Category: Hindi

  • Entries open for NFDC Film Bazaar at IFFI 2017

    NEW DELHI: The National Film Development Corporation (NFDC), which hosts the Film Bazaar during the International Film Festival of India in November in Panaji, has invited entries for the 11th edition of NFDC Film Bazaar Co-Production Market

    The co-production market is for feature film projects with South Asian themes. The regular deadline for the entries is 7 August 2017 but it has been extended to 21 August 2017. The Bazaar will be held from 20 November 2017, the day the festival opens, and close on 24 November 2017.  

    Projects selected for the market will have the opportunity to forge international co-productions, find financial and artistic support, and network with Indian and international film professionals.

    Apart from the co-production market, the Bazaar also has regular market screenings, pitching meets and workshops on different aspects of film trade and film-making.

    Also Read: Monsoon Filmfest: NFDC launches weekly radio programme

    Cannes delegates apprised of opportunities in Indian film industry

  • Munna Michael….. Just a passable affair!

    Munna Michael follows the formula of musical films about disco dancers made during 1980s to the core. You know, the kind of films Mithun Chakraborty was identified with! Such films also provided ample scope for action. Dances were the mainstay of these films. Action and romance followed. But this time TV serials related to dance competitions replace the disco dancing.

    An infant is left in a garbage dump. A dejected Michael (Ronit Roy), just thrown out of a dance group after being told he had passed his ‘best before’ date, is walking home drowning his sorrows in alcohol when he notices this infant. He brings him home and decides to tend to him. Not able to think of a name for him, he just calls him Munna (Tiger Shroff) who later adds Ronit’s character name, Michael, as his father’s name. Munna has an ear for music. As an infant, whenever he cried, all that his father had to do was to play music and the child would stop crying.

    Munna takes to dancing from the beginning. He dances his way through the school and later, as a grown up, rules the clubs. But soon, after an influential lad loses to Munna, he is banned from all Mumbai clubs.

    Munna moves to Delhi and it is time to introduce the baddies. Munna has an altercation with some goons. One of them happens to be the brother of Mahinder Fauji (Nawazuddin Siddiqui), a big time land-grabber don of Delhi. Mahinder is supposed to be a strongman and, hence, his introduction is through a fight he is involved in with a bunch of musclemen.

    Like all dons, Mahinder can’t bear his brother being defeated by anybody. He soon sets out to settle the score with Munna. When he spots Munna, he sees him dancing. Mahinder is impressed with what he sees. Mahinder can’t dance at all but it is his weakness because he is in silent love with Dolly (Nidhi Agerwal) who dances in a local hotel. He asks Munna to teach him to dance within a month. Because, Mahinder wants to dance with Dolly and impress her on Valentine’s Day. Munna accepts this impossible job since the money offered is good.

    Meanwhile, the musclemen whom Mahinder had beaten up take him by surprise when he is alone and just when they are about to kill him, Munna turns up and saves his life. Much obliged, Mahinder makes Munna his brother.

    Forty minutes into the film and it is time to introduce the girl. Mahinder takes Munna to see Dolly dance and later makes him his personal courier boy to deliver gifts and messages to Dolly. As usually happens in films, Dolly starts loving Munna. Wanting Dolly to be close to him, Mahinder offers Dolly the job to dance in his own hotel and also gifts her with a flat and a car.

    But, Mahinder’s brother spoils things by trying to molest Dolly and she runs away to Mumbai. Mahinder asks Munna to find her. As expected, he finds her at a studio participating in a dance contest. Munna lets his dancing buddies form a group with her but keeps his dancing talents a secret from her.

    As the dance competition is entering its final stage and getting no result from Munna, Mahinder lands up in Mumbai. On learning that Munna and Dolly are a pair, angry Mahinder wants to kill both.

    The idea of making this into a love triangle does not quite work as both men, Munna and Mahinder loving the same girl. While one can watch dances, too much of same kind of action spoils the fun. There also needed to be some light moments.

    The film is passable through its first part but after interval, it goes off road many times. It is a musical fine but a couple of songs mar the pace of the film. Director Sabbir Khan has earlier worked with Munna in Heropanti and Baaghi, but counting only on his two prowesses, dance and action is not enough. Editing needed to be sharper. Musically, the dance songs are good along with the romantic number – Pyar Ho.

    Performance wise, there is not much to write about. While Munna dances well and is good in action, Mahinder is miscast. Dolly is passable.

    On the whole, Munna Michael has not been received well and the reports mar its further prospects.

     Producers: Viki Rajani

    Direcrtor: Sabbiir Khan

    Cast: Munna Shroff, Mahinder Siddiqui, DollyAgerwal.

    Lipstick Under My Burkha…….Of curtailed lives

    More and more woman oriented films are being made and, most of them try to show the bolder side of the woman or try to get into the inner self of one. Not long ago, there was a film, Parched, which juxtaposed lives of three women from Rajasthan; the film was also directed by a woman director, Leena Yadav. The film dealt with miseries of these women and how they found solace from each other’s company.

    Lipstick Under My Burkha takes up the cause of four women from Bhopal and scans through their aspirations and desires which they can’t air openly.

    The film is about male domination and the patriarchal society. So here there are four women living under the same roof. That being a crumbling mansion owned by Usha (Ratna Pathak Shah). Not much has changed really since instead of men, it is her writ that runs in this house.

    Usha’s subjects are Shireen (Konkona Sen Sharma), a mother of three with a husband played by Sushant Singh, who thinks a wife is meant only for sex and bear children; Leela (Ahana Kumra), owner of a small time beauty parlour in the locality whose sexual desires matter to her and the world be damned and where from she gets it is also immaterial to her; there is Rihana (Plabita Borthakur) who is neither here nor there stuck between her parents’ orthodox ways and her aspirations. Then, there is Usha, who has been discounted as an aunt because of her age. None thinks at her age she also could have desires, which she has.

    The title is suggestive of the hidden desires of women like a woman hidden under a burkha. They are not aired, just dreamt about.

    The thing with Lipstick Under My Burkha is that, it is a film about underprivileged small city women, not that big city women don’t suffer the same fate.

    This is a performance oriented film and while Konkona Sen Sharma, Aahana Kumra and Plabita Borthakur do very well it is Ratna Pathak Shah who hogs the limelight. The male actors are fillers.

    Despite its limited and publicity it got during the Censor controversy, Lipstick Under My Burkha has limited scope at few upmarket multiplexes.

    Producers: Prakash Jha.

    Director: Alankrita Srivastava.

    Cast: Ratna Pathak Shah, KonkonaSensharma, AahanaKumra, PlabitaBorthakur, Vikrant Massey, Sushant Singh, Shashank Arora, VaibhavTatwawaadi, Jagat Singh Solanki.

  • Saregama’s Yoodlee to target 18-30 age-group with thematic films

    MUMBAI: Popular music banner Saregama has ventured into film production through Yoodlee Films under which it will make thought-provoking and engaging content, releasing films every month. Targeting the 18-30 age group, the banner will cater to the inherent need of the audience to watch strong thematic content.

    Yoodlee has already made five films, starting with Brij Mohan Amar Rahe, which will release on 1 September. Of the five, three are in Hindi, one in English and one bilingual — Tamil and Malayalam.

    Read here for detailed report:

    Saregama to produce films under Yoodlee Films

  • Distributors’ ‘star films’ gamble backfires

    Jagga Jasoos is the latest film to release last Friday. The team of Anurag Basu and Ranbir Kappor who combined to give Barfi (2012) were expected to come up with something better. What is more, even Ranbir Kapoor had put his faith Basu and turned a co-producer in the project!

    The film, in the making since 2014, however, turned out to be a major disappointment at the box office. At some places, the early morning shows (9 am) which normally draw the college crowds because of low admission rates, had to be cancelled due to lack of audience.

    The film collected Rs 7.9 crore on day one which was not impressive since the film was given an extensive 1800-screen release. Whatever the film collected was mainly from two metros, especially Mumbai followed by Delhi with rest of the circuits being way below par and none crossing even a one crore mark on day one.

    The film did show some improvement over the weekend on Saturday and Sunday as children took to the film but, considering the public reports are negative on the film and that it needs to work its way to over Rs 200 crore (Rs 2k million) figure to break even, the figures are not at all encouraging. What is more, there has been a considerable drop on Monday.

    On Tubelight front, distributors with the principal distributor, N H Studioz, are reported to have approached Salman Khan Esq for the refund of some amounts as they have suffered huge losses. The film was reportedly sold to N H Studioz for reportedly a whopping Rs 135 crore (Rs 1350 million) which would need a recovery of Rs 325 crore. There are just few precedents of a film doing that kind of business and the gamble by the distributor backfired. The film has fallen short of the target by as much as Rs 225 crore. The Khan Esq is said to be considering the distributors’ request favourably.

    *Jagga Jasoos, a film inspired by The Adventures of Tin Tin and other sources, does not quite get the opening it should have considering the film’s cast and others in the billing. The film manages to collect 7.9 crore on its opening Friday. It improves a bit on Saturday and Sunday. The film ends its first weekend with Rs 31.3 crore. The Monday footfalls are not encouraging.

    *Mom, again a costly film compared to its face value, stands to lose big time considering it had nothing new to offer. Woman oriented action have it tough to find a slot with the Hindi audience unless backed by a solid story. They are few and far in-between. Bad for Mom that it followed in the same plot as the recently released Maatr, which stole it of its novelty. The film collected Rs 22.5 crore in its first week.

    *Guest In London fails badly ending its first week with a meagre Rs 6.7 crore.

    *Ek Haseena Thi Ek Deewana Tha adds Rs 30 lakh in its second week taking its two week total to Rs 1.35 crore.

    *Tubelight has collected Rs 80 lakh in its third week to take its three week tally to Rs 115.1 crore.

  • Jagga Jasoos – a disappointment both as a musical and as a comedy

    Describing a film as a musical is a misnomer as the genre does not exist and in any case music as we knew it has virtually ceased to exist Hindi films which have lyrics that pass off as songs.

    Jagga Jasoos takes inspiration from various sources like the popular comic series, The Adventures Of Tin Tin, Hollywood musicals of the sixties and some from India. It has described as a musical, adventure, romantic, comedy.

    Ranbir stutters in his speech.His father, Saswata Chetterjee suggests that if he converses in verse he will not stutter. That is what makes it an excuse of a musical as he rhymes all his dialogue. Adventures are aplenty but lack impact as they happen suddenly and are forced most of the time. As for comedy and romance, they are missing.

    Ranbiir Kapoor is a school student staying in a hostel (time he grows up to more mature roles if he wants his films to work) who plays jasoos (detective) on the side. His comic books are popular and a journalist, Katrina Kaif, reads them out to a bunch of children regularly. This is perhaps the longest introduction of a hero in any film!

    The film starts with the much publicised Purulia arms drop incident. Saswata, who was a sole witness to the dumpingt vanishes soon after. Getting down to tracking him, Jagga Jasoos is roped in as a result of Katrina having narrated two of his adventures to children. In one of the stories Katrina who has gone to follow the story of the arms drop, gets involved with Ranbir who is after the arms smugglers.

    This takes the film to half time in the film when Ranbir decides to trace his father. He asks Katrina to join him. In the process, they land up in Africa and realize that though the main arms dealer is some two headed man who owns a Russian circus, some of the Indian officials are also involved, including Saurabh Shukla, a government investigator.

    Shukla thinks Saswata has been killed by his men but oddly enough, is told by Ranbir that his father is very much alive and is somewhere in Africa! Why should he do that when he knows Shukla is not worthy of trust? So Ranbir along with Katrina are searching for his father while Shukla is out to eliminate them.

    The usual chase follows as Ranbir and Katrina find ways to escape like in a train, a car, a scooter or even an airplane conveniently placed for them whenever they need them.

    The film clearly has a very loose script and hinges between being a children’s film and a serious subject of arms smuggling. The director has no grip on the proceedings and there are many glitches. With just Ranbir and Katrina with a couple of unknown faces to Hindi screen, it becomes a drag and the length of 142 minute duration adds to the woes! The film being dubbed as a musical fails as only the already popular number Galti se mistake…passes muster. Cinematography is good. The climax has been rushed.

    As for performances, Ranbir Kapoor shows no improvement, and Katrina seems to be losing her charm. Saurabh Shukla does well as usual. Saswata Chetterjee does very well.

    Jagga Jasoos has taken almost three years in the making but comes up with a totally disappointing result.

    Producers: Siddharth Roy Kapoor, Ranbir Kapoor, Anurag Basu.
    Director: Anurag Basu.
    Cast: Ranbir Kapoor, Katrina Kaif, Saurabh Shukla, Saswata Chatterjee.

  • Entries invited by FFI for Oscar award consideration

    NEW DELHI: The Film Federation of India today invited entries of Indian films commercially released in India between 1 October 2016 and 30 September 2017 for the Oscar awards which will be presented in February next year.

    As in previous years, the FFI is authorized to select one film for the consideration of Oscar Award in the category “Best Foreign Language Film Award”.

    The selection committee set up for this purpose will view the films entered for selection from 16 September 2017 as the film has to be submit to the Academy not later than 1 October 2017, Secretary General Supran Sen told indiantelevision.com.

    The Producers may send their entries directly to our office in Mumbai. The conditions set are:

    1. The films must be commercially released in India between 1 October 2016 and 30 September 2017. The film must run at least for seven consecutive days.

    2. As the films released between 1 October and 30 September are eligible, the films which are slated for release on the last Friday of the month -29 September – may also be considered.

    3. One English Subtitled print/DCP and synopsis of the film must reach the venue between 10th and 14th September’ 2017. Prints received after the stipulated date will not be considered. We are finalising the venue for screening and the same will be intimated shortly.

    Clarification can be sought from FFI Secretary General Supran Sen on Mobile No. 09821095649 or Deputy Secretary Anindya Dasgupta on Mobile No.09819820020 / 022 – 2351 5513. The Fax No. is 022 – 2352 2062 and email I D is filmfed52@gmail.com

  • Hindi Movies genre grew by 1.36%, Sony Max tops with 93.9% OTS: Chrome

    MUMBAI: Hindi Movies (Hindi-speaking market) HSM (Exclusive) was the most benefitted genre with 1.36 per cent with Sony Max topping the chart with 93.9 per cent opportunity to see (OTS) in week 27, Chrome Data Analytics & Media reported.

    Next in the tally was the kids genre — all-India genre saw a growth of 0.64 per cent with Nickelodeon leading the genre with 83.6 per cent OTS on an all-India basis.

    This was followed by Hindi News-HSM Exclusive which came third with a growth of 0.64 per cent and India TV lead the chart with 99.5 per cent OTS.

    Last, but not the least, Business News was on the fourth position with 0.62 per cent in six metros with CNBC Awaaz leading the chart with 83.7 per cent OTS.

    Among the losers this week, the English News segment in six metros recorded a fall of 1.17 per cent. Loksabha TV was the most affected channel in the genre with 95.1 per cent.

    Ratings of the English GEC genre in six metros decreased by 1.12 per cent with Colors Infinity leading the genre with 47.2 per cent. In the Infotainment genre, all-India ratings dropped by 1.04 per cent with NGC leading the section with 91.3 per cent.

    Religious – HSM Exclusive and Youth genre grabbed the fourth and fifth spots, respectively, with 0.68 per cent and 0.36 per cent. Sanskar and MTV led the genre with 96.2 per cent and 91.1 per cent OTS, respectively.

  • Box Office: Mom & Guest bring solace after Tubelight fails

    Two veterans, both with a huge fan following in their peak, Sridevi in Mom and Paresh Rawal in Guest Iin London, were expected to lead the charge at the box office. If one looked at the making of both the films, the production costs looks moderate. But, what matters is how much the theatrical rights have been sold for. And, in that sense, Mom riding the crest.

    The best recent film of moderate budget to excel has been Hindi Medium which achieved a high figure of about Rs 65 crore at the domestic box office. In case of Mom, the price at which it is sold and the kind of reports it has generated, it may fall short of its target by lengths. The difference is that, while Hindi Medium was an entertainer, Mom is a designed to be heavy film. And, they are not usually worth Rs 200 to 1000 that their admission rates command. No need to say, the eventual sufferers are the cinema chains.

    Mom had an inherent drawback in that an earlier film, Raveen Tandon starrer, Maatr, was based on the same theme. Since, the films are now made for the multiplex audience, a lot of the patrons would realize that Mom is just a female version of 1974 Hollywood trendsetter, Death Wish.

    *Mom opened to very weak response on Friday despite an overambitious release strategy as it was released across more screens than the film justified. The result was that many screens showed collection in few hundreds which showed on the film’s first day collections of a bare Rs 2.4 crore (Rs 24 million). The film showed an expected rise on Saturday and Sunday. The weekend collections according to trade sources are estimates are little over Rs 10 crore (Rs 100 million) while those released by the makers are over 14 crore.

    *Guest Iin London proves a damp squib. Following in the formula of Atithi Tum Kab Jaoge, which was no great shakes in itself, the film backfires in Toto. One must be really out of sync with the realities to think that another instalment of Paresh Rawal giving a noisy outlet to his stomach problem amounted to a comedy! It is a juvenile stuff to say the least. With the first day figures of Rs 1.2 crore.

    *Ek Haseena Thi Ek Deewana Tha has had a poor run at the box office with just Rs 1.05 crore to show while the weekend collected Rs 4.2 crore.

    * Tubelight, Salman Khan’s home production, sold at an exorbitant price which needed to do a business which none of his films has done before, is a total disaster. Strange that the film won’t even manage a lifetime business of what his film Sultan did in its opening weekend. The film had collected over 180 crore in its five day extended weekend.

    The film has added Rs 10.6 crore in its second week taking its two week tally to Rs 114.3 crore.

    *Bahubali2: The Conclusion has added about Rs 30 lakh in its 10th week.

  • Guest Iin London….Forced comedy

    Guest Iin London is a kind of unofficial sequel to the director Ashwani Dhir’s own 2010 film, Atithi Tum Kab Jaoge? Paresh Rawal played the uninvited guest in Ajay Devgn house in that film. Paresh Rawal is the common factor as the guest in Guest In London. His hosts have changed, though.

    The character of Kartik Aaryan works in London and is at the mercy of his maniacal boss because if he loses his job, his visa would be cancelled, too. Kartik can’t afford this situation because he plans to settle and make a career here. He finds a solution which many Asians are known to use to get permanent visa and that is to marry a local girl.

    It seems there are intermediaries too to fix such temporary marriages. Using the services of one such, Kartik decides to marry the character of Kriti Kharbanda whose bio data has the unique distinction of having two fathers and two mothers! Ergo, she has never known true family love. For sums agreed upon, Kriti agrees to marry Kartik for a period of six months till he gets his visa.

    The authorities in the UK seem to be aware of such visa weddings so Kartik and Kriti have to present themselves in a magistrate’s court to attest that theirs is not one such arrangement. At the court, one who sees through their ploy is the character of Sanjay Mishra, a Pakistani court clerk. The wedding is to take place after 10 days. Meanwhile, Mishra turns out to be the next door neighbour of Kartik and he takes it upon himself to spy on the couple to catch their lie.

    That is when the guests, Paresh Rawal and the character of Tanvi Azmi, come into the couple’s lives. Somehow, the guests drop in at Kartik’s office on the basis that they are the neighbours of one of his uncles! They end up forcing hospitality on the couple since Kriti has also moved in.

    Initially, Kriti and Kartik find the guests useful to make their marriage pact look legit. For their selfish cause, they let the guests take over the reins of the house. Every day is a party as Paresh and Tanvi inculcate the great Indian values into the couple and the mainly their subcontinent neighbours.
    By this time, Kriti feels like she belongs and that she has a family now. She has fallen in love with Kartik and wants their wedding to be for real. That having been achieved since both love each other, the equations change. The couple finds the guests to be an impediment on their lives. They want to get rid of them.

    The justification for Paresh Rawal and Tanvi Azmi’s forcing themselves as guests on Kartik and Kriti has been summed up through an irrelevant sob story and melodrama.

    The film figures in the comedy genre and one is not meant to look for logic in comedy. The problem here is that, even after sacrificing logic, the film fails to create comedy. The scripting is poor and the comic situations are forced and, hence, fail to work. Paresh Rawal’s passing of gas with thunderous sounds is not considered comic anymore. Other attempts at comedy are juvenile. Direction is poor. There is no support from the musical score. Editing is weak. Dialogue fail to evoke laughter except when related to Mishra’s Pakistan connection. The use of Punjabi lacks the flavour.

    Performances are just about passable. Kriti and Kartik make a good pair but the makers fail to create adequate chemistry between the two. Paresh Rawal sails through the film mainly on his reputation of being a great actor; he does not add to that in this film. Tanvi Azmi’s use of Punjabi lets her down. Sanjay Mishra is good as always. Ajay Devgn’s guest appearance serves no purpose.
    Guest Iin London has had poor opening and lacks merits to improve.

    Producers: Kumar Mangat Pathak, Abhishek Pathak.

    Director: Ashwani Dhir.

    Cast: Kartik Aaryan, Kriti Kharbanda, Paresh Rawal, Sanjay Mishra, Tanvi Azmi, Ajay Devgn (Sp Appearance).

  • Mom…..Lacks thrill

    If it is Delhi, the theme of rape is acceptable. Gangrape, rather. So, the location is a given. Sometimes, the police does its best but is let down by other arms of the law and fails. Looks like in Delhi, the seat of power, various parts of the law work to defeat each other’s purpose, not to complement it.

    So, we have an old-fashioned tried-and-tested vigilante story like Charles Bronson’s Death Wish (1974). Death Wish was about a father, Bronson, taking the law into his own hands to avenge the rape and death of his daughter. The film went on to become a successful franchise with more instalments.

    Mom is one such story with an Indian touch. Here, a woman, when failed by the law to deliver her justice, turns the avenger.

    What takes the privilege away of being a rarity of the subject is the fact that not very long ago, a similar film, Maatr, starring Raveen Tandon, had hit the screens where she ventures out to avenge the rape of her daughter in the same Delhi. She also played a teacher in a school where her own daughter is a pupil.

    Mom is about Sridevi in her 300th film since her debut on screen in her childhood. Without going much into what led to what, Sridevi’s character is married to the character of Adnan Siddiqui, a widower with an 18-year-old daughter, played by Sajal Ali, from his previous marriage. The couple have another daughter, much younger.

    Sajal has not yet accepted Sridevi as her mom. She misses her biological mother, is always curt with Sridevi and calls her madam as she calls her during her school hours. Sridevi is a school teacher and Sajal also happens to be one of her pupils.

    She may be too old to be in a school at 18 but the makers don’t care for such detailing. A boy in Sajal’s class has an evil eye on her. His sending dirty video clips to her backfires. Come a Valentine’s Day party at a farmhouse, the boy makes his move but is rebuffed.

    The alternative is always a taken in Delhi, it looks like. Assault and rape follow on Sajal. Evil deed done, she is dumped into a nullah as dead. The culprits are identified, tried and acquitted. Sridevi and the family are devastated, frustrated and angry — all the emotions that a film can use in such a situation.

    Sridevi takes it upon herself to settle the score with the four culprits. In the due course, she also engages a jasoos (detective) as he calls himself, played by Nawazuddin Siddiqui, a guy with X-Ray eyes so to say. Also lurking in the background is the character of Akshaye Khanna, a cop who has arrested all the culprits like a super cop but loses out to the judiciary as all the culprits go scot-free. He is left banging his hands on tables.

    The rest of the film is about Sridevi’s revenge and getting her stepdaughter to accept her.

    Mom is a badly scripted film with glitches all around and contradictions in the script. The director takes a Hollywoodian approach to treat the film but never gets a grip on the proceeds right from the beginning.

    In the era of songs sans lip sync, a couple of good tunes also fail to make an impact.The background score is good. Dialogue is good at places, especially Nawazuddin’s which sound extempore rather than penned. Editing needed to be much sharper. Camera work is fairly good.

    The film counts totally on Sridevi to carry it through and she does a reasonably good job. Nawazuddin, who has been given a special look for this film, becomes a caricature for no apparent reason. A detective should blend in the crowd not wanting to be spotted then what is the logic of giving Nawazuddin a getup with which he would stand out in a crowd of thousands?

    Adnan Siddiqui is sincere but his role has nothing much to offer. Sajal is does well. Akshay Khanna also gets the short end of the bargain with nothing material to do.

    Mom is a much hyped film with which it does not live up.

    Producers: Boney Kapoor, Sunil Manchanda, Gautam Jain, Naresh Agarwal, Mukesh Talreja.

    Director: Ravi Udyawar.

    Cast: Sridevi, Akshaye Khanna, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Adnan Siddiqui, Sajal Ali.