Category: Hindi

  • With Ghaziabad multiplex, Cinepolis crosses 300 screens

    NEW DELHI: With the opening of the 10-screen multiplex in Ghaziabad, Cinépolis crossed the 300 milestone India, with the total screen count now standing at 303 screens.

    Caiming to be India’s first International and the world’s fourth largest movie theatre circuit, Cinépolis has opened the ten screen multiplex in R.E.D Mall at GT Road in Ghaziabad..

    This is Cinépolis’ foremost property in Ghaziabad and also marks the opening of the largest cinema outlet in Ghaziabad. Cinépolis now has 39 Screens across nine cinemas in the National Capital Region.

    The newly inaugurated multiplex has a total seating capacity of 1619 seats and is scheduled to run more than 50 shows per day. The theatre is equipped with an exceptional RealD 3D technology and 100% digital projections and offers gourmet food at its trademark outlet Coffee Tree.

    Cinépolis India MD Javier Sotomayor said, “We have crossed an important landmark of reaching 300 screens in India in accordance with our expansion strategy and will be opening more multiplexes around the country.”

    Cinépolis India director – expansion Ashish Shukla added: “This new property further validates our commitment to open more screens & offer the best cinema experience to movie goers, across India”

    Cinépolis India director – strategic initiatives Devang Sampat added: “We have also introduced point based programmes like Club Cinépolis for patrons that offer exclusive services and promotions to members. We are positive that with such services, we will be able to engage with more & more patrons”

    According to Rakesh Babbar from R.E.D Mall, “The Mall will definitely emerge as an ideal cinema destination for the consumers after this launch.”

    The specially designed multiplex theatre will also offer freshly prepared gourmet food and beverages from the exquisite menu of Coffee Tree – the in-house signature coffee shop by Cinépolis. The brand also has unique flavored popcorns which include Butter salt, Cheese and Caramel Popcorns.

  • Miraj Cinemas adds four multiplexes in 15 days, inches closer to ‘100’ plan

    NEW DELHI: Miraj Cinemas has strengthened its position in Punjab, Gujarat and Delhi NCR by adding four multiplexes with 13 screens in a record time of just 15 days. With this addition, Miraj Cinemas has now secured 77 screens across India.

    In Gujarat, Miraj Cinemas has two new multiplexes in Vadodra and three screens in Gandhidham and another four-screen property in Miraj Cine Pride Ahmedabad besides its existing seven-screen property at Miraj City Pulse.

    The new multiplex of Miraj cinemas in Vadodra situated at SWC mall has 3D equipped four screens that boast of 728 plush seating capacities with 7.1 Dolby surround sound facility, 2k Projectors and recliner seats while its Ahmedabad property situated at Vitthal Plaza (New Naroda) and has three screens with a seating capacity of 372 along with silver screen and recliner seating facilities comprises with modern state-of-the art infrastructure.

    In Delhi-NCR Miraj Cinemas today came out with its new 3-screen multiplex at Laxmi Plaza in Rajendra Nagar, Ghaziabad, where it has 3D equipped screens with seating capacity of 711 people with 7.1 Dolby digital sound systems. This new property in has come out in addition to the existing 2-screen multiplex in Chowdhry Mall, Ghaziabad and at 2-screen multiplex at Subhash Nagar in New Delhi.

    In Punjab, Miraj Cinemas launched 3-screen multiplex situated at J’s EmiNent Mall complex in Hoshiyarpur. The new property has 2K technology projector and a silver screen for 3D movies. The multiplex is also equipped 7.1 dolby digital sound system with boasts plush seating capacities along with recliner seats.

    Miraj MD Amit Sharma said, “We believe this is a milestone for us where Miraj Cinemas promised to provide quality movie watching experience to its patrons and wants to be geographically present throughout the country.”

    The company has chalked out an aggressive plan to operate over 100 screens pan India focusing on major cities by end of this year with increasing presence in cities of Delhi NCR, Ahmedabad, Hyderabad & in the state of Maharashtra where it would have atleast 50 screens and the rest will be in the non-metros, Mr. Sharma said adding that the company By 2020, we want to reach 200 screens and we will be adding on average 30-35 screens every year.

    According to Bhuvanesh Mendiratta, Miraj Vice President -Operations, “Over past three years we have invested nearly Rs one to 1.5 billion and will go all out to enhance our presence massively in coming days.”

    With these additions, Miraj Cinemas is now have operations in 11 states with a presence in 21 cities and want to spread its wings to more Indian cities over next 2-3 years.

    Also Read:

    Cinepolis expands to G. Noida; to invest Rs 800 crore

    Cinépolis launches second Multiplex in Pune with IMAX Theatre

    Panvel Mumbai to get its first PVR multiplex 

    Cinekorn Entertainment associates with Viacom India for film Ring 

  • Sequels & the need to cash in on previous successes

    The film industry is going through its worst period in a long time. Nothing seems to be working as film after films flop losing almost total investments. This, when private investors are staging a comeback to invest in film distribution business as the big houses have curtailed their activities.

    While the producers of recent films have been suffering, the main sufferers are the single screens as well as the multiplex chains who, besides servicing their investments, also need to tend to their fixed costs like, staff, power, maintenance and other such costs.

    This is a Catch 22 situation. While the independent producers, who are keeping the supply going, they have to do it in limited budgets. The multiplex chains won’t give them decent playtime or reduced admission rates and the paying audience won’t be lured otherwise.

    The stalemate continues.

    The recent trend seems to be of making wome- oriented films. That is fine. They do work at times as was the case with, Kahaani, Dirty Picture, Neerja, Chalk & Duster, Ki And Ka, Fitoor, Sarabjit, Begum Jaan, Maatr, Noor and so on. But, just a few worked.

    If Kahaani worked, why did Kahaani 2 did not? It did not because it came across as a product of greed. A need to cash in on the success of its predecessors. The makers did not even care that their ‘Dare It All’ protagonist of Kahaani was turned in to a helpless, hapless woman in Kahaani 2.

    Both new releases of the week, Noor and Maatr, were women centric films. Both faced disastrous outcome at the box office.

    Noor was much hyped as the Pakistani journalist writer Saba Imtiaz’s account of her life as a journalist in Karachi, among the most violent cities in the world. It was published as a book, Karachi, You Are Killing Me! The account had no story, looked like a dramatised and fictionalised writing. Nothing in the book seemed fit to incorporate it in the life of a Mumbai journalist.

    Maatr was a vehicle for one time sought-after star, Raveena Tandon, as a senior actor to return in her veteran avatar as a mother. She played a mother on revenge mission for her raped and killed young daughter. The film failed to get an opening of any kind.

    *Raveena’s comeback, Maatr, sadly, could not find enough footfalls to run a show. Turned into a ‘No audience No show’ affair as the collections remained in lakhs. The film’s promotion was poor too. The three day collections remained short of one crore at about Rs 70 lakh.

    *Sonakshi Sinha, essaying the role of a struggling journalist, lacked head or tail. Is a loser on all counts as the film barely manages to put together Rs 4.1 crore crore for the first weekend.

    *Begum Jaan, an outdated story told poorly, fails badly to incite the audience. After a poor opening weekend of Rs 10.6 crore, the film ends it first week with a total of Rs 15.1 crore.

    *Badrinath KI Dulhania has taken its six week total to Rs 114.7 crore.

    *Laali KI Shaadi Mein Laaddoo Deewana, Blue Mountain, Mirza Juuliet and Mukti Bhawan are also ran.

  • Noor…Insipid…

    Noor is based on a book by the Pakistani journalist- writer Saba Imtiaz, ‘Karachi, You Are Killing Me!’ The book in itself does not really tell a story, it is more like a diary of a journalist of day-to-day experiences and adventures along with a bit of her personal life. 

    Karachi is a volatile and a violent place to be in, especially for a woman whose job is to venture into unlikely places in the cause of her job.

    In Karachi (as per her book) one can be mugged at a traffic signal in broad daylight even within the safety of one’s car. Moreover, the only way to get a can of beer is through a bootlegger. How such an account fit into an Indian metropolis like Mumbai is a question?  Also, our readers are not into the habit of reading by-lines in news reports or articles and recognize only a few TV anchors. So a film on one such greenhorn journalist’s life would hardly be of interest to a viewer. 

    The character of Sonakshi Sinha is a Page 3 journalist working for a content providing agency. She nurses a desire to become a real, hard core reporter covering more serious matters. She even keeps applying to the news channel CNN only to be rejected each time. The people in her life are her father played by MK Raina, maid Smita Tambe, friends Kanan Gill and Shibani Dandekar, her boss Manish Chaudhary, and a cat.

    Moving around the by lanes of Mumbai in search for stories in attempts to capture the unusual happenings in Mumbai, she is bored of her mundane assignments. Then, she finally thinks she has a story breaking which will bring her into the limelight. 

    Sonakshi’s story is about a huge human-organ racket. 

    Meanwhile, during one of her social circuit outings, Sonakshi meets an ex-CNN photographer, Purab Kohli. She finds him hot and takes the relationship further. That is when her exclusive story, her break to big time journalism, goes out of her control.

    After a good start, one expects the film to pack something interesting. But, as it moves further, it only goes downhill. The narration meanders as Sonakshi oscillates between self-pity and ambition.

    To add to the tedium, the film takes to sermonising on ethics in journalism. Things become boring and one comes out with mental fatigue.

    The book, ‘Karachi, You Are Killing Me!’ did show promise the potential to make into a film and, there is nothing the makers have been able to make work. The scripting is dull. The director shows finesse but that hardly helps salvage the film. The film required much more severe editing. Music is fair. The best thing about the film is its cinematography. As for performances, Sonakshi is okay in parts; in the absence of substance in her character, little else she could have done. Kanan Gill and Purab Kohli do well. Rest are okay. 

    Noor is an insipid fare.

    Producers: Bhushan Kumar, Krishan Kumar, Vikram Malhotra.

    Director: Sunhil Sippy.

    Cast: Sonakshi Sinha, Purab Kohli, Kanan Gill, Shibani Dandekar.

    Maatr…Routine revenge saga

    Maatr is yet another topical film. The subject is gang rape and, as an obvious choice, the locale is Delhi. To complete the setup, the culprit is influential, the spoiled son of a politician, the chief minister no less. Sounds cliché isn’t it? So what else is new?

    Having set up the basic premise of rape and police apathy, the next plot point is an effort to muzzle the victim. This is routine and can’t be very different. Then one would expect the media sensationalising the case and sitting in judgement, social media taking up the cause and so on. The location being Delhi, a candle march would be mandatory, too.  

    Maatr begins on the set formula but decides to go its own way thereafter. 

    The character of Raveen Tandon is a school teacher in a well-known Delhi school where her daughter, Alisha Khan, is a pupil. The school celebrates its annual day every Dussehra with the students presenting a programme. The chief minister is the chief guest with his son, played by Madhur Mittal, an ex-student of the school, also attending. 

    Alisha stands first in the evening performance and having won the first prize, she and her teacher mother, Raveena, proceed towards home. Stuck in the typical Delhi traffic, Raveena seeks guidance from her friend, played by Divya Jagdale, on phone. Asked to use GPS, Raveena, however, is on wrong path. Unknown to her, Mittal and his six goons, which all politicians’ sons seem to need, are following them.

    The gang of the seven pushes Raveena’s car into a ditch. Mother and daughter are carried to a farmhouse and the inevitable happens. Raveena barely survives the assault while Alisha does not.
    So far, the film is one of hundreds having been made over the years. Yet, there is no TV channels blaring out the incident, no social media and no candle marches as is the norm in such films. 

    That is because the makers wish to take this film off the beaten track hereafter. Raveena wants to settle the score herself. The first time I saw such a film was François Truffaut’s “The Bride Wore Black”, a 1968 French movie, where as a newly wedded couple is walking out of a church, the groom is killed by a random bullet fired by five gallivanting drunk men in a building opposite the church. The bride, actress Jeanne Moreau, decides to trace each of those five and kill them. This about sums up the second part of Maatr.

    After a routine first half, Maatr starts getting interesting as Raveena decides to chart her own course with the police not being cooperative. This too has been seen in various films earlier but still remains interesting and makes the film watchable because of how it is devised. 

    There is also a track about Raveena and her husband, played by Rushad Rana. This is totally irrelevant to the film and could very well have been avoided. She could just as well have been a single mother, which would have made no difference to the story. Maybe some more footage could have been devoted to mother-daughter equation. 

    The film has a usual which is saved in part by seasoned Raveena and in part by its second half about the woman getting her own. It has a couple of musical tracks which don’t matter. Dialogue is okay in places and the expletives are within limits. Editing, as usual, is the weak link. Cinematography is good and so are the locales. Background music gets too loud at times. 

    As for performances, while Raveena Tandon carries herself wellbeing the veteran that she is, Alisha excels in a fleeting role. Divya Jagdale is most natural. The villains as well as the cops are painted in their usual clichéd roles seen in many films earlier. Madhur Mittal is passable. 

    All in all, Maatr is a tolerable film but lacking face value, box office prospects don’t promise much.  

    Producers: Michael Pellico, Anjum Rizvi, Manoj Adhikari.

    Director: Michael Pellico. 

    Cast: Raveena Tandon, Divya Jagdale, Madhur Mittal, Shailender Goyal, Anurag Arora, Jayant Shroff, Alisha Khan, Rushad Rana. 

  • Big stars unaffordable for independent producers

    MUMBAI: Big films are getting scarce with some major studios pulling out from backing productions. Thanks to the corporate houses bankrolling films, the costs have escalated and the stars have become unaffordable for independent producers.

    Besides these factors, a majority of big stars such as Aamir Khan, Salman Khan, Akshay Kumar, Shah Rukh Khan and Ajay Devgn, etc. now prefer to work mainly for their home productions or in joint ventures with directors who have successful track record.

    In the circumstances, some independent producers are making a comeback, albeit, with films featuring lesser stars and relying more on different content, a story without props like action and special effects and such.

    Some such films do turn out to be good, win appreciation as well, the two recent examples being Mukti Bhawan and Anaarakli Of Aarah. However, the moviegoer does not find such films viable at the admission high rates that multiplexes charge which are same as big star films.

    *Begum Jaan, the new release of the week, is one such film that tries to tread a different trend, away from what its producers, the Bhatt Brothers, were known to make so far: mostly thrillers, romance laced with titillation backed by strong musical scores.

    Remade in Hindi from the Bengali film Rajkahini (2015), the film lacked purpose. There were major issues, massacres and millions were uprooted from their homes and became refuges during the partition. And as the film’s story goes, here is this woman brothel owner who wants to save her brothel from being dismantled in the cause of creating a border wedge! And, the film also shows some flashbacks of the violence of that happened during the partition!

    Begum Jaan opened to weak response, failed to find appreciation and, yet, thanks to some good promotion and expecting Vidya Balan to come up with another striking performance, it managed to rake in Rs 3.4 crore on the opening day. On Saturday and Sunday, the collections remained almost stagnant as the film collected Rs 10.6 crore for its opening weekend.

    *Laali Ki Shaadi Mein Laaddoo Deewana has a disastrous opening week as the film manages to put together a meagre Rs 80 lakh.

    *Mirza Juuliet, an intercommunity romance with politics and violence as the background in UP, fails badly. The film collects about Rs 55 lakh for its first week.

    *Mukti Bhawan enjoys good word but not the moolah and collects just about Rs 50 lakh.

    *Blue Mountain remained very low at about Rs 10 lakh in its first week.

    *Bahubali: The Beginning (Re-run) collected Rs 3.1 crore in one week despite an extensive release.

    *Naam Shabana sustained well in its second week to add approx. Rs 5.6 crore to its first week collections taking its two week tally to Rs 28.1 crore.

    *Phillauri added Rs 40 lakh in its third week to take its three week total to Rs 24.6 crore.

    *Badrinath Ki Dulhania collected Rs 1.1 crore in its fifth week to take its five week total to Rs 114.2 crore.

  • Begum Jaan…..A rebel without a cause!

    MUMBAI: The last memorable film on a brothel and prostitutes was Shyam Benegal’s Mandi. The theme was that wherever there are people, a brothel is bound to spring up and, otherwise, wherever a brothel comes up, a town is bound to come up.

    Begum Jaan is the remake of the Bengali language film, Rajkahini (2015). The closeness one can find between the two is about the women in the oldest profession fighting for survival.

    Actually, if one were to make a comparison as the women in the brothel, led by its
    founder, the character of Vidya Balan, resolve to stand their ground and fight out the battle of survival, it is with Ketan Mehta’s all-time classic, Mirch Masala, though it was not about prostitution. It was about saving a woman’s honour and, hence, the cause was justified.

    Begum Jaan is based around time when India was partitioned — India and Pakistan.

    Vidya Balan, a child widow, is disowned by her in-laws. Going through exploitation and hurdles, she ends up in prostitution. Being a strong-willed woman, she would do even that on her own terms. Her clientele includes big shots, influential people, even a king and some white men and officers who seek favours gratis. Ergo, Vidya wields great influence.

    Vidya has 11 women in her brothel, one old lady, Ila Arun, and a pre-teen girl, Gracy Goswami, a love child of one of her ‘girls’, Gauhar Khan. Vidya’s vast brothel, spread across a few acres, serves as a sort of shelter for women in distress who, eventually, join her trade. Socially ostracised, the brothels made their place away from towns.

    The girls live in bonhomie, they come from across India: Gujarat, Haryana, Punjab et al (how women from all over reached there in those days of great distances and limited transportation facilities is not answered). Maybe the idea is to make the brothel a representative of India: Unity in diversity!

    The place also has a Pathan sentry, played by Sumit Nijhawan, accompanied by his two ferocious looking dogs, all three totally loyal to Vidya.

    The going is good for Vidya and her girls till the powers that be decide to divide India into two countries, India and Pakistan. Here the film takes inspiration from various Partition stories written by the legendary writers, the likes of Saadat Hasan Manto. These are stories of unsuspecting bystanders, the kinds who unwittingly fell prey to the partition lines drawn by — Sir Cyril Radcliffe, the man in charge of The Border Commission, to divide the country.

    This is when the trouble starts for Vidya and her brothel. Her brothel falls right on the dividing line and to create the border and to separate two nations, it has to make way. Its very existence is in danger.

    The two men deputed to oversee the implementing of the division and build a barbed wire fence are the characters of Ashish Vidyarthi, a Hindu, representing India, and Rajit Kapoor, a Muslim, on behalf of the newly-formed Pakistan. That both are childhood friends but on different sides, is meant to add to the anxiety. Sadly, after creating a sort of ‘partition’ between both of them, their equation has been put on the back burner, except to show at the end that, both remain humane with their feelings intact to a wrongdoing.

    Both, Ashish and Rajit are at their wits’ end trying to make Vidya vacate her brothel when they approach a goon, played by Chunky Pandey and, as it is known in today’s world, give Vidya’s supari (a contract to get her out by any means).

    The film, which had started deteriorating gradually before interval, drops to its lowest hereafter. The very idea of introducing Chunky, his getup, his manners, take the film down. Towards the end, it swings between morbid and macabre.

    The scripting tries to incorporate too many angles. The main ones being a brothel at peril, two friends, now belonging to opposite sides, trying to fulfil a task entrusted to them, and the disaster they create when they involve a third party. But, the writers cram in many other side stories; that of a young girl child born at the brothel, a lusty teacher and his treachery, a love story between a pimp and a prostitute and so on.

    The idea may be to show the human side of those concerned, good or bad. The narration strays too often with the extra tracks and the pace drops.

    The direction is not really up to the mark. The idea of creating little India in the brothel is bad; as the women in the brothel converse in their native languages, be is Punjabi or Gujarati, none gets the language right, they make a mess of it. That after the film propagates all through that prostitution has no religion or regional identity! The women shooting randomly at the enemies! What are they shooting at, the brothel courtyard walls? Music is not as it should be for a kotha/brothel setup. Most such film in the past have set high standards. Cinematography is of standard. Dialogue is good though oft heard before. Editing, as in all such films where the director loves all that he has shot, is weak. A lot could be trimmed.

    Performances by all concerned are excellent starting with Vidya Balan leading the band. Other women are good but those who stand out are — Gauhar Khan, Pallavi Sharda, Indrani Chakraborty and Gracy Goswami. Ashish Vidyarthi and Rajit Kapoor are okay.

    Pitobash Tripathy impresses. Naseeruddin Shah has no scope. Chunky Pandey is pathetic. Rajesh Sharma is good as usual. Sumit Nijhawan makes a mark but Vivek Mushran is passable.

    Begum Jaan is a purposeless film. Having opened poorly despite a national holiday today, its prospects for improvement are suspect.

    Producers: Mahesh Bhatt, Mukesh Bhatt.

    Director: Srijit Mukherji.

    Cast: Vidya Balan, Ila Arun, Gauahar Khan, Pallavi Sharda, Priyanka Setia, Ridheema Tiwary, Flora Saini, Raviza Chauhan, Poonam Rajput,Indrani Chakraborty, Gracy Goswami, Pitobash Tripathy, Sumit Nijhawan, Ashish Vidyarthi, Chunky Pandey, Rajit Kapoor, Vivek Mushran, Rajesh Sharma, Naseeruddin Shah.

  • Carnival Motion Pictures to get into mainline content generation & distribution, says chairman

    MUMBAI: It was an occasion to revisit memories as cricket legend Sachin Tendulkar launched the trailer of ‘Sachin – A Billion Dreams’ in Mumbai. Following the launch, Tendulkar had an exclusive screening of the trailer on Extraaa Innings T20 on Sony Max.

    Carnival Group founder and chairman, and co-producer of the film Dr Shrikant Bhasi said, “I’ve always been keen to the idea of bringing the marvel of Sachin on the silver screen with the legend itself making his big debut. Carnival Cinemas will make sure that the movie reaches audience all across the country across all strata, as Sachin is a phenomenon everywhere.” He further adds, “Carnival Motion Pictures intends to begin its innings in mainline content generation and distribution, with this being an amazing start. There are many more interesting projects in pipeline that we will announce soon in the next few weeks.”

    The crowded auditorium in Juhu, Mumbai, was witness to the love that the master blaster commands as the audience cheered and applauded after the first screening of the trailer. Also present at the launch were the director, James Erskine who had flown down from the UK specially to attend the trailer launch. The producer Ravi Bhagchandka of 200NotOut, and Shrikant Bhasi, Founder and Chairman of Carnival Group also shared the dias with Sachin Tendulkar and James Erskine after the screening of the trailer.

    The chants of ‘Sachin, Sachin… Sachin, Sachin!’ from the trailer were still echoing in their ears as the MC Vikram Sathaye called the cricket legend to the dias to speak about the trailer and the upcoming film.

    As Sachin settled down to answer questions, he was joined by the director James Erskine, and producers, Ravi Bhagchandka, Shrikant Bhasi and Anil Thadani.

    Answering questions, Tendulkar said, “This film has helped me relive the important moments of my life through its making! I remain a private person but realised that there is much I have not revealed or spoken about, to those who have been instrumental to my life and career, especially my fans. I hope the film will be yet another avenue for fans who have showered their love and blessings on me, to cherish the journey that we undertook together for over 24 years.”

    Bhagchandka, the producer, said, “Making this movie has been my pilgrimage! I personally am a huge fan of Sachin and it was Sachin who was my inspiration when I used to play cricket. My company’s name, 200NOTOUT is also dedicated to his highest score in ODIs. Sachin is dearly loved by all Indians as well by cricket fans all around the world. He has been an idol for three generations of cricket fans and continues to inspire! This film will give his fans who have watched his cricketing feats on the television screen, the opportunity to see Sachin on the big movie screen!”

    The trailer gave the eager audience a hint of what the film has in store for Sachin’s fans. With glimpses of key scenes from the film showing moments of cricketing glory, personal moments, unseen footage from the dressing room and much more, the film promises to be every Sachin fan’s dream come true.

    Erskine, award-winning director of a number of international films on sports, took the audience through the making of the film. He said, “Directing the film was a wonderful experience! Coming from the UK, I knew that Sachin was a cricketing legend but even then, it was an eye-opener to see the adoration and respect that Sachin commands across the globe. Scripting his journey for the big screen involved interacting with Sachin, his family, his teammates as well as players from rival teams and others. Sachin is both gracious, and a perfectionist, and being able to make this film for the Indian people and many more across the globe was a true honour.”

  • Drishyam’s Dhanak is ‘Best Children’s Film’, new ‘Kadvi Hawa’ gets special mention

    MUMBAI: Drishyam Films’ much loved film Dhanak has won the 64th National Film Award for Best Children’s Film and their upcoming film, Kadvi Hawa has received a ‘Special Mention’ by the National Awards jury.

    Drishyam Films’ next, Kadvi Hawa is directed by acclaimed filmmaker Nila Madhab Panda (of I am Kalam fame) and is a powerful and heartrending take on climate change. It stars Ranvir Shorey as a young bank loan recovery agent and Sanjay Mishra as a blind old farmer, two ordinary people fighting for survival in two extreme weather conditions not of their making. The film is slated for a nationwide theatrical release later this year and the producers have just released a first look poster of the film (attached below).

    Directed by Nagesh Kukunoor, Dhanak stars Krrish Chhabria and Hetal Gada as the loveable siblings who set out on a magical, life-altering journey across Rajasthan. The film made its world premiere at the Berlin International Film Festival 2015 where it won two prestigious awards. It was released to critical and commercial acclaim on June 17, 2016.

    Drishyam Films founder and producer of Dhanak and Kadvi Hawa Manish Mundra: “Even though all of our films have premiered and won awards at various prestigious international film festivals, the National Awards are the biggest honour for us. For me, as an Indian producer, there is no greater joy than being recognised by the government for our efforts to produce quality content-driven cinema. We are very excited to bring our films Rukh, Newton and Kadvi Hawa to the Indian audiences later this year.”

    Kadvi Hawa: Once famous for farming, the people of Mahua in Rajasthan have forgotten the scent of rainfall on their soil. Lack of rainfall has led many farmers into debt traps set out as bank loans. Unable to grow food grain anymore and to escape repayments, many farmers have committed suicides. Hedu, the blind father of a farmer finds his son’s life threatened by the same pressure. Gunu Baba, a ruthless bank agent arrives with a growing list of suicides in his wake. But frequent cyclones threaten his family in a coastal village in Odisha. Each wanting to save their own family, they end up helping one another.

  • Mirza Juuliet….Poor rehash

    MUMBAI: Mirza Juuliet is one more spin-off on the legendary Punjabi folk tale of Mirza Sahiban, the love story of Mirza and Sahiban. A film was made on the same story in 2016 in a modern context as Mirzya. Mirza Juuliet is just another feebler attempt.

    The character of Sudarshan Kumar comes back to his maternal uncle’s home where he was brought after he was orphaned. But, he runs away. His father and mother were killed by the gun wielding goons in UP. He was restless to seek revenge. Having run away from his uncle’s care, Kumar seeks a job at a dhaba where, one day, he spots the killers responsible for his parents’ death. He kills them with their own gun.

    Sent to a juvenile home, one wonders how Kumar did emerges a grown up man when he is released! The film then goes on to chart a script of will.

    Kumar ran away even while his uncle was bringing him home to care for him as he was an orphan and he has been in some sort of custody ever since. But, after being released, he already has a backstory about his childhood love with the character of Piaa Bajpai, his uncle’s neighbour! It seems she was his companion in school as well as life around the mohalla.

    This Mirzya Sahibaan story is based in UP and, as if mandatory, involves political background. Piaa’s three brothers are gun totting bahubalis, her fiancé is the son of a politician with plans to become the next chief minister. There are family intrigues and killings.

    What irks Piaa is her fiancé’s sexual advances even before marriage. In one such attempts by him, she realises that what her fiancé wants to do with her, she would rather she did it with Kumar. She realises she loves him.
    Having finished with its UP style friendships, relationships, enmities and intrigues, the film now resorts to the legend of Mirza Saahiban. If you watched Mirzya, you are watching a rehash, albeit more convoluted, in this film.

    The film looks dated, has a poor script, poorer execution and nothing working for it. Viewer does not care for regional politics or bahubali stories, especially the UP, Bihar kind.

    Producers: Neeraj Kumar Burman, Ketan Maru, Amit Singh.

    Director: Rajesh Ram Singh.

    Cast: Piaa Bajpai, Darshan Kummar, Priyanshu Chatterjee and Chandan Roy Sanyal.

  • Blue Mountain….Lost cause

    MUMBAI: Blue Mountain is a film about the ambitions and aspirations of the young, the teenagers. The youth at that age have a new aim and ambition about what they wants to do with life and with each passing day. While, often, parents’ unfulfilled desires are forced on children, like wanting the child to accomplish what a parent could not, at other times a child is expected to follow a family tradition.

    Blue Mountain is about a young lad accidentally discovering his hidden talent which, it turns out, is in his genes.

    A group of four school friends, played by Yatharth Ratnum, Simran Sharma, Vaibhav Hanshu and Rishabh Sharma (the mandatory fat character fond of food and always munching in this kind of groups), spend their spare time riding their cycles around the picturesque hills of Shimla. They aim high and race to the tallest peak, the blue mountain.

    All four have different ambitions but one, Vaibhav, aims to become a musician/ singer and, to this end, he has entered his name for the auditions of a famous reality show on TV, Ragarocks. When the auditions are on and his turn comes, Vaibhav develops cold feet. He asks Yatharth to take his place.

    At the auditions, Yatharth decides to croon a classical number he always heard his mother, played by Gracy Singh, hum around house. He qualifies. As it turns out, the number he sang has many fans. It was originally sung by his mother, Gracy, who was a renowned singer but gave up her career after marrying the character of Ranvir Shorey.

    As Yatharth proceeds to Mumbai to participate in the reality show with Gracy, a wedge opens in the family since Ranvir is against Gracy forcing her ambitions on their son. He has bigger ideas for their son.

    The film then proceeds to take a cursory look at the behind-the-scene happenings of a reality show while Yatharth goes on winning round after round till, for no apparent reason, he croaks while singing in concluding the round and is disqualified.

    The outcome is that Yatharth is broken, suicidal, snaps at everybody and sulks to the world. While he sulks endlessly, which consists of almost the entire second part, the film sinks to its lowest, never to recover. The makers then decide to force in a happy ending but the cause is lost by this time.

    Blue Mountain is an amateurish enterprise which comes across as neither a children’s film nor for mature viewer. The reality show set up is patchy. Music is little help though the intentions are to promote Indian classical music.

    Except for the snow-clad Shimla, there is little else to watch here.

    Producers: Rajesh Kumar Jain.

    Director: Suman Ganguli.

    Cast: Gracy Singh, Ranvir Shorey, Rajpal Yadav, Arif Zakaria, Mahesh Thakur, Amit Behl, Vinod Nagpal, Yatharth Ratnum, Simran Sharma, Vaibhav Hanshu, Rishabh Sharma, Mehul Kapadia, Madhvi Shrivastava, Lisa-Marie Rettenbacher, Lamira Faro.