Movie Review : Yeh Saali Zindagi

[amazon_link id=”B0054PAOUM” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Yeh Saali Zindagi[/amazon_link]Rating : Above Average (3.8/5)
Genre : Drama
Year : 2011
Running time : 2 hours 10 minutes
Director : Sudhir Mishra
Cast : Irrfan Khan, Saurabh Shukla, Chitrangada Singh, Arunoday Sigh, Yashpal Sharma, Prashant Naraynan, Sushant Singh, Aditi Rao Hydari
Kid rating : PG-15YEH SAALI ZINDAGI (YSZ) : LIFE HAPPENS !

I started watching this film late one night. However, already blurred with sleep, I couldn’t quite keep up with the numerous characters and plots that exist in this wicked little film. So I shut it off and restarted the film the next day. It was well worth it.

YSZ is the off-beat crime-comedy caper that smarts with crackling dialogue and lovingly etched characters. Directed by Sudhir Mishra , of Hazaaron khwaishein aisi and Jaane bhi do yaaron fame, this movie has a bunch of plots which interlink into the main story-line creating a zany, almost PG Wodehouse-ian tale. I quite loved it.

Arun (Irfan Khan) is a shady businessman-fixer who helps Mehta (Saurabh Shukla) rake in the moolah through not-so-legal means. Arun is also in love with Priti (Chitrangada Singh), a nightclub singer. Priti, unfortunately doesn’t reciprocate, and is in love with Shyam, a minister’s son. Meanwhile, in a different part of town (yes, this is Delhi) lives Kuldeep (Arunoday Singh), a con-man trying to go straight. Estranged from his feisty wife Shanti (Aditi Rao Hydari) and son, Kuldeep is looking for that one big job which will make his life easy, once and for all. There is also Kuldeep’s boss Bade (the wonderful Yashpal Sharma in a cracker of a role) who is trying to get out Tihar jail. Striving to make that possible is his whacky fashion-designer younger brother Chhote (Prashant Narayanan). There is also a corrupt cop (Sushant Singh) in the mix.

When these worlds collide, all hell breaks loose.

First the good : great story-line, interesting characters, competent acting, apt dialogue. There are lots of characters here, and each of them gets his/her own back-story; they are built up as real, flesh-and-blood people with their own little quirks and problems – bravo ! Irfan Khan and Saurabh Shukla are outstanding (and you already knew that, didn’t you ?). Sushant Singh is wonderful; in him evil has a very middle-class face. Chitrangada Singh is good as a wishy-washy woman who doesn’t know where her heart is. Little known Rao Hydari does very well indeed as Kuldeep’s better half.

Now, for the flaws. While the direction is passable, “Ye Saali Zindagi” does flag a bit; I’m going to blame the screenplay. This film could have moved faster, been shorter, and a more condensed version of events wouldn’t have hurt. Acting wise, Arunoday playing a main lead, fails to impress inspite of his strong physical persona. I couldn’t quite see him as an impoverished, uneducated con-man – seemed way too erudite looking for that (probably the Aisha after-effect). Plus he seems lost without his facial hair.

This film was good, but it had the potential to be fantastic. Hopefully Mishra will pull that off in his next venture. Still YSZ sets a high standard, the kind that I’d like all Hindi cinema to meet. Well worth your time, this is a nicely layered tale, complete with dark humor. Highly recommended.

Kid-wise : With earthy expletives galore and visuals to match, this may not be suitable for kids younger than 15.

Posted in 2011, bollywood, drama, rating-PG15, recommended | 2 Comments

Movie Preview : Delhi Belly

Amir Khan’s film “Delhi Belly” releases July 1, 2011. The film starts Imran Khan, Kunal Roy Kapoor, model, MTV VJ and now actress Shenaz Treasurywala. And then there is the fantastic Vijay Raaz. The trailer looks interesting, and the lyrics of this song are . . . quirky, particularly the line (I can’t get it out of my head) : “Saabun ki shaqla mein, beta tu toh nikla keval jhaag”. Hilarious, LOL! I believe the film will be in the same vein. Looking forward to this one :

Posted in 2011, All Netflix, drama, Hindi movies on Netflix, Previews | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Movie Review : Black Swan

Black SwanDirector : Darren Aronofsky
Starring : Natalie Portman, Barbara Hershey, Vincent Cassel, Mila Kunis, Winona Ryder
Genre : Thriller
Rating : 4.5/5

I could not have imagined a thriller set in such a delicate and improbable setting. But in the Black Swan (the film gets its name from the a character in the ballet “Swan Lake”), Darren Aronofsky creates an arresting, psychological thriller about a hapless, beautiful ballerina mired in unhappy circumstances. Nina Sayers (Natalie Portman) is a delicate beauty, a dancer dedicated to her art, and striving for perfection. It seems as if all her efforts have come to fruition when she is chosen for the lead part in her ballet company’s premier production of Swan Lake.

Now that she has the prime part, Nina is the focus of the company members and their boss, the brilliant and arrogant Thomas Leroy (Cassel). Leroy blows hot and cold, and other cast members are jealous of her accomplishment. Diffident and demure Nina, till now almost cocooned in her claustrophobic home by her over-protective, domineering mother (Barbara Hershey), wants to break free and reclaim her independence. But everyone it seems, is conspiring against her.

The story is told from Nina’s point of view, so naturally one is sympathetic to her outlook. Especially because she seems to be such an underdog – a fragile, insecure character, unsure of her ability and plagued by self-doubt. Portman gives this role her all, and is quite superb as Nina. Hershey, who plays Nina’s mother is also fantastic as a strong-willed mother harboring notions of martyrdom.

This is a fascinating film. It is a subtle, nuanced, toned-down thriller, all the more intriguing because one is never really sure of reality in the film. The lines between fact and fiction are blurred and one is never really sure if the events that happen are actually happening or are figments of a really creative imagination. The characters in the film are quirky, and the director stresses upon the quirks, making the people seem a little unhinged. This film also has some elements of borderline horror which are effectively used – and this from me, a total non-fan of horror.

Highly recommended.

Posted in 2010, All Netflix, drama, hollywood, outstanding, rating-A, recommended, thriller | Tagged , | Comments Off on Movie Review : Black Swan

Movie Review : Dum Maaro Dum

Rating : Below Average (2.5/5)
Genre : Thriller
Year : 2011
Running time : 2 hours 10 minutes
Director : Rohan Sippy
Cast : Abhishek Bacchan, Bipasha Basu, Govind Namdeo, Rana Daggubati, Smit-Prateik Babbar, Anaitha Nair, Aditya Pancholi
Kid rating : PG-15

DUM MAARO DUM : DUMB MAARO DUMB !

Remember “Dum maaro Dum, mit jaaye gum” ? Yes, that catchy, sing-songy ode to the free-wheeling, hippie lifestyle of the 70s ? Well, Zeenat Aman’s insouciant number now has a modern twist, courtesy Deepika Padukone and director Rohan Sippy. Sippy also directs the film of the same name. It’s shot in Goa. Starring in it are the usual suspects : Sippy’s favorite actor of the month Abhishek Bachchan, and she of the swirling tresses – Bipasha Basu.

Bachchan is ACP Vishnu Kamath who, having lost his near and dear ones, is on a mission with a vengeance – to wipe out Goa’s drug mafia. Commandeered into service by Goa’s political head honcho, Kamath swings into action. As he nabs several small fry, he knows he has to do something to get the big game players to reveal themselves.

Prateik Babbar plays Lawrence Eduardo Gomes or Lorry, a student looking for a US school scholarship. Unable to get one, this blubbering babe-in-the-woods falls afoul of the drug mafia. In a whole lotta trouble with no place to go, Lorry can’t see a way out of his predicament. Along a parallel track runs the story of Zoe (Bipasha) and Joki (Rana Daggubati), a young couple who find themselves broken apart by Joki’s villainous boss Lorsa Biscuta. Once burnt, Joki who’s also a friend of Lorry cannot bear to see the same fate for him, and tries to help ACP Kamath in the good fight.

Yes, we know where this is heading; there’s a villain out there and there’s a man of law in hot pursuit. I expect the chase to be interesting (present high ticket price in evidence). I am then, a tad disappointed that this film didn’t meet the high expectations I had. Why did I have them in the first place, you ask ? Well, firstly the film is directed by the director of the entertaining Bluffmaster. Secondly, Bacchan, for all his un-acting, makes a decent policeman.

It is not that the film didn’t have its high points. Sippy introduces his characters well. As an example – he transitions to ACP Kamath’s life from a scene in the airport, where the ACP is catching Lorry red-handed. Where we were following Lorry’s naïve antics, we transition to charting Kamath’s life’s course; so it’s one story leading to another and all that transitioning looks smart and snappy. There is also some very sophisticated looking cinematography, slick, slo-mo action in myriad hues and interesting angles.

This film has many characters, but they lack depth and the oomph which makes them truly redeemable. Kamath is passable, but Joki (who morphs into a secondary hero) is inconsistent and weak. He apparently wants to be susegaad, easy-going, but this zalim duniya won’t let him be. Having stood by mutely as his world is ripped apart, he seems to come to life only later; we know not what compels him now that didn’t compel him then. Then there is the spineless Lorry Gomes, who is besotted with a smart, brainy US-bound gal. Lorry’s character is almost child-like (all he does is heave and sob), and a very unlikely cog in the wheel here.

But, let’s spread the blame where it’s due; yes, Sippy did see his leads display their limited talents and could not exhort them to do better (crime enough), but the supporting cast did no better. In this film the supporting cast was very important because DMD is kind of like a Hollywood-ian drama, in that it is not just hero-based. The hero comes in after about one-third of the film, and the story is carried on the shoulders on the secondary characters. You’d think those shoulders would be strong. Sigh! You’d be wrong.

South India actor Rana Daggubati who plays Joki, reminded me of a dying fish – he opens his mouth to speak, but gives the impression of gasping for air. Yes, he has physical presence but uses it ineffectually. His character has strength but Rana lends it impotence. He has hero-dom but is not the hero. Rana needs acting classes. ASAP.

Smit-Prateik Babbar plays mealy-mouthed Lorry, and wails and blubbers so much, I longed to give him a tissue. Bipasha, ofcourse, is known for her very limited histrionic skills. Then there is the villain Lorsa Biscuita played by yester-year blue-eyed hero Aditya Pancholi, who is one of the rare Bollywood-ian personalities I’m allergic to. Yeah. Hives. Really. I went armed with Benadryl. I enjoyed watching Bachchan, the impeccable Govind Namdeo (he plays Inspector Rane), and Anaitha Nair (she plays Lorry’s girlfriend). Unfortunately they couldn’t compensate for the truck-load of bad acting displayed by the others.

Direction was just about passable, the writing was sloppy, the screenplay flagged (I took a few mini-naps when it really went south) and the story was full of logical holes. I didn’t care about the characters, and the villains didn’t scare me. For the high-octane thriller that this film was trying to be, you’d think the screen would go crack-pop-sizzle with all that emotion and energy. But it’s actually pretty flat, save for Deepika’s energetic dancing. Sippy has tried to be edgy with the cop-robber plot, but it reminded me of an old 70s-80s film. And not in a good way. Plus there was gratuitous vulgarity, so there goes the classiness angle. Definitely not a film for kids under 15.

Yes, this film is better than some, but I’m being harsh on it, just as I am on others which could have been so much better but weren’t. Please brave it, if you still wish to. Else, just write me a Thank You comment for saving you the trouble 🙂 and we’ll call it quits.

Posted in 2011, bollywood, drama, rating-PG15 | Tagged , | Comments Off on Movie Review : Dum Maaro Dum

Movie Review : Tell no one

Tell No OneDirector : Guillaume Canet
Starring : Francois Cluzet, Marie-Josee Croze, Andre Dussollier
Genre : Thriller
Language French (with English sub-titles)
Rating : 4.5/5

I haven’t read the book upon which this film is based. I did intend to read it once; it lay on my bedside table for a very long time, but I had to drop it after a few pages. It makes a good movie. Sort of like the Robert Ludlum novels I can never read because I can’t bear to go through all the technical descriptions about guns and other such machinery. But Ludlum novels do well in a movie format; all those technical descriptions that take pages that you would have to wade through to reach the crux of the problem can be glossed over in quick, smooth action which takes just a few seconds.

“Tell no one” is a French film, in the French language. So all you English speaking folk will have to make do with sub-titles just as we did. The film (and the book) is about the disappearance of Margot Beck, wife of Dr. Alex Beck. Alex and Margot are childhood sweethearts. One night as they are out swimming at a favorite lake, Margot disappears. Alex is physically hit by an unseen assailant and is in a coma for the next three days. When he wakes it is to hear that Margot is no more. Her body has been found and identified. Alex, who has lost the love of his life, is heart-broken. Additionally he is also a suspect in the murder.

Cut to 8 years later. Life goes on, with Alex attending to his pediatric practice in Paris. He still misses his wife acutely. Then on Margot’s death anniversary he receives an email from an unknown person. The email has information only his wife could have known, and directs him to watch a webcam on the internet at a specific time. It also admonishes Alex to tell no one about it. While puzzled, Alex logs onto the webcam visual at the assigned time, and sees what he could not have imagined . . .

This is an engrossing film. It moves fast and has unexpected turns and twists; essentially quite unpredictable. It is beautifully written and well told. The acting is superb. In Dr. Alex Beck you have a very unlikely protagonist; he’s a soft-spoken pediatrician, clean-cut and gentlemanly. You would not attribute violence or an angry emotion to him. When he goes hunting for clues, he does it the polite way; he asks. And when he is forced out of his comfort zone (he is now apparently a suspect in the re-opened murder case) and pursued by the police, he must draw on resources he didn’t know he had.

An intriguing thriller, this is a must-see. Fellow-Netflix-ers, you will be happy to know that this is available to stream. So, go on. Enjoy.

Posted in 2006, action, All Netflix, foreign, outstanding, rating-A, recommended, thriller | Tagged | 1 Comment

Movie Review : The Lincoln Lawyer

The Lincoln LawyerDirector : Brad Furman
Starring : Matthew MacConaughey, Marissa Tomei, William H. Macy, Ryan Philippe, John Leguizamo
Rating : 4.25/5

The Lincoln Lawyer is based on Michael Connelly’s book of the same name. Matthew McConaughey plays Mick Haller the wheeling-dealing, smart lawyer who works quite a bit from the back of his Lincoln Town car (hence the name). Haller goes about defending his usual clientele – several low-life criminals, but one day hits pay-dirt. Louis Roulet (Ryan Philippe) a richie-rich kid from Beverly Hills embroiled in a nasty case involving a woman and extreme violence, wants to plead his innocence and wants Haller to defend him. Street-smart Haller smells a rat, but takes the case anyway.

If it looks fishy it usually is. And Haller finds out the hard way. What’s worse is that there doesn’t seem to be a way to extricate himself from the mess . . .

McConaughey is a good fit for this role. He naturally exudes a rascally good-natured-ness, and so, shines as sassy, smart-mouthed Haller. Because, like all good Hollywood heroes, underneath that smart-talking, gruff exterior, Haller has a heart of gold. Which he displays only to ex-wife Maggie (Marissa Tomei), his daughter, and his chauffeur. And to us (else whither the movie ?)

This film is well-made, well-paced and interesting. The story offers up a protagonist too good to resist, a smart, sassy hero in a spot of trouble with the real bad boys. In Haller, we have a likeable criminal lawyer who defends the not-so-worthy. He’s short on scruples, swaggers with a smarmy “I-can-do” confidence, and is loaded with street-smarts. But he’s a softie underneath (present wife and kid as evidence). When this intelligent alpha male gets into some serious trouble, he cannot look to anyone to bail him out; he’s all he’s got. Well, there is Maggie, who’s still a friend post-divorce, but she has to remain within the confines of the law, being a public prosecutor and all. But just as trouble come to the hero, payback is coming to the bad guys. We know. And we’re waiting for it.

William H. Macy plays Haller’s private investigator, and does a great job. Tomei is Haller’s ex-wife Maggie, a public defender, who’s apparently split-up with Haller because as she puts it, she wants to keep the scum off the streets and he keeps putting them back. Of course the film is what it is because of McConaughey’s portrayal of Haller. He is impeccable in this role, and delineates Haller’s hard-to-define character with a fine edge.

Now, legal thrillers are sort of predictable, we know there’s someone seeking justice, justice being hard to find. We also know they’ll get it, courtesy the hero/heroine. A good legal thriller is one which still gives you enough red herrings to make you sweat, within the narrow confines of said predictability. “The Lincoln Lawyer” then is one of the better legal thrillers I’ve watched. It is a twisting, turning lawyer drama, featuring court-room scenes, action and lots of personality. Fine tuned under Brad Furman’s strong direction and John Romano’s nicely paced screenplay, this one is worth the watch. Recommended.

Posted in 2011, action, hollywood, recommended, thriller | 2 Comments

Movie Review : Source Code

[amazon_link id=”B004XQO90E” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Source Code [Blu-ray][/amazon_link]Director : Duncan Jones
Starring : Jake Gyllenhaal, Michelle Monaghan, Vera Farmiga, Jeffrey Wright, Russell Peters
Rating : 4.25/5

This film is by Duncan Jones, director of Moon. “Source Code” has the same feel, although the story is quite different. SC is a time-warp film mixed in together with a potential terrorist plot. Jake Gyllenhal plays Colter Stevens, a soldier deployed in Afghanistan, who finds himself suddenly transplanted onto a moving train in Chicago. As he is trying to orient himself to his new surroundings the train explodes. Stevens amazingly survives and finds himself strapped into a seat in what looks to be a space shuttle. Right across from him is a TV monitor with a woman’s face on it. The woman is telling the groggy Stevens that the cycle will repeat until he can do something about it. . . And Stevens finds himself back in the train again. It explodes. Again and again and . . .

This is a “mind-bending” film, and words like parallel reality, alternate universe, quantum physics are bandied about. We never quite know how all this technology works; suffice it to say that it does and soldier Colter Stevens has been volunteered to “try” it out to potentially save the citizens of Chicago from a deadly attack. He has 8 minutes to save the world.

I wanted to see SC because the premise looked interesting. I adored “Groundhog Day” and Moon, and while SC seems to resemble both, it is quite different. Like Moon, SC is presumably set in a world where technology is allowing us to accomplish unheard of things. Like Moon, SC also has a lead protagonist entrenched in events which seem almost virtual and unreal, and who must extricate himself without any help from the outside world. And like Groundhog Day, SC has that sense of déjà vu.

SC is interesting and keeps you engrossed. The film opens well, and I was completely absorbed trying to figure out the mechanics of it all. As it progresses and we are clearer on the time-warping and Source Code technology, the film morphs into an action thriller with the hero on a time-critical mission. There’s never a dull moment.

However SC never gets quite as good as I expected it to be. It has a storyline and teaser which heighten expectation. Thus, I expected a rather bombastic film which would bring me to the edge of my seat. Jones, however, under-does the film. With his subdued treatment, the film never quite becomes as big as one would expect, and the bare space-pod-ish sets, few main characters, and minimal sound effects give it a low-budget, indie feel. This indie feel worked for Moon (which I saw on DVD), but do not bode well for Source Code which is a theater release, and from which I expected a slicker, more polished look.

Jones has a bare-bones style of directing. Moon lacked melodrama, as does SC. And while I have been guilty of pooh-poohing melodrama, I’ve got to say that without it one does not quite feel the punch to the gut as effectively as one should. Our hero Stevens is in the thick of it, but one doesn’t quite feel it – there’s not much emotional rooting-for-the-knight-in-shining-armor (or space pod) going on here. I know that Colter Stevens is a good guy, but he is a little daft (disoriented ?) and does indulge in racial profiling. There were also minor irritants in the film like the clichéd bad guy and sets which looked like they’d been built during the Cold War Era. Source Code is supposedly futuristic technology, so why doesn’t it look it ?

All that said, this is s decent film; it just isn’t your rah-rah Friday night entertainer.

P.S. : Comedian Russell Peters has a small role in the film as one of the passengers on the Chicago bound train.

Posted in 2011, hollywood, sci-fi, thriller | 1 Comment

Movie Review : Patiala House

Movie Review Patiala House

Rating : Above average (3.5/5)
Genre : Drama
Year : 2011
Running time : 1 hour 35 minutes
Director : Nikhil Advani
Cast : Akshay Kumar, Anushka Sharma, Rishi Kapoor, Dimple Kapadia, Hard Kaur, Tinnu Anand
Kid rating : G




PATIALA HOUSE : MELODRAMA IN LARGE DOSES !

 

An over-bearing patriarch and his over-wrought Punjabi family; put these 2 together with some drama-shama (because they are Punjabi, and Punjabis – they are like that only!) in the same film, situate the film in London and what do you get ? Why, Patiala House ofcourse ! Yes, I kid you not people – this is one overdone film. They’ve taken the Punjabi-ness and run with it.

For starters they have Gurtej Kahlon aka Bauji, Rishi Kapoor as a portly patriarch. Bauji is an intrepid and out-spoken man whose word is law in his home and in the community he has built up and aided against British racists. Then there is the salwar-clad long-suffering and very, very patient wife of the patriarch – doe-eyed Dimple, aging, but as pretty as ever. And then there are the bacchas – sons and daughter, nieces and nephews and daughter-in-laws, all sweltering in the heat of Bauji’s overt Punjabi-ness. The kids can’t assimilate into the British culture around them, nor can they do or speak as they wish. Bauji decides everyone’s fate and that’s that.

Things come to a head when Bauji’s obedient son, Pargat Singh Kahlon aka Gattu (Akshay Kumar), who has long since given up his life’s dream at Bauji’s behest, spies a ray of hope. Phir kya logon, – it’s mutiny time ! It’s covert mutiny ofcourse, it’s all hush-hush – Bauji hasn’t a clue what his honhaar beta is doing. But really, like all Bollywoodian plans, (and you can see it coming a mile away), this one’s going to go awry.

Yes, yes, yes – it’s high drama. Kapoor has a thing for the melodramatic and this script and the just as melodramatic dialogues give him all he needs. He milks it to kingdom come. Dimple by comparison, looks subdued and gives her matronly role the whole suffering mother treatment. Akshay Kumar playing the well-behaved son weirded me out. He was fine when he was covertly dancing to bhangra rap in the basement, but as seedha-saadha Gattu he was just morose. And oh, Ms. I’m-so-thin-I-could-be-one-dimensional Anushka Sharma turns in another sterling performance as the perky Simran.

Singer Hard Kaur acts. She’s a cousin sis of Gattu’s in the film – the one who wants to rap but quails at what Bauji will say. Interesting to see that out of her “rapper” get-up, and in a simple salwar-kameez, she looked really domesticated. Like she’d be frying samosas any minute. And for all you folks tripping down memory lane, there was a turbaned-up Prem Chopra and a blooming (and ballooning) Soni Razdan, both playng their bit parts quite effectively.

Anyway, I say it’s overdone, but it was still fun to watch. Direction, script, screenplay all passable. Great songs, some nice thrumming bhangra beats, and some cricket to boot. There’s lots of color and energy and a variety of characters, all with interesting quirks. The only thing that wasn’t developed well was the romance between the lead pair, so yeah, it’s not going to get you weak-kneed or anything. This is a family film, focusing on family ties – so I doubt that Gattu and Simran were going to get kissy-kissy anyway (they barely say a couple of words to each other, collapsing gratefully into holy matrimony).

Fairly slick, clean, and wholesome, “Patiala House” is a decent watch.

Posted in 2011, bollywood, drama, family-friendly, rating-G, watchable | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Movie Review : Road, Movie

Road, Movie (Tribeca Festival Premiere)Rating : Below average (2.5/5)
Genre : Drama
Year : 2009
Running time : 1 hour 35 minutes
Director : Dev Benegal
Cast : Abhay Deol, Satish Kaushik, Tannishtha Chatterjee, Mohammed Faizal, Virendra Saxena, Suhita Thatte, Yashpal Sharma
Kid rating : PG-15




ROAD, MOVIE : ASPIRES HIGH, BUT DOESN’T GET ANYWHERE

Road, movie is an unusual Hindi film, starring Abhay Deol, the stalwart of many unusual films. Deol plays the role of Vishnu, a young man of the middle-class, un-interested in taking over his father’s hair-oil business. His father Atma, proprietor of Atma hair oil business is pushing his son to show greater interest in his soon-to-be-inheritance. In a desperate attempt to get away from his ordinary small-town life, Vishnu volunteers to deliver some materials to a museum in seaside Samudrabad. The journey to the museum will involve a drive through the desert, in a rickety old Chevy truck. The truck is a mobile “talkie”; a truck outfitted with an old-style projector, meant to take cinema on the road to fairs and melas.

Well-armed with his mother’s (Thatte) ghar-ka-khana, home-made charms to ward off the evil eye on the six-day long trip, and his father’s tender remonstrations to sell Atma hair oil on the journey (three boxes of the oil are also placed in the truck), Vishnu sets off. On the journey, he grudgingly picks up passengers – a boy (Faizal) from a local dhaba wanting to get to the big city, Om chacha (Kaushik) – a portly mechanic who wants a ride to a mela, and a young gypsy woman (Chatterjee) in search of water. Thrown into an alien environment, will sheltered, self-absorbed Vishnu find his life changed by this different experience?

Now, “Road, Movie” is a festival-circuit film, so I was expecting an arty, non-commercial film. What I wasn’t bargaining for, was a film which lost it’s rhythm midway. Director Dev Benegal probably meant to tell us a soulful story of life and cinema, highlighting some truths about the haves and the have-nots. However despite the interesting start to the film, a story which held much promise, and an excellent cast, the flagging screenplay meant that I could only guess at the message he meant to convey.

Out of all the characters in the film, Vishnu’s character was the best sketched. Deol plays his character with much sympathetic skill. The supporting cast is also able, and I cannot blame them for the faltering characters and the sometimes contrived situations. The problem with this film was that is was inconsistent in it’s tone and direction. There was much philosophy, dreaminess, and elements of the fantastic, but there were also the hard-to-believe, pragmatic encounters with the corrupt policemen and the seemingly merciless water mafia.

The film falters. It is boring. It was hard keeping my finger away from the stop button. I de-recommend this one heartily.

Posted in 2009, All Netflix, bollywood, drama, Hindi movies on Netflix, rating-PG15 | Tagged | Comments Off on Movie Review : Road, Movie

Movie Review : Dil to baccha hai jee

Rating : Above Average (3.75/5)
Genre : Comedy

Year : 2011
Running time : 2 hours 30 minutes
Director : Madhur Bhandarkar
Cast : Ajay Devgun, Emran Hashmi, Omi Vaidya, Shazahn Padamsee, Tisca Chopra, Shradha Das, Shruti K Haasan
Kid rating : PG-15

DIL TO BACHCHA HAI JI : ENTERTAINING !

Madhur Bhandarkar, the director of such quality films as “Page 3” and “Fashion” returns with a different genre this time. “Dil to baccha hai ji” is a light-hearted look at the many travails of love, and presented amusingly. And I’ve got to say that even this far from his usual genre/forte, Bhandarkar does well. This film could have lapsed into ordinariness, but keeps up the entertainment value right through.

DTBHJ is an entertaining tale about 3 men in different stages of their lives. Naren Ahuja is a 30 something divorcee, Abhay is a young gym trainer with a roving eye, and Milind Kelkar is a gentle-hearted do-gooder working in matrimonial services. All three desire just one thing – to find the love of their lives. And there are candidates galore; will it all end happily for them ?

Ajay Devgan is Naren, a divorcee on the wrong side of 35. Afraid of being too old for the girl next door, he finds himself in just that predicament, when fetching office intern June Pinto (Shazahn Padamsee), who looks like she’s barely out of her teens, takes an inordinate amount of interest in him. He stands out among her youthful friends like a sore thumb, in age and in maturity. Ajay plays Naren with a wry humor, and does just about OK. It is well known of course that light-hearted comedy is not Ajay’s forte, dark drama is.

Abhay (Emraan Hashmi) is a playboy, plain and simple – no qualms about it. He’s looking to find the next rich girlfriend who’ll give him the luxuries he can’t afford. Life looks set when he snares a rich industrialist’s wife (Tisca Chopra). But then he meets the love of his life, and is faced with a choice – love or money ? Will filthy lucre have the day ? Hashmi suits this role 🙂 and plays the part to the hilt – nicely done.

Omi Vaidya, last seen in ”3 Idiots”, plays Milind as a mild-mannered, gullible fool in love. Attracted to Radio Jockey Gungun Sharma (Shraddha Das), Omi is willing to sacrifice his all for her – but does the lady return the favor ? Vaidya is a little wishy-washy as Milind, probably what was required, but his presence is ineffectual. I wasn’t quite interested in his story as I was in the others, and his Ugandan accent didn’t help.

The three leads were allright, but there was a spate of talented and good looking women in the film. Tisca Chopra and Shradha Das stood out, and Padamsee suited her almost juvenile role. Shruthi Haasan as Abhay’s true love lacked acting finesse. Even Daisy Irani made an appearance as June’s grandmother. Overall the good quality supporting cast helped make this film believable. And another feather in its cap was the wonderful music. Melodious and catchy, songs like “Ab kuch dino se” (sung by Mohit Chauhan) up the ante.

I hadn’t expected much from this film, except a few goofy situations and some forced laughs, but this one did unexpectedly well. This is a well-made film, and if you can ignore the obvious clichés and plot-holes, and the fact that this is about men (in love) behaving like imbeciles, this is kinda fun to watch. DTBHJ is a much better candidate for a light-hearted film than some of the films (must I call them that ?) that purport to be comedies. A feel-good wry comedy, this one is well worth a watch.

Kidwise : This is fairly clean – and by that I mean very little vulgarity/cheap innuendoes. There are some conversations that are meant for the grown-up ear, so I’d say this was a PG-15.

Posted in 2011, bollywood, comedy, directors, Good Hindi Movies To Watch, humor, rating-PG15, recommended | Tagged | 2 Comments