Monday 28 December 2009

Movie Review- 3 Idiots

Powered by: Chakpak.com Three Idiots 

Raju Hirani and Vidhu Vinod Chopra with the combined legacy of Munnabhai , 1942 A love Story, Mission Kashmir and Parineeta have a rich heritage of powerful cinema behind them and this time around they have been more than equal to the responsibility of living up to the high standards they have set for themselves. Add Aamir Khan and it becomes an irresistible trio and it was not disappointing. If anything the bar has been raised yet another notch.
First and foremost I do not have my oft repeated complain of a weak or a zero storyline. Chetan Bhagat’s Five Point Someone has been loosely adapted into a powerful narrative of human emotions and at the same time is a telling commentary on the present system of education where emphasis is laid on learning by rote rather than encouraging innovation and lateral thinking. It recognises that the orthodox and conventional stream of thought wherein the middle class redemption lies in attainment of an engineering or medical degree which forces the unwilling victims to compromise on their dreams often with disastrous consequences.
The story starts with a search for Rancho, a friend of friends, by Sharman Joshi and Madhvan accompanied by yet another class mate Silencer, so named for his propensity of letting go silent bursts of gas expulsions through his rear end. Their not so aromatic journey brings back the memories of their college days. Ahh, isn’t it the best time for just about anyone? And if you have been a hosteller, well, you would relive all the good times you had or wished that you had. The main protagonist is Rancho, never mind the full name but a thinker, a dreamer, a rebel, a scholar and a yaaron ka yaar. He constantly slips in and out of classes seeking knowledge and substituting simple and straight answers where profoundness is expected by stuck up teachers. Boman Irani comes up with another class act as the Director of the engineering college but looks suspiciously like Einstein which I guess was by design rather than accident. Nonetheless he delivers a flawless performance as a uncompromising teacher. The movie traces the lives of the three friends through college. Questions are raised about the path they have chosen, their aspirations of what they really want from their lives versus their loyalties to parents and friends. Heavy stuff, I know, but portrayed beautifully and with loads of rib tickling humour. A special mention must be made of the welcome speech made by Silencer which is surreptitiously changed by Aamir to get back at him for his pompous ways. It had my considerable self falling out of the seat. There are way too many such episodes in the movie to merit a mention here but each is executed with near perfection.
Kareena proves yet again that given a good role she can sparkle. Praeekshat Sahni has not forgotten to be loud, so you may dismiss him. The music is great and happily Vidhu Chopra has not flicked a western song and got ‘inspired’ by it. Perhaps the talented duo of Sawanand Kirkire and Shantanu Moitra has something to do with it. The movie is heart warming and a laugh riot but not perfect. There are quite a few impossible situations but you quickly get over them in the larger interest of wholesome entertainment. All in all...Alllll Eezz Welll. Go watch and freak out.

Wednesday 23 December 2009

Movie Review-Avatar

Powered by: Chakpak.com Avatar 

After the gross depiction of aliens in countless and forgettable Hollywood movies they were first made to look believable by the quintessential story teller Steven Spielberg in ‘E.T’. Unlike the blood thirsty inter galactic traveller of the yore E.T was almost human, loving, happy and sad in equal measure. It still gives me goose bumps when I remember his lingering cry to go home. James Cameron has made a huge attempt to take this concept to a whole new level.
Without any knowledge of the story I was pretty intrigued by the title of the movie which is an integral part of the Hindu belief. The story per se is not really novel. The conflict between industrialisation (growth) and the inhabitants it usually displaces (is resettles politically correct?) is what one reads about in newspapers in different parts of the world everyday and which gives the likes of Brinda Karat and Arundhati Roy something to wail about in their free time. However it’s the execution of the vision that sets apart Cameron from rest of the pack. The scale of the movie to understate the obvious is colossal. Set in the year 2154(who chose the number and why could be another story) we are taken to a moon called Pandora (very appropriate name for the number of tricks in its bag). The humans are led by an abrasive corporate honcho in charge of mining operations for something called ‘unobtanium’ which sells on mother earth for $20 million a kilo. Even after adjusting for 145 years of inflation that’s far more than humans would happily kill for. The honcho has a security chief who looks suspiciously like GI Joe to carry out the dirty tricks. And Sigourney Weaver, who turned a brunette for the movie, returns as a scientist engaged in a project to understand and connect with the local inhabitants. The locals are called the Na’vi , blue skinned and all of nine feet tall. Sigourney’s project involves usage of human and Na’vi DNA to reengineer a hybrid Na’vi which can be mentally controlled by the human whose DNA has been used. A new avatar, so to speak. Sam Worthington plays the main lead of a paraplegic former marine who is reluctantly allowed in the Avatar programme by Sigourney. Once admitted he finds a new world where he can walk, run and love.
Despite the fact that the story is set way into the future in a place four and half light years away the perennial human emotive conflicts, the greed for more, the compulsive desire to subjugate the weak, the irrepressible retaliatory spirit of the brave forces one to think that the more we change the more we remain the same. A pressing need of the awareness of preservation of environment which cannot come too soon finds a voice in the hopeless cries of the original and genuine and well, the primitive inhabitants. The love interest is unorthodox and endearing but does not catch the intense rapport of Jack and Rose in Titanic. It’s even unfair to compare the two but then Mr Cameron has spent half a billion dollars in making a flick replete with advanced digital imagery and the effect is spectacular. Shall I take my hat off to him ? Okkk, yes, but, he scores and he misses.
A movie which costs as much as advertised ought not to have even a hint of what’s seen or heard in the public domain. “I see you” is a greeting by the Matable tribe in Africa and the bush men of the Kalahari. The emotional connect between the warrior Na’vi and the colourful raptors they fly are strongly reminiscent of similar relationship of dragon riders of ‘Eragon ‘. It looks great in the movie but faintly disappointing. He has spun a believable yarn and was almost there but not quite. Maybe the proposed sequel is better.

Friday 18 December 2009

Movie Review-Rocket Singh-Salesman of The Year

Powered by: Chakpak.com Rocket Singh 

It’s only after the classic Jeewan Mrityu that I have seen a Bollywood movie showing a Sikh adorned with an appropriately tied turban. ”Singh is King” did show a heartening glimpse of Akshay Kumar in a traditional turban but then those shots were of the Punjab heartland and then they ruined it all by making him wear a cap like head gear for the rest of the movie. The makers of Rocket Singh seem to have researched a bit and a big hug to them for that. Another collective vote of thanks from the Punjabi consciousness is in order for not making the movie’s two Sikh characters of the Balle Balle and the Pairee Pauna variety. Aaarrrrgh, it gets my goat every time. A sober, quietly submissive, urbane but a resolute Sikh in a Bollywood feature? This was a first from Mumbai and I hope we get many more of them. The poor fellas are grossly misunderstood the world over but none more than by their own countrymen. Okay, politics over and now let’s get back to business.
Rocket Singh- Salesman of the Year is actually Harpreet Singh Bedi, a young lad full of beans and keen to make a place for himself under the sun. His shoulders are unburdened by the bare pass marks through his school and college days. Percentages between the 30s and the 40s are cheerfully rattled off to bewildered listeners while maintaining a supremely confident demeanour. That’s a typical surdy boy for you. So what does a young, over confident, under scoring and barely qualifying lad hope to become? You guessed it! He also gets the job but there is a slight problem. Our man has a conscience, a commodity steadily disappearing from our lives. His unwillingness to succumb to the scheming wheeling and dealing ways of the conventional salesmen sees him warming his chair in his office while his targets are distributed to his grumbling colleagues. They respond by jibing and throwing paper planes (rockets) at him. This and the frustration of forced inactivity propel him to independently make his own foray into the cut throat world of sales. Most of such stories have happy endings and this one is no exception.
The story is refreshing and the narrative engrossing. It’s almost childlike in its effort to reinforce the values taught in the moral science classes in school and why not? Today’s single minded pursuit of money and power (or was it always like that?) does make us gloss over some innate qualities of a good human being. Epithets like honesty, respect, transparency are usually met with tolerant and cynical smiles. Rocket Singh brings home the importance of these timeless values.
His partners in crime are just as refreshing. Giri, the porn loving service engineer epitomises the smarty pants technical expert whose real skill lies in shafting the customers. Ah, it was so familiar. In my working environment this species is striking gold even when the sun stands eclipsed. Mishra ji, the office peon contemptuously referred to as “Cup Plate” who assists as the service engineer in assembling computers. Koena, the sexy receptionist who gets passed over for a promotion and retaliates by joining the competition. And Rathore, the arch type go getter sales dude who decides to reinvent himself as the honest salesman. Shazahn, daughter of Alyque Padamsee and Sharon Prabhakhar makes her debut as the hero’s love interest besides being his first customer. But she does little beyond looking cute and kisses the bearded beau with touching regularity.
The soundtrack consists of fifteen songs most of which are very listenable but surprisingly the movie is populated by excerpts of only three which is hind sight may not be such a bad idea after all. Hindi movies need to go beyond the song and dance routine. Focus on the back ground score and use the songs for the promos.
My take? The movie is a great one time watch and Ranbir Kapoor strikes again. Way to go Surdy Boy!