What To Watch on Netflix and Prime Video – Edition # 35


Collateral (Netflix)

Carey Mulligan stars as Detective Inspector Kim Gillespie investigating the murder of a pizza delivery man. No motives. No apparent reason. So it’s probably a case of mistaken identity, or is it?

Involved in the murder as witnesses are a gay vicar and her girlfriend, and a Member of Parliament and his ex-wife. There’s also human traffickers, illegal immigrants, and the some members of the British military – so it’s quite a mess.

Mulligan impresses as calm, cool-headed DI Gillespie. She’s firm and sprinkles dimpled smirks in lieu of intimidation. It was nice to see that her 6 month pregnancy doesn’t come in the way of her job, whether it be pursuing a possible suspect or a making a trip to the morgue. Some nice acting and quick pace make this 4 episode BBC series a very entertaining and addictive watch.

Waco (Netflix)

This day, 27 years ago, the 51 day Waco siege came to an end. Several people died, ATF officers and Davidians. The 6 episode series, based upon two different books – one from the hostage negotiator Gary Noesner, and another from a cult member David Thibodeau – chronicles how it all came about.

An excellent cast, and a well-paced script make this series very watchable. Taylor Kitch bears a striking resemblance to cult leader David Koresh, and Rory Culkin who plays David Thobodeau in the series is the brother of Macaulay Culkin , the little boy who starred in the Home Alone movies.

Laakhon Mein Ek – Season 2 (Amazon Prime Video)

In the last edition, I also mentioned Laakhon Mein Ek – Season 1. Season 2 deserves its own mention though because it is a different storyline – the seasons might as well have been two completely different series! This season is about earnest, young doctor Shreya Pathare (Shweta Tripathi), who, against her wishes, gets assigned a task that nobody wants – the task of organizing cataract removal eye-camps in a remote village.

Dr Shreya bravely takes on the task, but not only does she have to win the trust of the villagers, she also has to combat the bureaucracy, corruption and sheer incompetence of the government and its agencies. Does no good task ever go unpunished?

I like everything Shweta Tripathi does (like Mirzapur) and LME-S2 is no different. Well-made, this is a bit of a sad tale, but kudos to Biswa Kalyan Rath for creating the important stories that need to be told!

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Movie Review : Tumbbad

Rating : 3.5/5
Genre : Horror
Year : 2018
Running time : 1 hour 44 minutes
Director : Rahi Anil Barve
Cast : Sohum Shah, Jyoti Maishe, Anita Date, Deepak Damle, Mohammad Samad
Kid rating : PG-15

Hindi films suck at the horror genre. From the “Jaani Dushman”-style films, to the films produced by the Ramsay brothers, the quality has veered between poor and poorer. It is a pleasant surprise then that Tumbbad succeeds and hopefully is the first of many well-done Hindi horror movies.

Tumbbad is a horror film with a storyline that is part fantasy and part mythology. The story is of Tumbbad village where Vinayak Rao lives with his impoverished widow mother and younger brother Sadashiv. After certain unfortunate events he is forced to leave Tumbbad and his mother makes him promise to never return. But, after many years, and in need of money, Vinayak Rao returns to search for the treasure he knows is buried in Tumbbad . . .

Tumbbad is very atmospheric. From looming mansions to ominous forests and creaky doors, Tumbbad is full of foreboding. The story is well anchored in folklore and hearsay – which makes it creepy. While director Barve does a nice job of developing the scary bits – the protagonist working his way through several locks, overgrown forests and monstrous grandmothers – the film really shines in the scenes where greedy Vinayak faces off against the demon-God Hastar to get at the treasure.

I really like the fact that Tumbbad is authentic home-grown Indian horror, and doesn’t simply ape Hollywood’s idea of horror (zombies etc.). Unlike other Indian horror films, it’s story-line isn’t stupid – which is nice – and seems to stem from the locale, the period and the folklore of the area. Director Barve paces Tumbbad well, and the fabulous attention to detail and the great special effects/cgi pays off.

I’m not a fan of horror, but Tumbbad is too original and interesting and well-done to miss. Do watch!

Kidwise: Scary for the young ones – snarling, rasping monsters etc.

Posted in 2018, Amazon Prime, Amazon Prime Video Recommendations, bollywood, drama, Hindi movies on Amazon Prime, horror, rating-PG15, recommended | Comments Off on Movie Review : Tumbbad

Series Review : Panchayat (Season 1)


Rating : 4.2/5

Genre : Drama
Year : 2020
Episodes : 8
Running time : 30 minutes (per episode)
Streaming Platform: Amazon Prime
Director : Deepak Kumar Mishra
Cast : Jitendra Kumar, Neena Gupta, Raghuvir Yadav, Chandan Roy, Faisal Malik
Kid rating : G

I’ve been waiting for Panchayat to release ever since I saw the trailer featuring this great cast, and I’m glad to say it was not for nothing. Panchayat is a pleasant, wholesome show and makes for an entertaining family watch.

Jitendra Kumar (remember him from Shubh Managal Zyada Saavdhan?) is Abhishek Tripathi, a fresh grad who, unlike his peers, has managed to secure an undesirable job – that of Panchayat Sachiv (secretary) in Phulera village. The remuneration is low, compared to that of his friend’s and Abhishek must leave his city environs for rural ones. Out of better prospects, Abhishek makes the trek to the hinterland, and thence begins the adventure.

The first episode begins with Abhishek’s arrival in Phulera, and his introduction to the local cast of characters. There is the Pradhan Manju Devi (Gupta), her husband Brij Bhushan Dubey (Yadav) who acts as Pradhan in her place, Prahlad Pandey (Malik) – the vice-Pradhan, and Vikas (Roy), the secretary’s office-sahayak or assistant. Each subsequent episode deals with its own little problem – sometimes it is a bhutiya ped, and others it is the theft of a monitor.

The problems are never too serious, and are generally resolved in the episode. City-bred Abhishek sees the small-scale corruption but doesn’t protest too much, his focus being on finding a better job and hotfooting it out of village life. I was a little disappointed at Abhishek’s chalta-hai attitude, but I suspect that that attitude might change in future seasons.

What I like about this series is its simple, clean wholesomeness. There are problems, yes, but they are generally resolved in a feel-good, humorous fashion. There is a smattering of women’ issues/empowerment throughout and the tone is forward-thinking and earnest. The characters are well fleshed out – flaws and all, and it will be interesting to see Abhishek’s personal growth from season to season.

I breezed through Panchayat in one day – and ’twas a pleasant Saturday. Panchayat is a must-watch!

Posted in 2020, Amazon Prime, Amazon Prime Video Recommendations, drama, family-friendly, feel-good, humor, passes Bechdel Test, quirky, rating-G, recommended, series, women | Comments Off on Series Review : Panchayat (Season 1)

Movie Review : Mard Ko Dard Nahi Hota

Rating : 2.8/5
Genre : Action
Year : 2019
Running time : 2 hours 18 minutes
Director : Vasan Bala
Cast : Abhimanyu Dassani, Radhika Madan, Mahesh Manjrekar, Gulshan Devaiah
Kid rating : PG-13

You might think it’s a crazy title but the film actually is about a man who doesn’t feel any pain. Surya (Dassani) has a rare congenital disorder where he has complete insensitivity to pain. His father and his grand-father try very hard to protect him as a boy, because Surya will walk head-on into danger and very great injury since he feels no pain. Surya learns to feign pain and act “normal” in public. With age and increasing martial art skills, he decides to turn into a vigilante crime fighter. Only he never thought he’d meet a nemesis like Jimmy.

This was an interesting movie. And by interesting I mean weird 🙂 . Its got an intriguing premise and charismatic leads. Abhimanyu Dassani (son of Maine Pyar Kiya heroine Bhagyashree) debuts here and does well; I look forward to seeing more of him. Radhika Madan (you might remember her from Pataakha) is her usual impressive self. Then there is Gulshan Devaiah who really makes the film as evil criminal Jimmy.

Now while the film starts off well, the going isn’t smooth. There are scripting issues, and the film seems to jump forward hither-thither without adequate backstories. I get the film’s progression but the director isn’t able to keep the film nice and cohesive. The first half, which deals with the Surya’s childhood and his coming to terms with his novel condition, drags quite a bit.

The highlight of the film are the fight scenes. Both the hero and heroine get to throw punches, which is nice. The fights are pretty well-done and gory with bone-crunching (literally!) sound effects. There are joints being dislocated and knife wounds etc, and it gets mildly Kill Bill-ish.

While I’m glad that Bollywood is attempting novel concepts in film – thanks to Ronnie Screwala and his RSVP films – Mard Ko Dard Nahi Hota didn’t pass muster. It needed better scripting, direction and character delineation; I felt a little for Surya, but poor Supri (Radhika’s character) got the short end of the stick when it came to characterization. Still, and in spite of several faults, there was something earnest about this film – it is a one-time watch, if you want stuff out of the ordinary.

Kidwise: Gory violence.

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Movie Review : Guilty

Rating : 2.8/5
Genre : Drama
Year : 2020
Running time : 1 hour 59 minutes
Director : Ruchi Narain
Cast : Kiara Advani, Akansha Ranjan Kapoor, Taher Shabber, Gurfateh Pirzada, Niki Walia, Dalip Tahil Manu Rishi chaddha
Kid rating : PG-15

Guilty is produced by Dharmatic, which is – very obviously 🙂 – Dharma Productions’s digital arm. It stars Kiara Advani as cool song-writing college girl Nanki Dutta who finds her singer boyfriend “VJ” (Gurfateh Pirzada) accused of rape. This movie is an attempt to strike a chord with the #MeToo movement, but doesn’t quite get there.

Once the accusation goes public (the victim tweets it out), VJ’s politician dad hires a lawyer. Danish Ali Baig (Taher Shabber), one of the lawyer’s team, begins to interview everyone involved to get at the truth, and much of the story is told through the perspectives of these witnesses who chat informally with Danish.

The film touches upon issues of class and privilege, and victim-judging. The girl making the accusation, Tanu Kumar (Kapoor) is from a small town – Dhanbad, and she very obviously wants to hook-up with the privileged and wealthy college heart-throb; she’s seen pawing him publicly. Tanu is also not the most likeable or reliable character – she’s abrasive and lies when it suits her. When she comes out with her accusation, not everyone believes her.

The bohemian Nanki is smart and a Rhodes scholar, but is an unreliable narrator, plagued by her own securities. The film can’t get its characters straight – Nanki wavers and doesn’t display the truth-seeking someone as egalitarian as her would. If there are other issues influencing her they are never fully realized on screen. Tanu wavers also but we don’t get to see her as up-close as Nanki. Danish’s character is so clinically drawn, it’s wooden.

Guilty does do a good job of portraying the double standards in Indian society vis-a-vis sexuality and sexual morality. It is a good message and intent, but unfortunately leaves you unmoved. It is a struggle to sympathize with either woman. The ending is filmi and weak. Bummer!

Kidwise: Sexual violence, cuss words.

Posted in 2020, All Netflix, bollywood, drama, Hindi movies on Netflix, rating-PG15, social issues, women | 1 Comment

What To Watch on Netflix and Prime Video – Edition # 34


– Taj Mahal 1989 (Netflix)

Directed by Pushpendra Nath Mishra, this humorous, quirky series delves into romantic relationships. The main couples here are philosophy professor Akhtar Baig (the marvelous Neeraj Kabi), his wife physics professor Sarita (Geetanjali Kulkarni), Baig’s college-mate Sudhakar (Danish Hussain) and his significant other Mumtaz (Sheeba Chaddha). There are also college students Angad Trivedi (Anud Singh Dhaka), Rashmi Malik (Anshul Chauhan), Dharam Awasthi (Paras Priyadarshan) who study, attend classes and intermittently fall in love.

This is an outstanding series overall, and features a fabulous cast. Director Mishra does an especially good job of recreating the time (1989) and locales of Lucknow – I grew nostalgic just seeing the A.H.Wheeler bookstands in the railway station scenes. I also loved that the characters would speak in to us in witty asides – quite fun! The soundtrack is gorgeous (and unfortunately not released), and the series features some very lovely poetry. What’s not to like?

– Jamtara (Netflix)

Jamtara is based on the real-life scams originating from Jamtara, Jharkhand. A group of young men use phishing techniques to defraud thousands of people, but then have to deal with corrupt politician Brajesh Bhan (Amit Sial – you probably saw him in Titli) who wants his share of the booty, and the intrepid young Superintendent of Police Dolly Sahu (Aksha Pardasny) who’s out to get them. Among the scammers are two brother Sunny (Sparsh Srivastav) and Rocky (Antihuman Pushkar). Sunny’s wife Gudiya (Monika Panwar – she also had a small role in Love Aaj Kal) is embroiled in the mess too, but for different reasons.

This intense and gritty series is directed by Soumendra Padhi. I look forward to Season 2!

– Laakhon Mein Ek (Prime)

Laakhon Mein Ek – Season 1 is written by comedian Biswa Kalyan Rath, whom you may also have seen on Prime Video’s Comicstaan. It apparently started as Biswa’s own story. Season 1 is about 10th standard student Aakash Gupta. When Raipur-based Aakash gets 55% in his exams his father ships him to Genius Infinity, an IIT coaching institute in Vishakhapatnam. There Aakash barely makes the cut and is placed in Section D, which is reserved for the students with the least scores.

Season 1 is beautifully made. The actors are a good fit, and actually match the ages of the youngsters they play – which is nice :). I look forward to Season 2 which has been released and features the fantastic Shweta Tripathi (who also starred in Mirzapur) as a doctor striving to do good work in a village.

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Movie Review : Panga

Rating : 3.8/5
Genre : Drama
Year : 2020
Running time : 2 hours 10 minutes
Director : Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari
Cast : Kangana Ranaut, Jassi Gill, Neena Gupta, Richa Chaddha
Kid rating : G

Panga is about ex-kabaddi player and National Champion Jaya Nigam (Kangana Ranaut) who has quit the sport for a family life and a government job. The feeling of letting her accomplishments get away from her leads to dissatisfaction. When her son exhorts to participate in her sport again Jaya is forced to rethink her commitment to kabaddi.

Bollywood stories traditionally revolve around pyaar and it’s obstructions. The hero-heroine wed in a society-ordained shaadi is where the film ends. Few commercial movies look into the happily-ever-after phase, especially from the woman’s point of view. So Panga is unique in that sense – it is Jaya’s life we are focussed on, her feelings and her self-worth that have been subsumed in the incessant routines of domesticity and motherhood.

Panga does its job well, because it gives Jaya a voice. When she is encouraged to reenter the sport, she scoffs at the outlandish suggestion, and the idea that her family will put their money where their mouth is and bear the brunt of her “second shift”. Kangana is a marvelous actress so she is impeccable in this role. But it was also lovely to see her husband rise to the occasion, and support her; I hope Punjabi actor Jassi Gill does more Hindi films

The wonderful thing about Panga is that its characters feel full-fledged, from her mother (Neena Gupta) who supports Jaya but also has her own issues with her choices, to her friend Meenu (Richa Chaddha) who is there for her every step of the way. Jaya herself is so beautifully drawn, torn between the love for her family and her passion for the sport.

Director Tiwari, who also directed the lovely Nil Batte Sannata, helms Panga skillfully. The wonderful cast – Ranaut, Gill, Chadda and Gupta make this feel-good film an absolute must-watch.

Kidwise: Clean and family-friendly

Posted in 2020, bollywood, directors, drama, family-friendly, feel-good, feminism, passes Bechdel Test, rating-G, recommended, women | Comments Off on Movie Review : Panga

Movie Review : Thappad (2020)

Rating : 4.1/5
Genre : Drama
Year : 2020
Running time : 2 hours 24 minutes
Director : Anubhav Sinha
Cast : Taapsee Pannu, Pavail Gulati, Kumud Mishra, Ratna Pathak-Shah, Geetika Vaidya Olhyan, Tanvi Azmi, Maya Sarao, Dia Mirza, Ram Kapoor, Manav Kaul
Kid rating : PG

Thappad (The Slap) has a tag-line “Bas Itni Si Baat?”, which literally translates to “just this little thing?”. That is the common Hindi refrain with which women are socialized into living with domestic violence and other indignities. That’s what good daughters-in-law and daughters do because culture, sabhyata, blah blah blah. Thappad’s heroine makes it clear that she isn’t down with that.

Amrita (Pannu) is a happy housewife, immersed in her daily routine, supporting her career-minded husband Vikram (Gulati), and caring for her elderly mother-in-law. Her world comes crashing down one day, when her husband slaps her at a party. Amrita is stunned and humiliated. Women crowd around her to tell her to move on, even reproach her; home-makers need to be tolerant. No one berates her husband; he sleeps soundly, oblivious.

Thappad is remarkable because it takes a firm stand, a firm No to even a single slap, in Indian society which sanctions all kinds of indignities towards women under the guise of “cultural values”. It’s not that he beats her routinely; it is that he cannot even raise a hand a single time. It is also remarkable because Amrita, when she rebels, is not a financially independent woman – there is no job, no personal savings to bank upon. The home is his – she leaves, her marital bank account is frozen, the credit card cancelled. She only has her family and they support her grudgingly.

Though Amrita’s is the main story, we get to also see the plight of other women and the men who take them for granted. Amrita’s loving father, played by the marvelous Kumud Mishra, supports her, but is shamefaced when his wife (Pathak-Shah) reminisces about her lost dreams. I didn’t stop you, he says. You saw them disappearing but never said a word, she says. There is Netra Jaisingh, Amrita’s lawyer (Sarao) who is subjected to snarky put-downs from her famous lawyer husband (Kaul, from Music Teacher); marital rape (not a crime under Indian law) is hinted at. And then there is fabulous Geetika Ohlyan (whom you might remember from Soni). She plays Amrita’s maid who is routinely beaten up by her husband.

Thappad’s wake-up call – amazing that in 2020 we need a wake-up call – is so powerful because it shows that social conditioning is deep-seated and dangerous. Generations of women, under patriarchy’s thumb, are complicit. Fathers AND mothers teach their daughters to put family and home above themselves. Men, meanwhile, will just be men.

It is also wonderful that Thappad gives screen-time to explore the effects of this humiliation on Amrita, and how she must overcome ingrained social conditioning to do the right thing for herself. While there is that, I found some other transitions a little choppy, and wish that some time had been spent in showing us how the men change their thinking, instead of just presenting their repentance to us on a platter; feels spurious.

Thappad has a fabulous star-cast. Azmi, Shah, Mishra – they are all magnificent. Special kudos to Pavail Gulati (from Made In Heaven fame) who embodies the typical, oblivious Punjabi male to the T. Thappad is another feather in director Sinha’s (Article 15, Mulk) cap.

Kidwise: Scenes of violence – a woman getting beat up, the slap, a man’s forced attentions on an unwilling woman.

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Movie Review : Shubh Mangal Zyada Saavdhan

Rating : 2/5
Genre : Romance
Year : 2020
Running time : 2 hours
Director : Hitesh Kevalya
Cast : Ayushmann Khurana, Jitendra Kumar, Neena Gupta, Gajraj Rao, Sunita Rajwar, Maanvi Gagroo, Manu Rishi Chadha
Kid rating : PG

Shubh Mangal Zyada Saavdhan is a romance with a difference because it doesn’t have a hero and heroine – it has a hero Kartik (Khurana) and another hero Aman (Kumar). Said heroes are madly in love with each other, but haaye! yeh zamaana! The cruel world, which in this film boils down to Aman’s family, opposes the match (to put it mildly), and exhorts him to marry Kusum (Awasthy), the pretty girl next door. How will Kartik and Aman get the family’s blessing for their union?

Shubh Mangal Zyaada Saavdhaan is a PSA for homosexuality and gay rights, but a good film it is not. It checks all the right boxes: a good message, heart in the right place, earnestness and all that, but the execution is so shoddy that it is all to no avail. The story is nonexistent – it is just Kartik and Aman finding acceptance with family – and there’s a lot of senseless hoopla thrown in to fill time. Events happen in the film without rhyme or reason, and the film meanders aimlessly, which makes it an annoying watch.

The characters are so overdone, they border on the stupid. They are a lot of side-stories – Aman’s dad’s kaali-gobi (black cauliflower) invention, Kusum’s besottedness with Aman, Goggle ki shaadi ki kahaani – which if handed properly could have made a fantastic film, but Kevalya makes a hash of it. He’s probably fine as a script-writer (like in Shubh Mangal Saavdhan) but as a director does not pass muster.

Ayushman Khurana hams it up as the volatile Kartik, and he’s a pretty decent actor, so I’m going to chalk this one up to the director’s misdirection. Jitendra Kumar does very well as Aman – I look forward to seeing more of him. The supporting cast is fantastic – Neena Gupta plays Aman’s mom, Gajraj Rao plays the father (pretty much the roles they had in the entertaining Badhaai Ho), Chaddha plays Chaman Chacha and the marvelous Sunita Rajwar plays Champa Chachi. I especially liked Maanvi Gagroo as feisty Goggle, Aman’s cousin and the girl at whose wedding this tamasha is taking place. Can we have a film on Goggle’s life, instead?

We’ve had films that attempt to educate the junta about homosexuality like this one and Ek Ladki Ko Dekha, but it is a pity that these films are made so badly. Shubh Mangal Zyaada Saavdhan has some good laughs, some funny dialogs, and some important information on gay rights which it dispenses peppered though-out the film, but other than that it is dismal.

Kidwise: Kissing scenes between the two men.

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Movie Preview : Thappad (release 28th February 2020)

Oh, how far we’ve come! Bollywood’s going bleeding edge – in Thappad, a woman’s seemingly happy marriage crumbles when her husband slaps her, and she files for divorce. Taapsee Pannu stars and Anubhav Sinha (director of Article 15) directs.

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