Mission Impossible : Rogue Nation

MI:Rogue Nation is the 5th in the MI series, and you’d think that it would get hackneyed and jaded, but amazingly it doesn’t. Tom Cruise looks older of course, but he is still in fine fettle as an action hero. He apparently has done one of the hair-raising (ha!) sequences, no stunt double, where he is clinging on to a plane which is taking off. That is quite a feat although it does flatten Cruise’s springy hair most unflatteringly. If you have ever wondered what Cruise would look like if he were bald, you can now see your answer.

The film itself was engrossing, thrilling and held interest. In the seat next to mine, I could hear my husband shake his head, guffaw a little, and tsk-tsk at every out there, hammy scene, but he didn’t enjoy it any less. And neither will you.

Two scenes which stick in my head post-watch are the remarkably well-done motorcycle chase, and the underwater, code-breaking sequence. Rebecca Ferguson plays Ilsa Faust, a disavowed MI-6 agent who knows quite a lot about the Syndicate “Rogue Nation”. She’s got some meaty action sequences and does them spectacularly. It is another matter that she must kick and slam and punch while dressed in either a sexy, hi-cut gown or clingy clothing, and high heels.

This 5th Mission Impossible is rated PG-13, and is mostly that. I’m old school in that I am sometimes amazed at the films which end up being PG-13, despite the sexuality and nudity they contain. Not this one though. The kids watched it with us, and barring one bare female back, I didn’t find anything really outré.

A very good action entertainer this one.

Posted in 2015, action, hollywood, rating-PG13, recommended, thriller | 1 Comment

What To Watch On Netflix Instant: Edition #26

A Series Edition this time – here are 5 recent Netflix Series I enjoyed:

[amazon_link id=”B00WK6ZE26″ target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Episode 1 (English Subtitled)[/amazon_link]Witnesses (“Les témoins”, France, 2014)

This is a very atmospheric mystery-thriller series with two detectives in a small, sleepy, coastal French town trying to find the perpetrators of a bizarre crime.

Both the leads are fantastic – Thierry Lhermitte plays Chief of Police Paul Maisonneuve and Marie Dompnier plays detective Sandra Winckler. Once you start the first episode, it is hard not to binge through the entire season.

[amazon_link id=”B000AYEL6U” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]North and South (BBC)[/amazon_link]North and South (UK, 2004)

If you like historical period dramas no one makes them better than the BBC/Masterpiece Theatre. Also if you are an Elizabeth Gaskell fan, then this one is right up your alley. Netflix also has another Gaskell drama “Wives and Daughters” which I’d recommended in my last TV series recommendation post.

Anyway, North and South is a romance between feisty Margaret Hale and scruffy mill owner John Thornton. Margaret is a vicar’s daughter who’s been forced to move her home from the genteel south to an industrial mill town Milton, and she is adapting to the change in her surroundings. The hateful Thornton doesn’t make things any easier.

[amazon_link id=”B00EE3KMOI” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Episode One[/amazon_link]BroadChurch (UK, 2013)

This is another mystery series featuring two detectives – one female and one male, investigating a crime in a small, sleepy British town (both featuring steep cliffs, amazingly; cliffs are probably dramatic camera fodder) but this is very different from Witnesses.

Not as spine-chilling, Broadchurch is still quite fantastic – great, well-etched characters and solid mystery to investigate. Again, hard to not binge.

[amazon_link id=”B00HW3EXCE” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Orange Is the New Black: Season 1[/amazon_link]Orange Is The New Black (US, 2013)

When this Netflix original series released it got so much positive press, that I always kept meaning to watch it. The premise seemed to be a little out there, especially because it was touted as “humorous”. It features Piper Chapman, a 30-something woman who is convicted of a decade old crime and sentenced to 15 months in prison. She enters prison tearfully leaving fiancé Larry, who promises to not watch “Mad Men” without her.

Prison life leaves her breathless, in a not-good way.

OITNB is very good, humorous, draws you in, although it can be a little hammy at times. Also this has pretty strong language/nudity/sexuality and lots of it, so it is only for mature audiences.

[amazon_link id=”B00CH3MAGU” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Episode One[/amazon_link]The Bletchley Circle (UK, 2012)

A group of women, who had earlier worked together at Bletchley Park during the World War, come together to track down a serial killer.

Beautifully done, and a must-watch if you favor atmospheric dramas with strong female leads.

Posted in 2015, All Netflix, comedy, crime, drama, english, humor, Netflix Recommendations, outstanding, recommended, romance, suspense, thriller, UK, WhaTWON, women | 1 Comment

Movie Preview : Drishyam (31st July 2015)

Ajay Devgan, Tabu and Rajat Kapoor. Shows promise.

Posted in 2015, bollywood, crime, drama, Previews | 2 Comments

Jurassic World and The Minions

No, this is not a formal review. And no, I am not watching Bajrangi Bhaijaan. For now. Let’s see how the old will-power holds up.


I remember watching the first Jurassic Park. How long ago that was! The time when all my hair was naturally jet-black. Not that it isn’t now 🙂 but you know, one does get nostalgic. And I was over-hearing a co-worker deliver this spiel on how the makers of JP are really milking it, because truly, and I agree, the storyline does remain the same (no, duh!). There are always dinosaurs and they always run amuck. Chaos happens, but the well-built hero makes it all all right as the clueless, high-heeled heroine runs around and wrings her hands ineffectually. It’s like the zombie movies, because those always have zombies. Zombies go wild. Enter hero, heroine. All OK. End of movie.

Yes, I still saw it, because the husband wanted to and the kids wanted to. In 3D IMAX. The eyes started to glaze over somewhere after the halfway point. So yeah, not quite a recommendation – watch it for the amazing effects, if you care about that sort of a thing.


The Minions I wanted to watch because the minions are goofy, and the laughter is infectious. I thought the trailer fantastic, and the movie is all right only because the minions themselves are just so cute. The story was a spindly little thing full of holes, so I will admit to the pace being slow and draggy and being a little bored. There’s Sandra Bullock as the evil villainess and Jon Hamm as her husband, and they were quite all right.

I remember watching the first Ice Age and enjoying myself thoroughly – it was such a smart, funny movie. The Minions, the cuteness notwithstanding, is so far below that quality of film. I am disappointed. I hope they continue to make Minion movies, but they make them  much, much better.

Posted in 2015, animation, english, family-friendly, goofy, rating-G, sci-fi | 2 Comments

Movie Preview : Masaan (releases 24th July 2015)

The film that got a standing ovation at Cannes is coming to a theater near you. Masaan stars Richa Chaddha and is directed by Neeraj Ghaywan, who also gave us the very interesting Shorts.

Posted in 2015, directors, drama, Previews, recommended, social issues | 1 Comment

Movie Review : Gippi (2013)


Rating : 3.2/5
Genre : Drama
Year : 2013
Running time : 1 hour 35 minutes
Director : Sonam Nair
Cast : Divya Dutta, Riya Vij
Kidwise Rating: PG

I’ve been wanting to see this film ever since it released last year. Unfortunately this didn’t release in the US at the time it did in India. But I wanted to see it because it is a unique film, for Bollywood that it, since there are very few Hindi films that are made specifically for young people. And cleanly and classily at that.

Gippi is 14 tear old Gurpreet Kaur, who lives with her beauty-salon-running mom (Divya Dutta) and younger brother Booboo. Her parents are divorced and her dad is on the verge of marrying again. This is a tumultuous time then for teenager Gippi as she deals with a multitude of pressures – the desire to be thin and cute, and attractive to the new boy in her class, and then of course there is the stuff with her parents. When she has a nasty spat with “cool” class-girl Shamira, Gippi must prove that she has what it takes to win.

Given that I really wanted to see this film, I was a little disappointed. It is decent, but not especially well made, as in, it drags, there seems to be little flow or structure. Like other Karan Johar productions this film too takes a challenging situation/problem in the protagonists’s life and sees it through to its resolution. The young protagonist Ms. Vij is pretty effervescent but can’t emote in some of the heavier scenes – I actually liked the young lady playing her best friend Aanchal more. Also there is virtually no star power in this film so you hang in there because you like the protagonist, and hope to see her bloom.

In what this film gets right, there are a bunch of things – nice play on familial love (Divya Dutta is phenomenal as the single mom), cute characters, adorable tweensy dialog, peppy youngish music. I also liked the fact that this film depicts positive characters – her mom is a spunky woman who support her kids as an independent woman and countenances gracefully her ex-husband’s second marriage, and her dad is a loving father although no longer married to her mother. There are no hidden morality messages (and you know Bollywood is rife with those) about marriages/divorces, boyfriends and “being horny”, so we really do take the grown-up viewpoint here, which is nice and refreshing for a Hindi film.

Superficially, Gippi falls in the “coming-of-age” category, but the coming-of-age is so shallowly dealt with that I hesitate to place this film in that category. As far as Hindi films go, you could do worse than Gippi. I only wish I could recommend whole-heartedly, but alas, I can’t.

Kidwise: Clean. I’d recommend this for teenagers.

Posted in 2013, bollywood, drama, family-friendly, rating-PG, watchable | Comments Off on Movie Review : Gippi (2013)

Movie Review : Dil Dhadakne Do (2015)

dildhadaknedoRating : 4.2/5
Genre : Romantic Drama
Year : 2015
Running time : 2 hours 50 minutes
Director : Zoya Akhtar
Cast : Anil Kapoor, Priyanka Chopra, Ranveer Singh, Shefali Chhaya, Anushka Sharma, Zarina Wahab, Farhan Akhtar, Rahul Bose, Parmeet Sethi
Kidwise Rating: PG-13

I was pretty surprised when this film received only lukewarm reviews – it was an Akhtar film, was it not? Post-watch I still can’t understand it although I have to say that Dil Dhadakne Do is a bit of a comedown after the rambunctious blockbuster that was Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara.

DDD is essentially about the Mehras – Kamal (Kapoor), Neelam (Chaya), Kabir (Singh) and Ayesha (Chopra), an ultra-rich Delhite family out celebrating the 30th marriage anniversary of the parental unit. Kamal and Neelam in truth haven’t been on friendly terms for ever so long, but maintain the pretense of the happily married couple. Their son Kabir is the unwilling crown prince to the Mehra industries throne, and his sister Ayesha has been married off in Bombay, and not considered a Mehra anymore in true Punjabi patriarchal style.

The anniversary celebration is in the form of a 10 day cruise of Turkey and Greece, where the Mehra clan is accompanied by friends and family. As the days go by, their lives unravel in spectacular fashion. Life will never be the same again, and that can’t be a good thing can it?

So that’s the nub of it: the implosion of a good-looking nuclear family. It is very prettily done of course. Nice characterizations, some good acting, lovely locales and foot-tapping music. It is a little drawn out at at the beginning, with frequent voiceovers spelling out the obvious to us. Too much telling and not much showing – a big, glaring flaw. I mean I understand that Akhtar wants us to get the nitty-gritty and all, but could she not have worked the voice-over-ish stuff into dialog?

Once you get past that, it’s mostly smooth sailing. I like the Akhtars you know, because when I see their films, even though they get a little too bromance-y, you can tell that they are feminists. In DDD, they actually take it pretty head on. There is an overt questioning of the patriarchy, of the superficial veneer of morality that shrouds society, and of the unequal status of women in Indian society. I loved it.

Anil Kapoor, probably playing his age for the first time ever, is in spectacular form. And Shefali Chaya, as unhappy society wife Neelam, is toe-to-toe with him. Ranveer Singh and Anushka Sharma have great chemistry – they fairly sizzle on screen. There is this scene where the two set eyes on each other for the first time, and all they do is look. It was smolderingly fantastic, and would have been even more so if not for the annoying voice-over. Priyanka Chopra and Rahul Bose do well too, and then there was the fabulous Zarina Wahab as Bose’s mom – an unexpected bonus.

It is new for the Bollywood film industry, this genre of familial fall-outs, and unspooling love-lives (note the plural). And if anyone were to try their hand at it, I’d rather it be Akhtar because she, despite some missteps, seems to display that talent for getting to the heart of the matter. The poignant moments in this film are proof enough of that. I recommend Dil Dhadakne Do – a fun, feel-good film.

Kidwise: This is clean and classy. There are a couple of lip-locks, and a few trysts in the sack (although nothing is too explicit – let’s not carried away now, this is Bollywood after all). My teenagers saw this with me and loved it. Say what you will, but you do have to admit that like other films by Farhan/Zoya Dil Dhadakne Do also makes Desi people seem cool, hip, and possessed of a sense of humor – traits very attractive to the young ones. My kids have now evinced a renewed desire to polish their Hindi skills, because they want to understand the meaning of the song lyrics, and get the inside jokes. And for that, dear Akhtars, I tip my hat.

Posted in 2015, directors, drama, feel-good, humor, rating-PG13, recommended, romance | 2 Comments

Movie Preview : Hamari Adhuri Kahani (19th June 2015)

Hamari Adhuri Kahni comes via director Mohit Suri. While the trailer looks interesting, and the film features a strong star cast, one still doubts. “Aashiqui 2” was all right, but Suri’s most recent venture “Ek Villain” was extremely painful to watch :-). Still, here’s hoping for the best.

Posted in 2015, bollywood, Previews | Comments Off on Movie Preview : Hamari Adhuri Kahani (19th June 2015)

Movie Review : Tanu Weds Manu Returns (2015)

[amazon_link id=”B00WSLEA6O” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Tanu Weds Manu Returns (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)[/amazon_link]
Rating : 3.5/5
Genre : Romantic Drama
Year : 2015
Running time : 2 hours 8 minutes
Director : Aanand L. Rai
Cast : Madhavan, Kangana Ranaut, Jimmy Shergill, Deepak Dobriyal, Swara Bhaskar, Eijaz Khan, Rajendra Gupta, Navni Parihar
Kidwise Rating: PG-13

It is the age of the sequel and so it is that Tanu Weds Manu “returns”. You do know that I quite liked Part 1? That one was quite a sleeper hit, and in anticipation I expected big things from this – which I got, in a manner of speaking.

“Tanu Weds Manu Returns” deals with what happens after “happily ever after”. The lovers have united after fighting their way through fierce obstacles, but till when does the harmony last? Not very long apparently, since at the beginning of this film Tanu, i.e.; Tanuja Trivedi Sharma, has returned to India leaving husband Manu, i.e.; Manoj Sharma, in dire straits in the UK. Manu follows her but finds her distant. Then he meets Kusum, a young college-going girl who is almost Tanu’s twin in physical respects. Manu finds himself falling for the much more pliable Kusum. Tanu meanwhile starts longing for Manu again . . .

If you are rolling your eyes at that story, know that you are not alone. I am a little befuddled when the director tries to bring in the “judwa/look-alike” concept, especially in this realistic genre. The story itself is shaky and not so believable. The whole beginning scene in the UK with the disturbed Manu being led away just seemed false. The characters in TWMR have changed, and not in a good way. This hurts because the characters enthralled us so in the previous film. Manu, ever-so-constant in his love, seems dithering here. Raja Awasthi, that hot-blooded rogue has been tamed down to beyond recognition. And Tanu herself seemed rebellious, but here she also seems flighty and selfish.

The film had a shaky start but seemed to settle down. It does have genuine moments of humor, but largely it seemed like the director was trying very hard to play to the gallery. While that is good in moderation, I watch a film for the director’s vision, not his interpretation of what he thinks I want to see! Originiality is king, and what made the first TWM the film it was. TWMR seems a weaker commercialized wanna-be when compared to it.

Kangana Ranaut carries this film. She is marvelous as both Tanu and Kusum (Dhatto), portraying each one believably with a difference of manner and accent. Madhavan is referred to as an “adrak” (ginger) in the film, because his character seems to grow in every direction. And that is true, he is spreading fast! His charm, of course, is inversely proportional to his corpulence (remember him in Rehna Hai Tere Dil Mein?). Jimmy Shergill looks like he did in TWM and does as well as one could with such a weakly written character. The rest of the cast like the magnificent Dobriyal, Bhaskar, Gupta et. al. remains as dependable as before.

Aanand Rai hasn’t totally lost his touch because the settings and the supporting characters still seem genuine. And there is an emotional pull-and-tug behind it all. However I am disinclined to give it more than 3.5 stars because, IMO, the sanguine charm of the previous film has degraded down to the “massy” appeal of this one. Nothing wrong with massy appeal of course, unless it’s massively contrived, which it is here. The lead characters, the ones in whom we have been invested have changed to the point where I’m not sure I care that much. I actually felt more for Kusum and Raja than Tanu-Manu; maybe Rai should follow up with a sequel about them. Given Rai’s obvious talent, would it have been so hard to actually make a film that stuck to the true and narrow?

Kidwise: Pretty clean, although there is some language.

Posted in 2015, comedy, directors, drama, quirky, rating-PG, sequel | 2 Comments

Movie Preview : Dil Dhadakne Do (5th June 2015)

From the director of the lovely “Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara” comes Dil Dhadakne Do. Lots of big names in here : Priyanka Chopra, Anushka Sharma, Ranvir Singh, Farhan Akhtar, Rahul Bose, Shefali Chaya and Anil Kapoor.

Posted in 2015, bollywood, directors, drama, Previews, romance | Comments Off on Movie Preview : Dil Dhadakne Do (5th June 2015)