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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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Posts By sudhishkamath

Woodstock Villa: Wooden he is

June 5, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Genre: Thriller
Director: Hansal Mehta
Cast: Sikandar, Neha Uberoi, Arbaaz Khan, Gulshan Grover
Storyline: A hairy, wooden player with three stock expressions finds himself as the villain responsible for kidnap and murder.
Bottomline: Not as bad as people say it is.

Introducing Sikandar, the new Suniel Shetty (remember Shetty when he first made his debut… this one’s comparable to that).

The introduction song is enough to rest my case.

Within the first ten minutes, whatever little expectations you had from a Sanjay Gupta production are reduced to zilch.

Which is the only thing that works for Woodstock Villa. That once you make your peace with the situation, things only get better.

The film begins with a hyperactive camera (Vikash Nowlakha comes up with a few gorgeous sweep shots otherwise) that doesn’t stay on anything for more than half a second as a couple (Arbaaz and Neha) have a fight in the middle of a nightclub and Arbaaz Khan ends every line of his with ‘Sara’ trying to drill her name into our heads. The next thing we know he’s yelling “You bastard” into the phone because a mysterious kidnapper is demanding ransom for his wife.

The kidnapper stays mysterious only for two minutes after which director Hansal Mehta decides to give him a full fledged cool intro song as he enters riding a Harley (he’s so cool that he can’t seem to take his hand of the clutch) and his sunglasses take care of the rest of the acting in the song.

One scene after another, the filmmaker goes to spell out the character: First, young Sikandar seems to take Love Thy Neighbour a little literally even if she’s married. Two, he owes money to his landlord Shakti Kapoor. Three, he’s in a nightclub with a friend telling us why he’s returned to India. Four, he owes money to bad man Gulshan Grover and five, even when he’s getting beaten up, has his pride in tact.

After getting beaten up, he bumps into the girl he met at the bar (poor thing hasn’t heard of valet parking) at the deserted parking lot late in the night and asks her for a lift.

Neha Uberoi looks like a sexier version of Soha Ali Khan, manages a decent debut, pulling off the cheesiest dialoguebaazi with a straight face. Sikandar can only do better than this by working within his limitations. All he has to do is steal roles from Suniel Shetty.

S.Farhan’s story is the only thing that keeps you hooked, in spite of all the plot holes. What sort of a con would take a bagful of money on board an international flight?

Smart storytelling is about tying up those loose ends, more so in a thriller. The film doesn’t become smart because you employ jump cuts, split screens and bleach the image. It looks like you just finished your first editing assignment in film school.

Hansal Mehta used to be a better filmmaker before he joined Sanjay Gupta. Now it’s hard to tell them apart. And, even Yeh Kya Ho Raha Hai seems more mature.

Yes, Woodstock Villa is juvenile filmmaking but it somewhat engages with its gimmickry.

BRB

June 3, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Sorry guys,

Thank you for your emails and comments. Been a little busy with outstation trips. Just getting back to the routine.

It’s been a crazy fortnight or so. Finally finished casting for my new film and we’re likely to shoot by July end or August.

That’s also the time That Four Letter Word would be out on Home Video and on Video on Demand. Watch this space, will post a link through which you ll be able to order the film directly. 🙂

Thanks. And I promise to post the pending reviews and new stuff in a couple of days.

Indiana Jones Preview: Fond memories of that dog

May 25, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

“You’re not the man I knew ten years ago,” said Marion, after meeting her old lover and the man with the Fedora hat famously replied: “It’s not the years, honey, it’s the mileage.”

That was when they together fought the raiders of the Lost Ark over twenty years ago. Guess what Marion will tell him when she sees good old Indy when the fourth installment of the Indiana Jones franchise opens today.

No matter what she says, the mileage has brought the franchise alive for a new generation of viewers.
What began as a fun exercise to pay homage to the cornball TV action heroes of yore who delivered lines topped with cheese is a cult by itself that has spurned scores of high-budget visual effects tributes.

According to the legend, George Lucas wanted to create something “even better” than James Bond and came up with Indiana Smith borrowing the name from his dog. Turned out that his good friend Steven Spielberg didn’t quite like Smith. And George casually tossed up Jones. And Jones it was.

And hence that the inside joke in the Last Crusade when Sean Connery as Dr.Henry Jones Sr. tells us that Dr. Jones Junior named himself Indiana after a dog.

Arguably, the Last Crusade has been the best from the franchise, thanks to the rip-roaring father-son chemistry between the Joneses.

After running out of ideas to revive the franchise, Lucas found just the perfect one after twenty years – as life comes a full circle for Dr. Jones Junior to play father figure to young superstar Shia La Beouf who will hopefully carry the Jones legacy into the future for the generations to come.

We know that because Shia La Beouf plays a motor-cycle riding greaser called Mutt Williams. If Indiana was named after a dog, a mutt cannot be too unrelated to the Jones family, right?

The plot has always been an excuse to unleash some fun and adventure…

If you’ve seen the first three films, you can write the plot down yourself.

Scene One: A super that tells us which year it is. Location, some ancient cave where Indiana Jones is looking for something, an adventure to get things started, cut back to the classroom where Indy’s alter ego (every superhero has got to have one) Dr. Jones teaches his students a thing or two about archeology, followed by a new lead that introduces them to *insert the subject matter of the movie title* (in this case, the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull) and soon enough the rival group of villains in search of the subject matter from the movie title attack Dr. Jones for the clue and before you know it, the adventure has begun… a map shows you where they fly to for the action to unfold, throw in crates of snakes, vampire bats, wasps, rats in caves, a little romance (Indy reunites with Marion again) and company (that would be Mutt Williams who we suspect is Henry Mutt Jones Super Junior) all accompanied to the unforgettable John Williams score (that till today doubles up as the score for every other film award function) and what you get is an Indiana Jones film.
With visual effects from Lucas’s stable of Industrial Light and Magic, we can be rest assured that cheap imitation Mummies will be put to shame.

Yes, the films have hardly been politically correct. Temple of Doom was banned in India for blasphemy and rightly so.

The franchise celebrates American Pride and give Jones the licence to stick his nose in matters concerning cultures the creators themselves do not understand.

Indian prince eating chilled monkey brain? Not in a million years, dudes.

But, let’s just let that pass. How seriously can we take a film that’s intentionally mindless and cheesy so that we can all have a little fun celebrating pulp fiction? So let’s just freeze our brains under Fedora hats and join Indy for another crazy adventure.

Juno: For young adults & parents

May 18, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Genre: Drama
Director: Jason Reitman
Cast: Ellen Page, Michael Cera, Jennifer Garner, J.K.Simmons
Storyline: A 16-year-old gets pregnant and decides to give the baby away for adoption
Bottomline: Bitter-sweet heartwarming tale of growing up

What are the first few thoughts that come to your mind when you hear about a film that deals with teen pregnancy?

Disturbing, melodramatic, depressing, seriously heartbreaking with heavy-duty emotions?

Juno is anything but any of that.

It’s matter-of-factly real, incredibly light-hearted, funny and a heartwarmingly bitter-sweet tale of growing up and taking responsibility.

It’s one of the best-written films in recent times.

What’s the typical response you get from filmi fathers when they hear their daughter’s pregnant?
Here, a brilliantly restrained J.K.Simmons says: “I thought you were the kind of girl who knew when to say when.”

And Juno, the 16-year-old to-be-Mom admits: “I don’t know what kind of girl I am.”

Juno is the story about this girl who is dealing with things way beyond her maturity level, consequent to her decision to keep the baby and give it away for adoption without any of the morality baggage usually forced on to a subject like this.

If at all there’s any message intended, the only moral that comes out is: “Shut up. It’s none of your business” to all those who have nothing to do with a situation as sensitive as this.

When the ultrasound technician rebukes Juno with a seemingly harmless-but-loaded “Thank goodness for that” after learning she has found adoptive parents for her baby, there’s this stinging dose of snubbing she gets from Juno’s supportive step-mom: “I am a nail technician and we both ought to stick to what know…

You think you’re so special because you get to play Picture Pages up there. My five-year-old daughter could do that and she’s not the smartest bulb in the tanning bed. So why don’t you go back to night school in Manteno and learn a real trade.”

But for the smart and witty chunks of dialogue-writing (Screenplay by Diablo Cody), it seems all too real.

Juno knows she made a mistake, she knows she’s too young to raise a baby and is smart enough to take responsibility for her action, even if it includes finding caring parents for her baby and going the extra mile to keep them posted about every little development about the pregnancy, making a genuine attempt to be friends with them and discovers a few things about love and relationships along the way.

Juno is sunny, serious and funny at the same time without being even a wee bit manipulative of its melodramatic potential, exploring all aspects of teen pregnancy… Relationship between sex and boredom, contraceptives, abortion, morality, social stigma, the price to pay and the future at stake are all addressed and rolled out seamlessly in this taut 90-minute-narrative.

Young Ellen Page who’s already showed us what she could in Hard Candy (the two-character film set in a building), breezes through this role with multi-dimensional fluency, carrying the film on her shoulders.

If you are a teen thinking of getting sexually active or are a parent of young adults, you sure want to watch Juno. Because, more than teen pregnancy, Juno is really about modern-day relationships, supporting the ones you love, love and the baggage that comes with it.

Probably for the first time in the movies, a biological mother-baby bond isn’t treated with any sort of sanctity.

Juno never ever sees the baby as hers. She just sees it as a form of life which can bring joy to people who want it and gives it away, knowing fully well that there was no place for it in her life… without an iota of regret or sadness. That’s what makes Juno incredibly real and responsible.

After all, not all relationships are biological – the mother is not necessarily the one who bears the child but she’s surely the one who raises the baby.

Copycats from Bollywood, why don’t you rip-off something like this, with all its integrity in tact?

Speed Racer: Godspeed, to the cinema halls

May 15, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Genre: Adventure
Director: Andy Wachowski, Larry Wachowski
Cast: Emile Hirsch, Christina Ricci, Susan Sarandon, John Goodman, Matthew Fox
Storyline: After the death of his daredevil racer brother, the second son of the Racer family decides to step into his shoes to take on evil corporates.
Bottomline: Go Kids Go

If you are a kid or a child at heart, this is possibly the best summer in recent times.

Your favourite cartoon hero Speed Racer is zipping through town.

A word of caution if you are a Wachowski Brothers fan or if you still have your Matrix trenchcoats and black shades on.

This one’s for kids. So do not expect anything more than just that.

But Speed Racer sports the Wachowski signature in its subtext.

Like Matrix and V for Vendetta (which the brothers wrote and produced), Speed Racer too is a story about how one man takes on those who control the system. The philosophy remains the same – only the genre is different. It is about the quintessential triumph of the human spirit against assembly-line odds stacked up against him by those who govern our lives.

Like the first two movies, Speed Racer too looks towards anime for inspiration and creates a never-seen-before spectacle of form in animation films from Hollywood.

We’re not talking about the quality of animation and visual effects alone, we’re talking about the inventiveness in storytelling and form. The background landscape seamlessly makes way for a series of comic panels detailing the flashback segments as the hero in the foreground broods over it in the present.

There’s even some non-linear storytelling thrown in at the start to let you figure out what’s going on.
Because of this start, chances are you either start loving the film or completely hating it.

If you can sit through the first 15 minutes unfazed, you’re going to be in for the ride of your life. Thrilling races with space-age cars on roller-coaster racetracks, edge-of-the-seat action, the comic subplot with the adventures of the adorable Spritle (Paulie Litt) and his chimp Chim Chim, Speed’s love story with his childhood sweetheart Trixie, the drama between Rex and his father, the villainous Mr.Royalton… To put it simply, there’s action, adventure, mischief, fantasy, romance, comedy, drama, revenge and awesome animation giving it a larger than life canvas… This is the Wachowski masala film.

Lost fans will be glad that good old Jack (Matthew Fox) has found his acting cells after a disastrous outing in Vantage Point.

Even if you have not seen the original cartoon series Mach GoGoGo (like yours truly), you are going to want to see it.

For fans of cinema, Speed Racer packs in the best of both worlds – real emotions through live action set against a backdrop of awe-inspiring animation and visual effects.

So machchi, go, go, go…

Bhoothnath: When the ghost became a dost

May 11, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Genre: Fantasy
Director: Vivek Sharma
Cast: Amitabh Bachchan, Aman Siddiqui, Juhi Chawla, Shah Rukh Khan
Storyline: Boy befriends ghost and they learn a thing or two from each other.
Bottomline: A delightful start to a kiddie-movie franchise

Dear kids who grew up on Jaadoo – the alien,

Of course, you need re-orientation.

After all, you possibly can’t tell your kids the ‘When-we-were-little’ story with ‘Koi Mil Gaya’ in it without having them laugh at you at the end of that sentence.

If ‘Koi Mil Gaya’ was a life sentence, ‘Krissh’ was death.

So quick, thank God, the B.R.Chopra clan and Vivek Sharma for giving us ‘Bhoothnath,’ the only decent mainstream attempt at fantasy fare for kids from Bollywood in recent times.

Here’s a ghost who does not have to use his superpowers to fight evil Mogambos and save the world.
Hell, he does not even use it to help the kid cheat in sports.

And though there are plenty of visual effects in the film, thankfully there is no abuse of computer-generated animation as Sharma keeps it effectively brief and uses effects only when extremely necessary.
Vivek Sharma’s Bhoothnath, the friendly ghost, is the kind your parents would approve of because he says exactly the same things they would want to tell you… And, he also happens to be the kind kids like you would love because he is like you.

The cool thing about Bhoothnath is that the ghost with superpowers is not a superhero. One moment, he’s as flawed and mischievous as the boy and the next, he’s the loving, caring, grandfather-figure who helps him understand right from wrong.

This is the kind of stuff that could’ve become outright preachy but thanks to Sharma’s maturity and sensitivity in handling the narrative, the film works beautifully well with the right dose of mischief and moral instructions.

Grown-ups are likely to groan at the melodrama towards the end but if you are a child and/or a sucker for sentiment, you will love the way Sharma employs drama to touch upon lessons of unconditional forgiveness, understanding the place you call home and what it stands for.

Traditionally, the young have always most connected to the old, sharing an impulse and innocence they completely relate to each other. With nuclear families becoming the norm in recent times, the link between generations seems to have broken and kids are growing up lonelier than ever before.

Here’s a film that once again builds that bridge and celebrates the old-world charm.

Bhoothnath has everything going for it as a franchise for sugarcoated moral science for kids.

Aman Siddiqui is a natural, immensely likeable (Admittedly, I find 95 per cent of all child actors annoying). Bachchan churns out one of his best ever, one that will haunt. Even the support cast of comic characters is incredibly memorable… a drunk (Rajpal Yadav) who’s often the target of Bhoothnath’s pranks, a best friend-rival for the kid, a Principal (Satish Shah) who steals lunch from the kids, an adorable Mommy (Juhi Chawla makes a super comeback) who makes cooking look like a workout and there’s Shah Rukh Khan in an extended cameo.

Can’t wait for Bhoothnath and Co to come back and remind us what ‘Jaadoo’ really used to mean before Hrithik Roshan happened.

Dear Vikram,

April 28, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Dear Vikram,
Yes, as you may have noticed, I have never called you Kenny. Because that’s what your closest, personal friends call you.

Though we ‘are’ friends, I am sure you appreciate I am paid to be a journalist and that’s what I do for a living.

So I, of course, only know you as Vikram. I have only met you when either of us have wanted to do a story on you or when we’ve needed something from each other officially – to attend one party or the other. I am thankful you were nice enough to come and watch my film and I hope you didn’t see that as a favour you were doing me. ☺

As you clarified then: “The best story anyone ever wrote on me was by you. So was the worst ever. But for that best story you wrote, you can write another 100 bad stories.”

Earlier in February, two things happened:
1.    Gautham mentioned Bheema as the film he hated in one of our columns in Cinema Plus. And before going on to say he hated it, he also said: “When a talented actor and successful director come together you expect something well thought out. I know they can come back and tell me the same thing about Pachakili Muthucharam but if you don’t like something, you don’t like it… That’s how it works, right? So let’s go for each other.” Little do you know that we pushed the story by a week to make sure it didn’t affect your film’s already dismal performance.
2.    The following week in the same column, we carried the interview I did with you before my interview with Gautham where you had mentioned ‘Vinnukkum Mannukkum’ as the movie you hated. (You obviously had a problem that the paper carried your films in the column for two consecutive weeks. You even accused me of misquoting you. You forget I have it on record and it wouldn’t take me much to upload your interview on my blog for everybody to compare what else you said and that what actually appeared was a toned down version. You have a tendency to deny things you say… like how you rubbished Krissh and then chickened out after it appeared wondering what Hrithik was going to tell you. Which is why I recorded the interview and told you it was not “off the record”)

Anyway, the same day this column appeared, you asked me to treat your whole other big interview on Bheema off the record. I thought you didn’t need the story any more. I had no clue that was supposed to be some sort of a punishment for me.

After all, you had asked us if we can do an interview with you to boost Bheema’s run after complaining  about the review we carried. Yes, though I may not agree to the reasons mentioned by our official reviewer, the truth is if I had done that review, I would’ve been far more critical of the film.

But when you asked me, I told you what worked for me and what didn’t.

I told you that the seed of the idea of Bheema was really good: the story of a second generation vigilante… what happens if a boy who grows up idolizing the vigilante takes law into his own hands in today’s context when the system is all powerful. I told you I liked the fact that your performance was restrained. It was a welcome relief after Anniyan and Maja. But I also told you I would have liked it if it were not as stylised in execution and it lacked a raw realistic feel that would’ve given it the grittiness of Ram Gopal Varma’s Satya.

I even mentioned in one of my columns that Bheema ended up looking like a throwback to Brokeback Mountain. It wasn’t just my opinion. The entire hall was in splits. If you had watched the film in a multiplex, you would’ve died of embarrassment. I understand the mass reacts differently and there lies your audience and market. So it didn’t matter what the urban audience thought about the film.

Since we were wearing our ‘friends’ hats, I had even taken care not to hurt your feelings and sandwiched my criticism between layers of praise, over the phone.

But you just cannot expect me, or any journalist friend of yours, to do that ON PRINT.

A critic is paid to give his honest opinion. If I, or our official reviewer, hadn’t done that, I can’t imagine you respecting us. From critics, we would become the people you think you can control. I hope you understand the term “free press”. Friendship or not, a newspaper has to do what it has to do in the best interest of its readers.

This specific case of you being mad at me for carrying Gautham’s and your own opinion in the column even more than three months after these incidents, losing your cool enough to utter four letter words at a recent party, does not show you in good light to the media or your film fraternity.

I told you were mixing business and personal. To which you said, “My films are personal to me. Anyone who doesn’t like my films can’t be my friend.” To which I told you, I am a journalist first.

That being the case, you said you don’t need to give me interviews if I were just a journalist and not your friend. True that. I have news for you. I am not paid by my organisation to get your interview. I am paid to write what is the best interest of our readers.

Now that we are no longer wearing our ‘friends’ hats, here are a few tips from a guy who still wishes you well. Also, the reason I am writing this on my blog and not on the paper is because I am writing this not as a journalist, I am writing this as a fan.

You are a great actor. Very few actors put in the kind of effort you do for films. You put on weight, lose weight, get excited, lose sleep and are even willing to go blind in your passion for cinema and quite literally, when you did Kaasi or a Sethu. We, your fans, loved you for that and showed our appreciation for you in even your commercial entertainers: Dhil, Saamy and Dhool.

What we have liked about you hasn’t changed. But what you have become has. In your own words, you said you can never do a Kasi again because there’s a huge market and the minute you sign a film, the market value of it and the expectations increase. And whether or not you charge less, people distributing the film and the system will promote it like a big film. And that “in this industry, you are only as good as your last film.” Learn from Mr. Kamal Hasan please.

Ever since Anniyan… Be it Maja or Bheema, your films have become more about you and your superstardom, even if you are playing an ordinary henchman or a village bumpkin. You do not want to play an ordinary man again as an actor… Which you were in Sethu, Dhil, Saamy and even Dhool… you were up against odds larger than you but you fought them as a common man.  Today, you are feeding the star more than the appetite of the brilliant actor that you used to be and still are capable of being.

I’m not going to mention things you told me off the record here but we both know what you think of yourself. It is good to have self-esteem. But narcissism is an entirely different thing. It is symptomatic when you ask why your name has been mentioned after two other women stars in an interview. What have you become Vikram?

You are the same guy who pawned your wife’s jewels to organise previews for Sethu. You came up the hard way. You deserve to stay. Are you going to throw it all away being hot-headed and taking criticism so personally?

Your refusal to understand Gautham Menon’s point of view is not a good sign of what you have become. He tells me you aren’t in talking terms. Everybody knows about your spat. Nobody from the industry ever is going to dare to tell you the truth about what they think about your work or your film. They are going to tell you what you want to hear. And when you fall, they will laugh at your foolishness.

For all you know, they are just waiting for you to fall. You used to be the guy people liked. Today you are wearing his mask. Your actions speak louder than words. Every film of yours speaks volumes of how full you are becoming of yourself. Let the actor in you breathe. Let your characters become flawed, complex and ordinary again. We like to see a struggler reach glory in our films and in life. Today, you believe you are infallible and that you can do no wrong. Even if you really believe that, be thick-skinned and do it with conviction (like yours truly) so that in the end you have only yourself to blame.

Yes, we know you’ve made crores and enough to support the next seven generations but there’s something called as respect. Do you want your kids to respect you when they grow up and see your movies for what they really were? Are you going to be proud of Bheema? I doubt. They’re probably going to cringe at Daddy Dearest’s Brokeback Mountain attempt in Bheema. They are going to be teased in college for it. They are going to be reminded of how their father became India’s first gay icon as Rampwalk Remo, not that there’s anything wrong with that. It’s one thing to do that intentionally and another to not know when you’re making a fool of yourself. Speaking of which, I hope you are not playing a superhero called Cock-Man in Kandasamy like the trailer indicates.

When friends tell you something, please listen. You don’t have to do something about it but at least pretend like you are listening or they will never ever tell you what they really think about you and your work. They have your best interests in mind. I still have nothing against you. Remember, I wrote the best story about you and the worst. You sure don’t want to lose an honest opinion. You don’t want to lose objectivity.

Tashan: The Englis The Tution The Star-vation

April 26, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

(Phor extra-reading plesar, read “tion” as “sun” and “f” sounds with “ph”)

In the backside of every Hindi “fillum,” there is a “pharmoola.”

Underwear Indian, bathroom western but business inside is about toilet paper and inspiration.
Pardon the Phlavour, but Hindi fillums out of Yash Raj are smelling like morning ablution. There’s always a sitting, a loud hearing and then, there is a release.

Tashan is like that wonly.

I knowing Tashan is tribute to pharmoola fillums of Ballywood. But by God, right intention but loses direction. Many nice situation but not holding attention. Reason: Déjà vu and John Woo ishtyle. We seen that, done that. We also having DVD player. We have slow motion button on remote control. Mastana (Naseeruddin Shah) in Bombay Boys ispeaking Englis like this also.

So what is new in Tashan? Introduction… Bindaas half-a-first scene (until the car goes off the cliff in cartoon effect) intercutting between Kabhi Kabhi Mere Dil Main and Highway to Hell, muchos nothing. By nothing, I talking about Kareena Kaboob in and as beach bums in neech bikini. Zero per cent fat, 80 per cent cleavage, 100 per cent mileage, no wastage of her footage. The bigger size the movie, the smaller size the costume.
Today children seeing what we earlier finding only in James Bonda movies. How things have changed far better or worse. Anil Kapoor was hairy-chested Lakhan in Ram Lakhan. Now Lakhan Singh in transparent vest hiding his shaved boobies in Tashan. In movies today, no matter hero or heroine, you need to wax chest more than eloquence.

To tell more about story in briefs… Saif Ali Khan after much talking to camera, forgets continuity of biker moochen, and tells us he got into the situation because he agreed to take Englis tution for Bhaiyyaji, not knowing that he was actually being used and double crossed by cheatercock bikini bitch. How? Because screenwriter-director mistakes Call Centre to be Telephone Exchange.

Finding this logic, Saif Ali Khan runs out of shooting set but camera follows. And, Bhaiyyaji calling Ganga Kinaare Waala.

Enter Akshay Kumar with double surname: Bachchan Pande as Ravan with shades, beating writer for corny dialoguebaazi. “Ramayan was written by Tulsidas. I only writing screenplay,” argues writer. Understanding? Yes, pharmoola of Hindi fillums was written by Salim-Javed. Vijay Krishna Acharya wonly recycling pharmoola, pleading innocence?

Bledy Nonsense.

Hindi cinema heroine has no common sense. Even if she cheatercock, she tell truth about next destination: phather’s last rites in Haridwar. Khiladi and Anari go on road trip again to cut back to bindaas first scene… setting stage for interval with girl in between triangle.

Everything is from the Ballywood book of pharmoola (From Don to Deewar to Kala Pathar to Ram Lakhan to Mr. India to Main Khiladi Tu Anadi) but underwear, look and pheel of the fillum is Hollywood. Like Jimmy saying, in our Hindi fillum, we have a song for everything.

All elements of pharmoola you will find in Tashan. But no soul, only villain who is asshole. Like all the fillums, villain has big den with water-stream running for motor-boat stunts and machine guns only for showing, strictly not for using during climax action. Also if they fire gun, they all must miss or what is the fun?

By God, Saif is uper-cool, Kareena sooper-hot, Anil what-not and Akshay all heart. Apart from these four, it is a wild bore. But the kitschy look, the dhinchak music, the naach-gaana, the Englis ka bajaana, Kareena’s trip to the cabana and the occasional line-marna (especially the proposal to bend like Beckham) makes Tashan an alternative in these times of starvation. Expect nothing. Get more.

U, Me Aur Hum: The Mr & Mrs. Devgan Show

April 18, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Genre: Drama
Director: Ajay Devgan
Cast: Ajay Devgan, Kajol, Divya Dutta
Storyline: A couple’s ‘Happily Everafter’ is interrupted when Alzheimer’s condition strikes.
Bottomline: Sucker for sentimentality? Try this.

“You know something?”

That phrase is used to punishing levels in this near-meandering melodrama littered with borrowed jokes and stolen moments from ‘The Notebook,’ ‘A Beautiful Mind,’ ‘50 First Dates,’ among other films you can’t remember because memory fails you.

Yet it all works strangely and comes together quite effectively in the second half. Largely because, even if the world of his constructed reality is borrowed from a different sensibility, Devgan seems to have taken its occupants from the real world. His characters are as real as they get in mainstream films.

They come up with the most inane commonplace comments about each other, even SMS jokes and moral-of-the-story email forwards. They bond like normal people do. They don’t always speak intelligently. They are flawed. There are no side-kicks. They are capable of making even the hero the butt of all jokes. And, they are comfortable singing out of tune.

No, this is not realistic cinema by a long shot. It is every bit the quintessential melodramatic Bollywood film employing larger-than-life devices in the story-telling and jumping genres quite comfortably. Be it the light-hearted split-screens that show the little boy as the villain of the piece or the comic flashback sequences exaggerated to make you smile, the wide-angle point of views, jump cuts or even the ghostly dissolves…

There’s this scene where the camera (Aseem Bajaj’s cinematography) jerkily establishes the mental health facility like the Ramsay Brothers would introduce their bhooth bungalow. Devgan seems to suggest that the inmates are living ghosts, sending a shiver down your spine. That’s because this is a point-of-view film where the camera slips into the shoes of different characters to make its point.

“Are you sending your husband to the facility to make life easy for you or him?” the shrink had asked his patient’s wife much earlier in the film. Now, here he was bringing his own wife to the facility, trying to avoid eye contact with the woman he had counseled. He feels helpless, ashamed, guilty, vulnerable, heavy and even understanding and empathetic.

As an actor, he’s brilliant.

As a filmmaker, even better.

A fine example unfolds (again in the second half) when the doctor hands him his newborn and adds that he’s not sure if the mother would even recognise the baby.

There’s no melodramatic response or a background score to heighten the mood before the cut. The director does not forget that the man is a doctor himself. Just a moment of thought, which, in no time melts into baby-talk and he fondly greets his newborn with a “Hi baby.”

Also, but for the climax, the rest of the melodrama is contained and surprisingly restrained, restricted to metaphors and visual cues. Sample: the drama of rain washing away memory, doors and windows employed as transition to signify blackouts, the lizard about to swallow its prey inter-cut with impending danger or the colour white to represent memory (déjà vu Black and an Alzheimer’s-afflicted Amitabh Bachchan walking around in a white room?).

Devgan is a thinking storyteller with a flair for the ‘answers first, questions later’ narrative technique, breaking linearity to deal with predictability, to infuse pace into an indulgently told story. He has absolutely no problem with long monologues affecting pace. He sets it up for all his actors to unleash their histrionics, giving them ample scope to pour their hearts out.

Kajol revels in her role with an unforgettably electrifying performance to match Devgan’s career-best. The couple is likely to walk away with a few awards and is finely complemented by a solid support cast in Divya Dutta, Isha Sharwani (fully utilised to flaunt acrobatic flair, salsa and cleavage), Sumeet Raghavan and Karran Khanna.

Ashwini Dhir’s lines (the ‘Office Office’ guy who made ‘One, Two, Three’ and also wrote the forgettable Krazzy 4) help quite a bit to keep the balance between the light-hearted feel-good and the heavy-duty drama but the You-know-something’s take a toll on you, more so if you’re watching it for the second time.

But, you know something? For a film that isn’t too original, ‘U, Me Aur Hum’ has a lot of heart.

Krazzy 4: Kakey Koshan Rtd.

April 18, 2008 · by sudhishkamath

Genre: Comedy
Director: Jaideep Sen
Cast: Irrfan Khan, Arshad Warsi, Rajpal Yadav, Suresh Menon, Juhi Chawla, Diya Mirza
Storyline: Four mentally ill friends need to rescue their doctor who has been kidnapped.
Bottomline: Gives Hindi cinema a bad name.

Kakey Koshan: I’m, er… recently retired…
Borat: You are a retard?
Kakey Koshan:Er… yes…
Borat: Er… physical or mental?
Kakey Koshan: RETIRED! I don’t work anymore… Except Krissh films.
Borat still doesn’t get it.
Kakey Koshan: STOPPED WORKING!
Borat: [quietly across the table] Is very good you allow retard to, er…make movie-film. But it is not success, you will be execute.

Yes, certainly, there was a noble idea somewhere in between all that making fun of the mentally ill and questioning the sanity of modern day society.

But thanks to the way it plays out, you desperately start praying for a regulation under which producers of such films can be sued.

Dearest trouble-makers, this is the kind of film that you should claim for ban on some grounds or the other. Here are a few charges you can press:

a. Mental Agony, Nausea & Trauma: This one’s good enough for a lawsuit. Only that the judge may hold you in contempt for showing it to the court just to prove a point. Besides, you will have to be in court during the screening. A second watch could leave you brain dead.

b. Tall Claims: For all the promos that promise a comedy, the funniest joke in the film is where Arshad Warsi asks Irrfan to hold his injured middle finger up so that the breeze will soothe it (Mr.Bean there done that?) only to send the wrong signals to the biker dude. The second funniest attempt at humour is when an obsessive-compulsive cleanliness-freak Irrfan tries rubbing off Rakhi Sawant’s trash stamp at the end of her item. There is no third joke in the film.

c. Mental Illness is not a joke: Political incorrectness is better than pretentious political correctness. You want us to laugh at these guys all through out the film and then expect us to take their preaching seriously and hope we shed a tear for them.

d. The Fancy-Dress ‘Gandhi’ who turns to violence: Yes, this film actually shows a man dressed as Gandhi slapping a patriot who falls at his feet. When he shows his other cheek, he gets slapped again. Yes, we’re supposed to see the irony… a man dressed up as Gandhi does not understand ideals of Ahimsa. But when you make a clown like Rajpal Yadav monkey around that it looks like he’s almost going to disrobe the man’s dhoti in public view, the man’s actions seem extremely justified.

e. Obscenity: Nope, we are not talking about Rakhi Sawant’s costume (When has she worn clothes anyway?). It’s not even half as obscene as the marketing hype and budget for this no-brainer. SRK does better dancing in the ‘Panchvi Pass’ commercials and Hrithik’s much-hyped item is a 90 second extension of the original commercial appearing during end credits.

f. Defamation: Rajat Kapoor, Irrfan Khan and Arshad Warsi should sue for defamation. The only reason they could’ve done this film is out of pressure of high expectations we have from them. They can’t do anything worse than this next, can they?

g. Death threats: That ‘To be continued’ at the end of the film hinting at a sequel… you must be joking right?

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