Category: Hindi

  • Satyajit Ray’s ‘Apu’ trilogy among top films in Asia: Busan Filmfest

    Satyajit Ray’s ‘Apu’ trilogy among top films in Asia: Busan Filmfest

    NEW DELHI: Indian cine craftsman Satyajit Ray’s Apu trilogy stands at the fifth place in the top ten films in Asia drawn up during the 20th Busan International Film Festival.

    In a separate list of the top ten directors, Ray again figures at the fifth place.

    Ray is the only Indian filmmaker to have won an Oscar for Lifetime Achievement, and the Oscar Committee had come to Kolkata to give him his honour as he was ill at the time. He passed away in April 1992 at the age of 71.

    The top film is Tokyo Story from Japan whose director Ozu Yasujiro features at the top in the director’s list.

    The ‘Asian Cinema 100’ for the Special Programme in Focus this year at the Festival aims to celebrate its history and is a collaboration project with the Festival and the Busan Cinema Centre to shed light on the values of Asian film. 

    The list will be updated every five years to act as a guide for the aesthetic value and history of Asian cinema and to discover hidden masterpieces and talented directors of Asia.

    For the project, 73 prominent film professionals included film critics such as Jonathan Rosenbaum, Tony Rayns, Hasumi Shigehiko, and festival executives, programmers, and directors Mohsen Makhmalbaf, Bong Joon-ho, and Apichatpong Weerasethakul. 

    They recommended their top 10 films, resulting in 113 selections and 106 directors (including joint rankings) for the final 100 list.

    Akira Kurosawa had two films in the top 10 list that included Rashomon (1950) in second place and Seven Samurai (1954) at sixth place. 

    The top 10 (a total of 11 films) will screen under Asian Cinema 100. A special book containing the details and reviews of the films on the list by 29 film professionals will be published during the Festival.

    Interestingly, Close Up from Iran is listed at the eleventh number, while its popular director Abbas Kiarostami figures at number three in the Directors List. 

    There are three Japanese films and two films each from China and Taiwan in the list of eleven films.

    The Apu Trilogy (Satyajit Ray, 1955) depicts the life of Apu in Pather Panchali (1955), Aparajito; (1956), and Apur Sansar (1959). A masterpiece that realistically and placidly portrays Indian society. Ray is called a master of Asian film as well as the father of Indian cinema.

    [Special Program in Focus: Asian Cinema 100 – Top 10 Screening List (11 total, including joint ranking]

     [Special Program in Focus: Asian Cinema 100 – Top 10 Directors (including joint ranking]

  • Ajay Devgn’s ‘Drishyam’ declared tax free in UP

    Ajay Devgn’s ‘Drishyam’ declared tax free in UP

    MUMBAI: The Ajay Devgn starrer Drishyam, which is directed by Nishikant Kamat, has been declared tax free in the state of Uttar Pradesh (UP).

     

    The film got a go-ahead for the supplementary budget proposal and was declared tax free in the state at a recent cabinet meeting.

     

    Having Drishyam declared tax free in a major state like UP, which is a huge market for the distributors, watching the movie will surely help facilitate and increase the viewing access for the common people of the state.

     

    Meanwhile the movie continues to stay steady at the box office.

     

    A Panorama Studios & Viacom 18 Motion Pictures Production, Drishyam also stars Tabu.

  • Box Office: ‘Bangistan’ bombs; ‘Bajrangi Bhaijaan’ crosses Rs 300 crore

    Box Office: ‘Bangistan’ bombs; ‘Bajrangi Bhaijaan’ crosses Rs 300 crore

    MUMBAI: Coming from a production house, which is known to churn out quality films, Bangistan fails to deliver. Produced by Farhan Akhtar and Ritesh Sidhwani’s Excel Entertainment, the movie was expected to be a commercial entertainer. However, Bangistan, inspired from a British film Four Lions – about four waylaid terrorists, is an utterly senseless film exhibiting total lack of the film medium. The film managed to put together just about Rs 1 crore on its opening Friday and despite expected improvement over Saturday and Sunday, the first weekend collections stand at a measly Rs 3.35 crore.

     

    On the other hand, Jaanisar, was marketed as ‘From the maker of Umrao Jaan’ and to his credit, Muzaffar Ali did make Umrao Jaan and Gaman, two hugely appreciated films. However, his latest lacks the purpose and the human interest story that his previous two films had. This film lacks identification for any kind of audience, as a result of which, meets with a disastrous fate at the box office: no takers.

     

    Ajay Devgn’s experiment with a family thriller sans action, Drishyam, does not quite work despite all three of its previous versions in Malayalam (original), Telugu and Tamil remakes making their mark at the box office as well as with critics. While critics stayed divided over handing out stars in ratings to the film, ticket buyers remained mostly indifferent. Except Devgn, that too not the way his fans like to see him, the rest came as a patch up job.  You make an economical film but admission rates remain the same at the cinema halls and audiences expect their money’s worth. After an opening weekend of Rs 27.6 crore including collections from paid previews on Thursday before regular release, the film ended its first week with Rs 41.3 crore.

     

    Masaan could muster praise from the critics as well as few who paid to watch it but not enough to register at the box office. It added Rs 1.05 crore to its first week figures taking its two-week total to Rs 3.45 crore.

     

    Bajrangi Bhaijaan still holds sway over the audience also getting some repeat footfalls as it collects over Rs 29.4 crore in its third week. This takes the film’s three-week tally to Rs 301.45 crore.

     

    Bahubali: The Beginning (Hindi- Dubbed) continues to do well during its fourth week. The film has added Rs 10.9 crore to take its four-week tally to Rs 98.85 crore.

  • Mukta Arts signs MoU with Foxconn Technology

    Mukta Arts signs MoU with Foxconn Technology

    MUMBAI: Mukta Arts’ Whistling Woods International has signed an agreement with Foxconn Technology Group for setting up a Media Lab at the film school.

     

    As part of the agreement, Foxconn Technology Group will supply equipment to Whistling Woods Institute at Goregaon, Mumbai. The two will work together to create a high quality content hub at Whistling Woods in Film City, Mumbai.

     

    The duo, as part of the agreement, is looking at producing content jointly by using the talent coming out of Whistling Woods Institute. “However, the talks are at preliminary stage and no details for the same are finalised so far,” the company said in a statement to BSE.

  • YRF to screen ‘DDLJ’ in Japan

    YRF to screen ‘DDLJ’ in Japan

    MUMBAI: Yash Raj Films’ Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge (DDLJ) will be screened at the South Asian Gallery of the National Museum of Ethnology in Osaka, Japan.

     

    This marks yet another milestone in the movie’s 20th year of uninterrupted run.

     

    One of the world’s largest museums, the National Museum of Ethnology will screen DDLJ at the Indian Films Special Screening event with new Japanese subtitles as part of celebrating the renewal of its South Asian gallery as well as the 20th year anniversary of the iconic film. Patrons will also be able to enjoy many of YRF’s iconic movie posters on display.

     

    Aditya Chopra’s epic romance starring Shah Rukh Khan and Kajol is the only Hindi film to be screened at the festival, which is designed to showcase the best films from all Indian languages.

  • ‘Bangistan’: Just a whimper

    ‘Bangistan’: Just a whimper

    MUMBAI: When a comedy is attempted in Hindi films, one is very sceptical, since we don’t have decent writers in general, let alone humour writers. And, in a scenario where there are no writers for comedy, the inspiration needs to come from other sources, a la foreign films. 

    Bangistan has been ‘inspired’ by a British film titled Four Lions, a crisp comedy about four UK-based wannabe jihadists.

    The land of Bangistan is divided into two parts, North and South, representing Muslim and Hindu dominance, respectively. While Riteish Deshmukh belongs to a jihadi family in North, sports a longish beard and does his worshipping as required, he is also educated and works for a call centre using an English pseudonym. However, when one client calls finds out he is actually a Muslim, he abuses and calls him a terrorist. Riteish is disheartened and gives up his job. 

    Pulkit Samrat represents South Bangistan. He is a staunch devotee of a religious head-cum-political leader who heads a party called Maa Ka Dal. Elections are round the corner and this guru-cum-politico needs some riots, which are not happening thanks to a Hindu and a Muslim religious head, Shiv Subramaniyam and Tom Alter, who preach harmony and peace. 

    There is an international peace conference, which is due to be held in Krakow, Poland, where religious heads of all sorts will gather (there are 4200 religions in the world, it seems). The jihadis and South Bangistan guru-politician may have different ideologies but in this case they think alike. Both want to bomb the conference through suicide bombers. One can’t figure out how a bombing in distant Poland will help a local, small-time politician win an election nor as to how it will help a nondescript jihadi family. And neither side wants to claim credit since the jihadis sends their volunteer as a Hindu while the guru- politician sends his man as a Muslim to blame the incident on Muslims. 

    The Muslim candidate in the guise of a Hindu is Riteish while the Hindu posing as a Muslim is Pulkit. Both end up at the same Polish airport at the same time. While Pulkit is a freewheeling guy, Riteish, though feigning to be a Hindu is a hard-core Muslim at heart. When he sees Muslims, including Pulkit, being taken away from the immigration queue for a thorough search, Riteish reacts as to why only Muslims are considered terrorists. This stand of his continues through the film. 

    Both check-in to a same accommodation, which is supposed to be the cheapest in town at 200 Zloty. Their rooms are separated only by a ceiling with a huge hole. Both have already become friends at the airport (which is the undoing of this film among many other things). As the film progresses, the two bond like childhood friends instead of playing a game of one-upmanship a la Spy vs. Spy (famous MAD magazine strip).

    The rest is not worth telling as the film goes from banal to juvenile. The original, Four Lions was a mere 97 minute while this one stretches to 124 minutes for no reason! 

    The scripting is immature and direction complies (the director, Karan Anshuman, is a former film critic). There is no help from songs and only one song shows money spent with a group of dancers. Dialogue is mediocre. So are editing and background score. 

    While Riteish underplays, Pulkit shines. Jacqueline Fernandez gets about two and half scenes and a song.

    Bangistan is a mess of a film with no hope at the box office. 

    Producers: Farhan Akhtar, Ritesh Sidhwani

    Director: Karan Anshuman

    Cast: Riteish Deshmukh, Pulkit Samrat, Jacqueline Fernandez, Zachary Coffin, Shiv Subramaniyam, Tom Alter, Arya Babbar

    ‘Jaanisaar’: Lifeless

    In his career spanning almost four decades as a filmmaker, Muzaffar Ali has attempted a total of seven films and has four released films to his credit. His debut with Gaman was impressive and the film that earned him laurels was Umrao Jaan. Both boasted of immortal music in lyric and songs. Ali tried to take up a social cause with Aagman, a film about exploitation of UP sugarcane farmers of Awadh, which did not quite work. Umrao Jaan was about that region and now, Ali’s latest, Jaanisaar is also about Awadh. 

    The story goes back to what is now called the first war of independence, in 1857. Among those killed by the British in this war were the mother and father of Imran Abbas. The British and Queen Victoria select Abbas to train him, educate him in Britain to make his a pucca sahib so he does not become another rebel leader like his father! 

    Abbas is now grown up and back in India with a British mindset, to the extent that he even thinks his father was a traitor and served his British masters. He has been brainwashed. He has no issues with that since he plans to do the same. Abbas’s maternal grandfather, Dalip Tahil is taking care of the state while he is away. When he realises that Abbas is totally angrez, he decides to instill some local language and culture in him. To this end, he sends him to a kotha run by Beena Kak where Abbas falls in love with one of the dancers, Pernia Qureshi. It seems to be a norm in Ali’s films, if not in Awadh, for royals to fall in love with tawaifs. Pernia falls in love too without any preamble.

    While, Abbas and Pernia are busy romancing, the shots are called by the local British agent, Carl Wharton, who treats his wife like dirt and the only way he enjoys his sex is through sadomachism, his imagination being limited to almost strangling his wife in the process. She in turn, enjoys leering at Indian royals. Carl, the sadist, loves to kill people and collect his victims’ finger as a souvenir. This has nothing to do with the main plot except to suggest how bad the British were to no effect.

    Abbas’ grand father plots to separate Abbas and Pernia. Some futile emotional scenes follow and both are back together again after Abbas finds her in the care of Muzzafar Ali, who is also a rebel and colleague of his father in the war of independence and a mentor of Pernia, who has been training in some sort of lathi wielding. Ali, Abbas and Pernia decide to take the war to Carl’s door through, which they think they will destroy the British Raj.

    The climax ends in a Wild West sequence where Carl is riding on a train when the duo and Ali along with his gang decide to ambush him. 

    As far as story, script, direction are concerned, this film is a total let down. Even a newspaper report would be more interesting than this 124-minute torturous saga. If music was the heart and soul of Gaman (Jaidev) and Umrao Jaan (Khayyam), here Ali takes it upon himself to compose songs, and it is just another drawback. In nutshell, there is nothing working for this film.

    There is nothing to performances as well since they are all bad, except, to an extent, Kak, who makes an effort. Most don’t even fit the roles assigned. 

    Jaanisaar is poor in all respects and will find it hard to attract the audience.

    Producer: Meera Ali

    Director: Muzaffar Ali

    Cast: Imraan Abbas, Pernia Qureshi, Dalip Tahil, Carl Wharton, Beena Kak, Muzaffar Ali

  • Anurag Kashyap and Zeishan Quadri team up for ‘Meeruthiya Gangsters’

    Anurag Kashyap and Zeishan Quadri team up for ‘Meeruthiya Gangsters’

    MUMBAI: Anurag Kashyap and Zeishan Quadri, who have earlier worked together in Gangs of Wasseypur 1 & 2 series, have come together yet again for Meeruthiya Gangsters.
     

    While Quadri has directed the film, Kashyap has edited it. It was in the process of editing the film that Kashyap found the script very interesting and hence decided to present the film too. 
     

    Kashyap, who has already worn the director’s and producer’s hats has now stepped into the editor’s shoes with Meeruthiya Gangsters and will also be active for all the  promotional activities and events for the film. 

    Kashyap will launch the first trailer of the movie in the first week of August.

    “When Zeishan invited me to see the first cut, I kind of made an excuse, because I was scared I might not like it. Then Vasan Bala called me and said he was blown by it. Then I went and saw it and was not just surprised but completely taken in by it. Vasan and I sat with him and gave our feedback. The film is so funny and edgy and also so contemporary. A modern India that’s developing in the shadows of shopping malls and aspirations and need to be rich overnight. I loved the film and so decided to come on board. You see the film and you can see where the characters of Wasseypur came from,” said Kashyap.

  • Eminent film historian Feroze Rangoonwala passes away

    Eminent film historian Feroze Rangoonwala passes away

    NEW DELHI: Eminent film historian Feroze Rangoonwala, credited with having written the highest number of books on Indian cinema, is no more.

     

    Rangoonwala passed away at his residence in Mumbai earlier this week, aged 77, of prolonged sickness. 

     

    He has left behind a wealth of information on Indian cinema, particularly at a time when efforts are on to save cinematic material for archival purposes.

     

    Rangoonwala was best known for creating the first book of Indian filmography in 1969, Indian Film Index, and his magnum opus, Pictorial History of Indian Cinema, which for its period of issue had a record run in printing. Its Russian translation led to Indian cinema being introduced to the big Soviet readership, which loved Indian films. The book also saw multiple printings.

     

    It came about five years after Indian Film written by an American film historian Erik Barnouw and Indian filmmaker S Krishnaswamy, which was the other major book on Indian cinema at that time.

     

    Rangoonwala wrote 15 major books spanning a career of five decades. These included Indian cinema, Past and Present in 1983, and several monographs on different film personalities including those on filmmakers Guru Dutt and Bimal Roy – some written for the National Film Archives of India. Other books include Satyajit Ray’s ArtSeventy-five years of Indian cinema, and Bharatiya Chalchitra Itihas.

     

    He started as a film publicist in Mumbai in the early 1950s, and soon created a major hobby into a scholastic career. He also collected a large number of film posters and rare photographs. His knowledge of the film industry made him a much sought after person to sit in both international and Indian film juries.

     

    Unfortunately Rangoonwala remained least acknowledged by the Indian government circles and did not receive any accolades.

     

    Rangoonwala finally called it a day in 2006, as illness dogged him.

     

    He sold off his entire collection of Indian cinema memorabilia to a collector of film history and retreated into private life. He also donated some rare photographs from cinema to the National Film Archives of India.

  • Sonakshi to play lead in biopic on Dawood Ibrahim’s sister Haseena Parkar

    Sonakshi to play lead in biopic on Dawood Ibrahim’s sister Haseena Parkar

    NEW DELHI: Actress Sonakshi Sinha will soon be seen in her very first biopic, which is based on the controversial story of Haseena Parkar, the late sister of Mumbai underworld don Dawood Ibrahim.

     

    Although Ibrahim has 12 siblings, she was the closest to him but died in 2014 having suffered a heart attack.

     

    Her intriguing story is now being made into a film that is being produced by Mubina Rattonsey and directed by Apoorva Lakhia.

     

    Titled Haseena – The Queen of Mumbai, the film is expected to raise eyebrows.

     

    It will cover 40 years of the emotional saga of Haseena and what it meant to be Dawood Ibrahim’s sister.

     

    Lakhia is known for his love for making biopics on underworld dons. The film will roll out for shooting early next year. 

  • Box Office: ‘Drishyam’ collects Rs 27.6 crore; ‘Bajrangi Bhaijaan’ going strong

    Box Office: ‘Drishyam’ collects Rs 27.6 crore; ‘Bajrangi Bhaijaan’ going strong

    MUMBAI: Much touted, successful in its Malayalam, Telugu and Tamil versions, Drishyam carried some expectations in the trade but, with only Ajay Devgn in the top billing, the film could not draw the expected audience. Despite praise from the critics, word of mouth failed to do much for the film. 

     

    Drishyam opened at little over Rs 5 crore on Friday and, as expected, did show some improvement on Saturday and got better on Sunday. However, despite its economical making and saving on casting, the weekend figures had Rs 27.6 crore to show including paid previews on Thursday. This being not up to the mark, much will depend on how the film holds through the rest of the week.

     

    Masaan, critically acclaimed film as well as a Cannes awardee, could not do much at the box office. Awards of any kind don’t really matter to the Indian audience. The film collected a measly Rs 2.4 crore in its first week.

     

    On the other hand, Salman Khan’s Bajrangi Bhaijaan maintained a strong trend even in its second week. The film has become a rage all over and Khan’s docile character without action has found much appreciation. What’s more, the film’s climax has been winning the audiences’ hearts. The film added a fantastic Rs 87.2 crore in its second week to take its two week tally to Rs 272.05 crore. 

     

    Baahubali: The Beginning (Hindi-Dubbed) continues its strong run notwithstanding strong opposition from Bajrangi Bhaijaan. The film is already the highest grossing Hindi dubbed film ever and looking at the trend it will most likely also be the first dubbed film to make it to Rs 100 crore club. The film has collected Rs 21.7 crore in its third week, which is barely Rs 3 crore less than its second week. This takes the film’s three week total to Rs 87.95 crore.