Category: Movies

  • Palm Springs fest to spotlight African cinema

    MUMBAI: The Palm Springs International Film Festival that will be operative from 6 to 17 January will spotlight on African Cinema.


    Dubbed Cinema Safari: A Showcase of African Cinema, the programme will present 13 new films made in Africa or presenting contemporary African stories or themes.


    The section will include Debs Gardner-Paterson‘s Africa United; Davey Frankel and Rasselas Lakew‘s The Athlete; Sherry Hormann‘s Desert Flower; Gabriel Range‘s I Am Slave; Caroline Kamya‘s Imani; Claus Wischmann‘s Kinshasa Symphony; The Last Lions; Lance Bangs‘ The Lazarus Effect; Oliver Schmitz‘s Life Above All; Michael Henry Wilson‘s Reconciliation: Mandela‘s Miracle; Mahamat-Saleh Haroun‘s A Screaming Man; and Hawa Essuman‘s Soul Boy.


    Organisers of the festival also released the line-up of films that will compete for the FIPRESCI Award, New Voices/New Visions Award and John Schlesinger Awards.


    The titles in the New Voices/New Visions lineup that focuses on international directors making their feature debut are Emre Sahin‘s 40; Johannes Naber‘s The Albanian; Juanita Wilso‘s As If I Am Not There; Pernilla August‘s Beyond; Vardis Marinakis‘ Black Field; Edoardo Leo‘s Eighteen Years Later; Alexandru Maftei‘s Hello! How Are You?; Mikkel Munch-Fals‘ Nothing‘s All Bad; Hans Van Nuffel‘s Oxygen; Emilio Aragon‘s Paper Birds; Ola Simonsson and Stjarne Nilsson‘s Sound of Noise; and Nayra Illic‘s Square Meter.


    Ten documentaries by first-time filmmakers that will compete for the John Schlesinger Award are Clio Barnard‘s The Arbor, Jan Tenhaven‘s Autumn Gold; Richard Press‘ Bill Cunningham New York; David Sievekin‘s David Wants to Fly; Edmon Roch‘s Garbo: The Spy; Nicola Belluci‘s In the Garden of Sounds; Risteard O‘Domhnail‘s The Pipe; Shlomi Eldar‘s Precious Life; Joonas Berghall‘s Steam of Life; and Lynn Trues Summer Pasture.


    The festival will also screen 40 of the 64 films that have been submitted for an Academy Award in the foreign-language film category.
     

  • Grauman’s Chinese Theatre to honour Robert Duvall

    MUMBAI: Robert Duvall, well-known for his film Get Low that helped him receive a SAG Awards nomination, will place his hands and feet in cement in the forecourt of Grauman‘s Chinese Theatre on 5 January.


    The ceremony would be in celebration of Duvall‘s 50-year career in the span of which he won the Oscar for Tender Mercies and Golden Globes for Apocalypse Now, Tender Mercies, Lonesome Dove and Stalin.
     

  • Eighth Chennai Film Fest gets going

    MUMBAI: The Eighth Chennai International Film Festival, declared open on 14 December, saw the likes of director Shankar and actors Sarath Kumar, Radhikaa, Jeyaram, Vikram and Madhavan gracing the occasion.


    “The festival is being held on such a large scale for the first time with almost 125 films from 43 countries being showcased,” said B Ramakrishnan, president of ICAF.
    Prominent films to be screened at the festival include The Last Emperor, Little Buddha, The Blue Butterfly and Ayaruthil Oruvan among others.


    The Government of Tamil Nadu has also encouraged the festival by making a contribution of Rs 2.5 million towards the event. 


    For the first time in eight years, there will be a competition of Tamil films of which 12 will be screened along with 14 other Indian films as part of the Indian panorama.
    The festival jury is being headed by director Singeetam Srinivasa Rao.


    The festival that will conclude on 23 December has been organised by the Indo Cine Appreciation Foundation (ICAF) and is being supported by the Film Federation of India and the South Indian Film Chamber of Commerce for the first time.
     

  • Sangeeth Sivan takes U turn to comedies

    MUMBAI: Ater giving comedies like Apna Sapna Money Money and Kya Kool Hain Hum, Santosh Sivan decided to make an action film in Ek-The Power of One. He also directed horror film titled Click. But both the films bombed at the box-office.


    Knowing his forte was making comedies, Sivan has taken to direct comedies once again. For his upcoming venture Cheers he has roped in Arshad Warsi, Shreyas Talpade and Ritiesh Deshmukh. Earlier he was to make the film with the Deol brothers but things didn‘t fall in place.


    Sivan‘s first home production 332Mumbai to India releases today

  • A watchable film but lacks due promotion







    Producer: Reliance Big Pictures.
    Writer-Director: Vinay Shukla.
    Cast: Konkona Sen Sharma, Raima Sen, Boman Irani, Shreyas Talpade, Arunoday Singh, Shahana Goswami, Rajpal Yadav, Sushant Singh, Ila Arun, Pitobash and Prem Chopra.


    MUMBAI: The title Mirch suggests nothing about the film’s content.


    The film incorporates four stories, all of similar themes: that of women caught cheating on their husbands. Not only that, but also of how they wriggle out of the situation making their men bear the burden of guilt.


    Arunoday Singh, an aspiring film writer, has written a script. Through his friend, Shahana Goswami, he narrates the script to producer Sushant Singh, who likes it but feels it is too short for a full length film.


    Singh cooks up three more such stories, two set in the olden era while the others are contemporary. While in the first tale, Raima Sen the wife of Rajpal Yadav, a wage earner in a small village, cheats on him out of need for sex, in the second, Konkona Sen Sharma, the young bride of an aged king, Prem Chopra, also does the same because the old man, in his sixties, has no inclination towards conjugal pleasures.


    In the third story, Raima Sen retaliates with an affair because her husband, Shreyash Talpade, keeps doubting and testing her virtue by donning new getups. In the last story, Konkona Sen Sharma cheats on her husband Boman Irani because she neither gets money nor sex from him. She gets both by indulging in prostitution.


    The stories are inspired by Panchatantra and The Decameron, a collection of novellas by Giovanni Boccaccio whose own inspiration often came from Panchtantras and Hitpodesha. While the themes are common about a woman cheating on her spouse, the scripting is crafty yet simple.


    Each story has its share of wit, tittilation and a nice twist in the end. An old hand at writing, director Vinay Shukla has executed his thoughts with perfection. The photography is apt with locations exploited to the maximum. The music blends with the atmosphere while dialogues are peppy.


    Performance wise, while Arunoday Singh gets in to the skin of all five characters with ease, Boman Irani, playing the Sindhi businessman, is convincing. Raima Sen, Konkona Sen Sharma, Rajpal Yadav and Prem Chopra are good. Ila Arun is natural. Shahana Goswami and Sushant Singh give good support.


    Mirch, a watchable film, aimed at the gentry and multiplex audience, lacks due promotion; it has prospects to have a lasting value on video and satellite circuits.


     


    Much ado about nothing


     








    Producer: Sangeeth Sivan Productions P Ltd.
    Writer-Director: Mahesh Pandey.
    Cast: Ali Asgar, Chetan Pandit, Vijay Mishra, Sharbani Mukherjee


    MUMBAI: Sangeeth Sivan‘s 332 Mumbai To India is an issue-based film.


    Taking a leaf out of an incident of a Bihari boy hijacking a public transport bus in Mumbai,the film goes into those few months of discomforting equations between local Maharashtrians and people from UP and Bihar coming to Mumbai for a livelihood.


    Rather than weaving a story around the incident (a la A Wednesday!), the film is a recreation of it. How it affects a few other people’s lives forms the crux of the film.


    The air is already thick as workers from Bihar and UP are attacked by local Marathi speaking people when a provoked youth from Bihar hijacks a BEST bus in a Mumbai suburb.


    As the driver and others from the lower deck desert the bus, those in the upper deck are held captive at gun point. Among other passengers travelling in the bus, there is also a couple — Bihari boy and a Marathi girl — on their way to seek her parents’ approval to marry.


    The incident also affects a father in Bihar who is glued to the TV set watching news, hoping it is not his son who did it. A hostel toughie targets a Marathi speaking student in Benaras to avenge the incident happening back in Mumbai and a Muslim rickshaw driver has his rickshaw smashed and gets severely beaten up.


    With a thin storyline and nothing much to build on, the scenes become repetitive as they shift from character to character caught in the milieu. After all, how many times can you see a gun totting youth with no solid agenda scaring a few people in a bus or a tense father staring at a TV set to identify the boy or a Marathi student in UP being glared at?


    So neutral is the script that it finally ends up conveying nothing. The performances are passable.


    A film based on news headlines does not work with our audience and the precedents are aplenty. 332 Mumbai To India only adds to the tally.


     


    Kaalo: A horrible horror film


     








    Producers: Yash Patnaik, Mamta Patnaik.
    Writer- Director: Wilson Louis.
    Cast: Swini Khara, Adtya Srivastav, Paintal


    MUMBAI: Kaalo is said to be world‘s first daylight horror film.


    Described as a creature based horror film and shot around Jaisalmer, it is about a witch who resurfaced two centuries after she was killed and buried.


    Her quest is for the young and nubile girls who, when sacrificed, would give it immortality.


    The village Kulbhata, which the witch Kaalo haunts, has been deserted and no one dares pass along the village road.


    However, a passenger bus with some travellers is compelled to take the route when the main road is closed. Also travelling on the bus is the 12-year-old Swini Khara who becomes Kaalo’s target. Kaalo attacks the bus and kills its travellers till only Swini and Aditya Srivastav survive.


    The initial scenes of Kaalo slithering through sands and taking people off guard have an impact. But as Kaalo kills its victims one after the other, things become monotonous. Visually, Kaalo looks like a giant sized bat which except carrying off people, does not scare enough.


    Director Wilson Louis shows his passion for the horror genre and has effectively used special effects. This makes the film interesting. The background score is effective and the cinematography is good. Of the cast, Swini Khara impresses while the rest are just about passable.


    All said, Kaalo is an experiment on Indian film buffs who have yet to cultivate the taste for the horror genre.
     

  • Amitabh Bachchan promotes Malayalam film Kandahar

    MUMBAI: For the first time in his career, Amitabh Bachchan has been promoting a Malayalam film in Mumbai. He took part in the promotion of Kandahar along with Malayalam film superstar Mohan Lal.


    Kandahar recounts the tale of Flight 814 that was on its way from Tribhuvan International Airport in Nepal to Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi when it was hijacked. The hijackers forced the aircraft to land in Kandahar, Afghanistan. The hijackers released 27 of 176 passengers but fatally stabbed one and wounded several others.


    The film, written and directed by Major Ravi, has been jointly produced by Sunil C. Nair under the banner of Zoe Estebe Moviez and Mohan Lal‘s production house Pranavam Arts International. Lal said the film was special as Bachchan was acting in a Malayalam film for the first time.


    Besides Bachchan and Lal, the film stars Ganesh Venkatraman, Sumalatha, Parvathy Omanakuttan, Kaveri Jha, and Ananya among others.


    The film releases today worldwide.
     

  • Chetan Bhagat to assist Vishal Bharadwaj in 2 States

    MUMBAI: Chetan Bhagat will assist Vishal Bharadwaj in Sajid Nadiadwala‘s soon to roll adaptation of his novel ‘2 States‘.


    Nadiadwala, who bought the filming rights of the novel, had recently roped in Bharadwaj to direct the film.


    This means that apart from collaborating with Bhardwaj to write the screenplay of the film adaptation, Bhagat will also assist him to learn the ropes of film direction.


    Says the author “Vishal is a very gifted filmmaker. I would definitely like to learn direction from him.”


    2 States is the story of a Punjabi boy who falls in love with a Tamil girl while pursuing his MBA at IIM Ahmedabad. As the two belong to extreme cultures (North – South) of India, what follows is tension and drama with happily married ending.


    On the other hand, Bharadwaj would be more than happy to take on Bhagat as an apprentice while shooting for the film. Litterateurs rarely cross over to making films, but Bharadwaj has always been interested in literature.


    Meanwhile, Bhagat has been actively involved with the screenplay of two films adapted from his own novels Hello (from One Night At The Call Centre) and Abhishek Kapoor‘s adaptation of ‘The 3 Mistakes Of My Life,‘ though not much progress has been made with Kapoor‘s adaptation.


    Nadiadwala, meanwhile, approached Shah Rukh Khan with the script, after which Khan has already expressed interest to work in the Bharadwaj-helmed film.
     

  • Eros to distribute Yamla Pagla Deewana overseas

    MUMBAI: Eros International Media will be releasing the Samir Karnik-directed Yamla Pagla Deewana in the international markets on 14 January next year.


    The upcoming film directed by Samir Karnik has been produced by Karnik and Nitin Manmohan under the banners of Top Angle Productions and One up Entertainment. 


    Speaking on the announcement, Eros International plc president – distribution Pranab Kapadia said, “We are very excited to bring this special treat for all Deol fans worldwide with the release of Yamla Pagla Deewana. The much loved father- sons trio has a huge fan following overseas and we are anticipating a very encouraging response for the film.”


    Yamla Pagla Deewana brings together Dharmendra, Sunny Deol and Bobby Deol as never featured before in a drama of action, comedy and romance.

  • Source Code to have its world premiere at Texas fest

    MUMBAI: Director Duncan Jones‘ new action thriller Source Code will have its world premiere as the opening-night film at the South By Southwest Film Festival, Texas, on 11 March next year.


    The complete lineup for the 2011 festival will be announced in early February. The event runs till 19 March.


    The film stars Jake Gyllenhaal as a soldier who continually wakes up in the bodies of different train commuters in the last eight minutes before each dies in a bombing. Eventually, it becomes clear that he is on a mission to discover who set the explosive so he can prevent a second, larger detonation.


    Jones, the son of David Bowie, screened his first film, Moon at the same festival last year.


    The Summit Entertainment release will open in theaters on April 1.

  • Miguel Joseph set to head United International Pictures

    MUMBAI: After a deal inked with Warner Bros., United International Pictures (UIP) will distribute films of the production company in Central America beginning next year.


    Current general manager of Warner Bros. Pictures in Central America, Miguel Joseph, has been tapped to head up UIP Central America from January. He will replace industry veteran Jose Victoria.


    UIP reached a similar agreement last year to handle Warner Bros. titles in Mexico, Latin America‘s top market in terms of box-office revenue.