Monday, 12 March 2012

Review: Kahaani - Subhash K. Jha

This is a great time to be a movie buff. Within a week of Paan Singh Tomar, which should incontestably win Irrfan Khan the National Award for best actor, comes Kahaani in which Vidya Balan is so flawlessly resplendent that one suspects the next year's National Award too is already reserved for her. Dirty deeds forgotten.

Playing Vidya Bagchi, a non-resident Indian (NRI) who lands in Kolkata heavily pregnant and immeasurably distressed by the disappearance of her husband, Vidya Balan doesn't hit a single false note in the entire graph of her character's fascinating journey.

Kahaani is not an ordinary thrill-a-minute film about a search for a missing person. It's a lot more. Bringing a virgin vitality to the suspense drama, the film strikes a captivating balance between realism in art and the art of courting realism, without losing the entertainment quotient.

From the moment Vidya lands in Kolkata, the colour, vibrancy, bustle and jostle that are peculiar to Kolkata assail your senses. It's a claustrophobic yet liberating world of intrigue and deception. A pungent flavour of anxiety and stress qualify the narration from frame one.

Sujoy Ghosh, whose earlier films gave us no clue of the ingenuity that he displays here with such ostensible casualness, cuts the footage with razor sharp economy, leaving no sign of the surgery involved in leaving behind scenes and putting together a tale that pays homage to Hitchcock even while it tilts its topi to the detective films of Satyajit Ray.

The complexities of metropolitan life emerge in a kind of bridled flurry. Within a few minutes of Vidya's landing in Kolkata we know her search for her missing husband is not going to be a cake-walk. Yes, we will see this spirited woman's pursuit of the truth to the end.

Ghosh crafts a tale of devious dynamics that do not make a song and dance of their cloak-and-dagger intentions. The narrative doesn't whip up a lather of anxieties. Stock devices of the suspense genre are here thrown meaningfully into the Hooghly. The relevance and resonance of Vidya's journey into the dark unrevealed bowel of India's secret service emerge in illuminating details created in Vidya's character which add up finally to a jigsaw where not a single piece is out of place.

The end-game, shot in an exquisite eruption of Durga Puja's compelling colours, is so unexpected, it is bound to leave even the most diehard cynics with a sense of satiated suspense.

Indeed so clever is the writing and so stunning yet convincing the denouement that one was persuaded into wondering whether Sujoy Ghosh filched the material from some unidentifiable source.

While it would be criminal to give away any of the plot details it would be in the scope of permissible praise to say the writing is clearly not meant to strew red herrings in our way. As we go back to the film, at the end we see every detail, every twist and turn in the plot was meant to be a coherent pointer to the complete picture.

Ghosh's masterful story-telling leaves no room to doubt the existence of a rather unforgiving God who charts a seemingly cruel destiny for the unsuspecting individual.

Vidya's portrayal of grace under pressure is so measured and skilled, one at times wonders if she was actually watching herself perform from a distance to make sure she didn't take her character's distress into the kingdom of melodrama.

Vidya Balan has splendid support from actors who merge into the Kolkatan conundrum with the seamless inevitability of people who accept extraordinary circumstances as part of life's ordinary patterns.

Impressive in his own right is Parambrata Chattopadhyay as Vidya's pillar of support from within an establishment that insists on throwing her off the track.

Parambrata plays his gentle character with such tender affection that you begin to believe goodness is not an extinct commodity.

Nawazuddin Sidiqqui, that brilliant actor from Kabir Khan's New York and last week's Paan Singh Tomar, brings a steely-sharp ruthlessness to his investigative officer's role.

In one of Vidya's best sequences where she quietly tells him to keep his menacing advice to himself, Nawazuddin steps back to let the lady have her moment of glory, unhampered.

Vidya Balan takes centrestage with great skill and restrained pride. Her laughter of joy when she bonds with the chai-wallah kid (Ritobroto Mukherjee) and her final breakdown sequence bring her close to the cathartic emotions that Shabana Azmi displays.

Vidya displays a rare understanding of her character's exacerbated emotional and physical state. Luckily for her, her co-actors display no outward or inward signs of insecurity in playing roles that are designed to be supremely supportive.

Veteran Bengali actors unknown to Hi-Fi (Hindi Film Industry), such as Saswata Mukherjee as a hired assassin and Kharaj Mukherjee as a kindly podgy cop, fill up the edges of the comprehensive lucid portrait of a woman with a mission, without crowding the canvas.

Kahaani is one of those rare films that can easily lay claim to being a game-changer. And yet the narrative makes no claims. The destiny of the protagonist is charted in a breathless sweep of urgently persuasive episodes that tumble out as though God wrote Vidya Bagchi's screenplay.

Enthralling, absorbing and engaging the narrative never resorts to italicized emotions to get our attention. We are hooked unconditionally from scene one. We surrender to Vidya's journey. She gives us no choice.
Source:NDTV

Wednesday, 9 March 2011

Sonakshi makes way for Kamal



Sonakshi had the offer to star in a south film with Kamal Haasan. Now she has signed on the dotted line agreeing to play the South superstar’s wife. She will sport two looks in the film — Indian and Western. She leaves later this month for a 45 day schedule to London. The film is said to be an Indian version of Anthony Hopkins and Julianne Moore’s Hannibal. To accommodate the film that takes off this month, she had to bow out off a few other projects. Her schedule is a mess right now, and she actress will now have to work overtime when she returns to Mumbai. The actress confirms, “I’m happy that an actor of his caliber has noticed my performance and wants me to share screen space with him. I've grown up watching films of his like Sadma, Ek Duje Ke Liye, Appu Raja and Chachi 420 and have immensely appreciated his performances. Things always manage to fall into place for me as has this. I landed up with this film during a break after the first schedule of Joker so it was all very convenient for me.”
Source:TOI

Aadesh’s new collaboration

Aadesh Srivastava is on a high these days. After several foreign collaborations with noted international artistes, he has upped the ante yet again. Says Aadesh, “Hip hop star T Pain and me collaborated on a new track and are jointly going to release a club track worldwide and its totally for the youth and very upbeat in nature. We recorded the song in the Hit Factory studios in Miami. I have nothing but praises for T Pain. He’s such a trained singer and has a very high pitch and is totally dedicated to his craft. The track has a working title but we have yet to firm up a pucca title. We recorded it in November.”
Source:TOI

Shahana’s a criminal?

Shahana Goswami has a penchant for finding roles that stand out and she is hoping that her character in Game, Tisha Khanna, will wow all. “It is a very different character that I’m playing. It’s grey. I play a crime reporter, who has wasted a lot of time in her life because of the unsettling past. She drinks too. Suddenly, she gets a call to cover a big scoop and gets drawn into the plot of the film. And then someone gets killed. Because of my traits, people might think that I’m incapable of killing someone but are they right? Do they know me? That’s the kind of thriller the film is and I love the twists and turns and the screenplay. The story really drew me to the film and I immediately said yes to it,” the acclaimed actor says. Meanwhile, she also reveals that she is a sucker for thrillers. “I have always loved the genre. It just grips me and gets me going and I have read a lot of them too.”
Source:TOI

Actor Udita Goswami speaks about her Hollywood experience, moving bag and baggage to Los Angeles, Mohit Suri and much more

Now that you are back from Los Angeles, tell us how was the experience? 
It’s been two days since I’m in India and trust me I already want to go back there. I had a wonderful time.


So was the trip productive in anyway? Absolutely. I was supposed to be there for 21 days but I ended up staying for two months. I had a lot of work lined up for me in India. But when I was invited to the Oscar week festivities, which is a big deal there, I decided to stay on. Honestly, I thought it is a once in a lifetime chance and I shouldn’t miss it. Thanks to my stay there, I met a lot of people from Hollywood, hired a manager, publicist and lawyer. So it was extremely productive. 


So are you planning to shift base now? Yes. I have plans of going back there in August or September. I have done my groundwork. I’ve looked at places I could shift to and plan to take driving lessons. My secretary here almost wanted to kill me when I was delaying my return to Mumbai because I was having so much fun there. The only reason that I’m back in India is to work on my American accent. 


Considering most of our top actors have failed to make a splash in Hollywood films, why are you willing to take such a risk? 
For someone like me, who hardly does any work here, I think it’s a good idea to move to LA. The thing that works for me there is that I don’t look Indian. Here, this was my biggest disadvantage because my looks didn’t fall in the Vidya, Rani and Konkona bracket. The kind of roles that I have been offered in Hollywood is of the exotic variety. I could pass off as a Spanish woman according to them. Plus there aren’t many Indian roles happening in English movies. Since I don’t have the typical‘Indian beauty’ look and don’t have much work here, I don’t see the reason why I shouldn’t move there. 


Back home, reportedly your ex Mohit Suri and Vishal Mahadkar came to blows over you. Mohit has blamed Vishal for his split with you. It’s very strange. I just got back two days ago and here I am reading about this in the papers. It is interesting to know that two men are fighting over me. But let anyone fight, I don’t care anymore. 


Buzz has it that you have become very pally with actor Gerard Butler, who was rumored to be dating Priyanka Chopra? Why just Gerard? I’ve made friends with a lot of folks from Hollywood. I’m in touch with them constantly. I discovered that they are a lot sweeter and simpler than many of our B-Town people. Plus, I’m not into the name dropping game. You don’t go to a private party and micro-blog your pictures from there — with Gerard or any other celeb. It’s cheap and tacky.
Source:TOI

Saturday, 5 March 2011

Charity begins at home for Asin

Whatever her charitable activities are, actor Asin and her family maintain that they would rather be quiet about it. Asin had previously initiated an eye check-up camp in strife-torn Sri Lanka and also runs a school for the under-privileged in India.
"Asin has never really spoken about her charitable activities because she believes that these things are not an ideal way to grab headlines. So, even if she is doing something for the poor, she feels that she would rather not talk about it," says her father Joseph Thottumkal.


According to Joseph, Asin does believe in charity and turns to lend support to several organisations from time to time. "She believes in doing something for the poor and we are happy that she thinks that way. She has our full support. But we are happy about the fact that she chooses not to talk about it. It's a value that she treasures," her father adds. Asin has reportedly ear-marked a small portion of her income towards charitable causes, which is regularly sent towards the institutions that she backs.

Source:DNA

'Yamla Pagla Deewana' sequel on: Bobby




After the stupendous success of comedy caper Yamla Pagla Deewana, actor Bobby Deol has revealed that work on the sequel to the film has started.
"We are definitely coming out with a sequel to the film, it's a dream for us to make a sequel but the work is still on so I can't say much about it. Meanwhile, I am just enjoying the success of the film," Bobby said at the launch of model-turned-actors Milind Soman and Rahul Dev's fitness and spa centre Breathe at South Extension in New Delhi on Friday.
The film saw all the three Deols Sunny, Bobby and their father veteran actor Dharmendra tickling audiences' funny bones with their impeccable comic timing.
Since Bobby was not well he made a brief appearance at the launch and left early. "I have not been keeping well for sometime but Rahul is a very good friend of mine and I had promised him that I would come. I didn't want to disappoint him, so I am here," Bobby said. Although Milind was missing from the launch, Rahul along with his younger brother actor Mukul Dev made sure that they attended all their guests personally.
Source:IANS