. After Aishwarya got married, it took time for us to accept it. That first night when she wasn’t at home, that was the time I realised how much I missed her. I called her and cried.
The best experience growing up when we took off to see the World Cup in London. We love watching cricket as a family. You should see my Dad cheer India. He’s out there standing and whistle. It was cold but we never took flights. We insisted on taking trains. We wanted to see the countryside.
You know how my Dad is. We were raised to live simple. So even when you know you can have what you want, you are happy with what you have.
I’m not saying I don’t splurge. I obsessed with Aviator frames (sunglasses). I have the same thing in different colours.
When I took Appa to Brussels for body scan to Eyetronics (the company that did 3D scanning for Brad Pitt for Troy and Johnny Depp for Charlie and the Chocolate Factory), we were there for 20 days. On the way back, we stopped in London and I took my Dad shopping. He’s the best shopping companion I’ve had. He never complained and I was like a princess just buying whatever I wanted and he was carrying all the bags. I took pictures of him carrying the bags thinking ‘That’s Rajnikant, carrying luggage for his daughter.’ He’s a fun dad.
Appa can’t walk on the road the way he does in London. We do go out. I do get recognised. When people come and talk to you, we don’t look at it as interference. It doesn’t reach a point where it becomes a nuisance. But can I go and sit at Zaras? No, I can’t.

On dating, freedom and curfew:

(Laughs) I don’t have the time for that now and anything I do becomes news. I cannot do things I did in Australia… I cannot take my car and get petrol without being stared at. Yes, it’s a blessing. We have curfew and all that but I don’t complain about it. Why unnecessarily give room for people to talk about you. I used to complain when I was 17-18 and ask “Why should we back by eight?” But now, I understand why my parents are protective about us. And I think it’s a good thing to have one close friend than a group of 20 people you’re not sure you can trust. I have a close circle of friends. I do unwind with them, again but not in public places.
Marriage, I have a long way to go before I can think of that… The thing is right now I am focused about my career. And that’s all I think about all the time.
I wouldn’t say I like control. I lead and I don’t follow. A guy who’s mature enough and who’s on his own is all I’m looking for but not now. Definitely not in the near future.

* * *
Sondarya’s Favourites:
Genre – Fantasy
Films – Lion King, Thalapathy, Roja, Shrek, Finding Nemo, Annamalai, Lagaan, Dil Chahta Hai, Gladiator, Last Samurai
Filmmakers – Mani Ratnam, Steven Spielberg, Clint Eastwood.

* * *

Kuselan News Watch – 1

July 15, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Superstar fans may want to see this.

Gautami: Beyond labels, Defying definitions

July 15, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

When you go in to watch the most awaited film of the year made by people you admire, you’re not just excited but also scared that you may not like it.

Just as I was about to leave to watch the film a night before the official release at Rohini complex, I caught Gautami on chat.

“You nervous,” I asked.

“Not at all,” she typed back.

I was.

More so, after she said: “Let me know what you think.”

I saw the film twice in the next four days.

When I meet Gautami later in the week at her office, we begin with the response generated.

Is dumbing down an idea for the mass a necessary evil of commercial cinema?
That’s when I realise Gautami does not like definitions.

“What’s a ‘class’ audience? Just because they pay a higher value for a ticket does not mean they have a higher level of awareness or critiquing or aesthetics of cinema. I know factory workers from Tambaram who would pay 2000 bucks to watch a film. People from the so-called class audience tell me they would have to see it a few times to understand it completely,” she says.

“I think the beauty of this film is that it has reached different people at different levels. Everybody finds something different to say.”

Does hype affect how people see a film?

“That’s a huge part of the thrill of going to see a movie, not knowing what to expect. I like to go in with an open mind. I don’t like to read the reviews beforehand, I don’t like to read the story or the book or find out from my neighbour how it was. Even while watching it, I don’t want to try to guess what the climax is going to be and then bore myself silly. I think that defeats the purpose of entertainment. I would like the storyteller or the filmmaker to tell me the story in their own way. I like to form my opinion AFTER I’ve seen the whole film, what worked for me and what didn’t.”

Gautami has seen the film grow in front of her eyes from the idea to concept to screenplay to film and with it, she grew as a technician. “It has been an eye opener. We all don’t have to go out and make films. We can do anything. But it’s about how much better can we do it. It’s about your endeavour for something above the ordinary and beyond the benchmarks you’ve set for yourself.”

She seemed to enjoy her second innings.

In her first innings, Gautami was the hottest heroine on the block doing films with Rajnikant and Kamal Hassan. She giggles when you tell her that.

What happened between these two innings?
“Life happened. I got married, I figured out how relationships work. I had a daughter, lost my parents, one after the other. Figured out and understood that a relationship has to be participated with mutual respect and equal effort from both parties and if not, it’s not something I would like to spend my life on. So I went about shaping my life with something I am happy with and with people I am comfortable with. Then I fought cancer and I came out of that and did Dasavatharam.”

No one else could’ve mentioned all of that and made it sound like it happens to everybody. Especially, fighting cancer and rebooting after life-altering changes. When exactly did the Ulaga Nayakan make an entry into her life?

“Halfway through all that,” she says. “I had decided that I did not want a life with any kind of compromise. We live one life. If you are lucky, you live to eighty, you have all your faculties in tact and you have life, that’s great. But if you don’t and if you just have today, how well do you live life? How honestly do you live it for yourself? I made all my decisions on my personal life, my marriage, based on that. My daughter needs to grow in an environment that is loving, wholesome, where there is no stress, where there is no kind of pressure of any kind…”

How did she fall in love with Kamal Hassan?
“He was Kamal Sir to me. He still is, but in a different way. He was one person I looked up to and thought the world of. With every level that I’ve gotten to know him, from the audience to star to his co-star to… I’ve seen him as a writer, I’ve seen him as a director, I’ve seen him on the set, I’ve seen him with his kids and my respect for him has only grown.  He’s an immensely strong person, very, very compassionate. These are things which are never seen or heard because he never speaks of himself and people who know him don’t speak much. It is about sharing little joys, every moment, every day, it’s about the 24 hours… I think both of us felt that and it grew to the next stage.”

Is it a relationship that’s beyond marriage?
“No, I’m not going to classify my relationship. I don’t feel the need to define it.”

Classic Gautami. She does not believe in definitions.

* * *

On Kamal Hassan

I have learnt perseverance from him. I have seen him go through all kinds of issues. Everything is kept where it should be. He’s never ever come home with work tension. He’ll come back home, the kids will be all over him, the dogs will be over him and he’ll be playing with them. He would’ve probably left behind something of great magnitude back at office… I know a lot of people who would bring that tension home. Not him. He knows to compartmentalise.

I don’t think it is cinema that’s the glue that holds us together. It’s about two individuals at a fundamental level and the kind of people we are. If you ask me, a couple should never work together.

Also, I am very mindful of his taste. I have never ever thought of telling him what he should be doing… he’s the master craftsman. I think that’s root of this admiration.

When there’s a field you love so much, and there’s this master craftsman and you realise who he is and where his dreams are coming from, the magnitude of his talent, it’s a different kind of an admiration.

While we were putting Dasavatharam together, we were focusing on the smaller parts and our individual contributions. So we never knew how the big picture would look when put together.

The perfectionist that he is, he is his biggest critic. So when it was finally ready, as he was watching it and being critical of himself about the small details, I was in complete awe of one man’s vision to dream and put it out there. He’s done something without the benefit of a precedent, something that will give people years later the encouragement and insight on how it could be done. He dared to do it and we should be proud of him.

Hancock: Where there’s a Will…

July 12, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Genre: Action/Comedy
Director: Peter Berg
Cast: Will Smith, Charlize Theron, Jason Bateman
Storyline: An anti-social superhero gets an image makeover but his past is back to haunt him yet again
Bottomline: The funniest superhero movie of all times

There are superhero movies. There are superhero spoofs. And, there’s Hancock.

Seriously, Will Smith’s got to be the funniest thing on film to have ever saved the world. When was the last time you actually had an entire hall cheering and rooting whole-heartedly for a superhero/superstar not from this land?

Hancock isn’t your regular superhero. He’s jaded, bloody irresponsible, engages in drunken flying, dirty and foul-mouthed, politically incorrect (he’s mean to senior citizens, rude to children) and unwittingly wrecks the town reckless. No wonder then that he’s doing a thankless job. People hate him.

That makes John Hancock the single most irreverent superhero of our times and one of the most adorable onscreen rogues ever. A modern day Devdas, even.

The original Bad Boy would’ve been so much cooler if only he got to mouth a few more of those seven words you can’t say on television. Yes, that would’ve been a black stereotype indeed but hey, what about all those bits where he thrusts one guy’s head into another chap’s crack? The hall was in splits.

The film is a celebration of black-American humour and a little profanity would’ve done no harm, brothers. It’s juvenile fun, yeah, but not the kind of film you bring your kids to.

Though Hancock is the embodiment of the collective angst of superheroes who have a jinxed love life given their responsibilities of saving the world, Peter Berg makes sure that that inherent pathos and resulting drama, rarely takes over the light-hearted mood of a film celebrating the staple of comic books.

Employing hand-held cinematography for realism, Berg would have us believe that these guys from the comic books sporting crotchety tight capes have no clue what being a real superhero feels like. Making fun of every bit of superhero mythology, ranging from origin to costume to food habits to how they got their superhero name, the makers have done quite well to root Hancock in the real world – Hancock hates the idea of body-hugging costume, is from this planet (Miami as far as he can remember), loves his meat-balls in spaghetti like every other American family, longs for love and actually cares about what people think of him and his name was just a case of misunderstanding.

The explanation of his superhero roots is rather simple yet fascinating. What if the world’s most powerful superhero could also be the most vulnerable? Hancock is a sobering take on the life of an unlikely superhero and an attempt to capture the slices of larger-than-life through relatable paradigms. The documentary footage of the superhero on Youtube, for instance.

The climax, however, is an entirely different film ghost-directed by Karan Johar. A stretch of schmaltz.

Charlize Theron tries to steal the film from Will Smith in the second half looking hot as hell and the likeable Jason Bateman sets up the laughs throughout but it is Will who OWNS the film.

Let’s drink to a sequel and hope Hancock turns anti-social again. After all, this superhero is more fun when drunk.

Wanted: The Gun Fight-Club

July 11, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Genre: Action
Director: Timur Bekmambetov
Cast: James McAvoy, Angelina Jolie, Morgan Freeman
Storyline: An ordinary man is sucked into a world of violence when he learns that his father was an assassin belonging to a cult called The Fraternity
Bottomline: Will blow the smithereens out of your mind

Violence has never looked so delicious. Nor has a messiah of destruction ever looked so incredibly edible. Get ready to be consumed by lust. And a zest for life. Taking life, to be specific.

Angelina’s Fox is just a heavenly embodiment of the seduction you are in for as you sit and watch this film, barely able to take your eyes off the screen for even a moment. You don’t want to blink and miss any bit of the action. Speaking of which there’s a seriously hot moment when Fox emerges out a bath, with only tattoos to adorn her dripping wet bare back.

Director Timur Bekmambetov treats the graphic novel by Mark Miller and J.G. Jones as his bible and transforms gun-fights into an art-form, creating a stylised symphony of violence that is so stylish that it would give Superstar a complex.

The plot is just a petty excuse for pretty much every one in the film to shoot every body else and bite the bullet. But not before learning to ‘bend’ it like Beckham! Yes, bullets in this film rarely travel in a straight path, the film makes you believe that if you train hard enough, you can press the trigger and be assured that the bullet can actually ‘curve’ around any obstacle before meeting its target.

Bullets kiss each other, they bump into the other, they graze and face-off, pretty much like arrows did when you grew up watching Ramayan. Yet, when you see it happening in ‘Wanted,’ it’s poetry in motion.

Wanted is not even a wee bit deep as Fight Club was but from what meets the eye, it’s as bloody good as it gets in an action film. Clearly, the visual effects guys have had a blast making some of the most wicked stunts look so spectacularly cool. This is an over the top, shameless exhibition of attitude, political incorrectness and violence as a cathartic experience.

James McAvoy looks a lot like Russell Crowe looked years ago before he turned beefy and provides the right blend of vulnerability and toughness to Wesley Gibson. Morgan Freeman has little to do and doesn’t seem comfortable with profanity.

But then, this is largely an Angelina showcase. She sends temperatures soaring, scorching the screen with her presence and there you are, drooling, sweating and completely dehydrated by the end of it all.

Wanted: A glass of water, please.

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