Category: Movies

  • Life! Camera Action to premiere at MIACC film fest

    MUMBAI: The world premiere of filmmaker Rohit Gupta‘s Life! Camera Action… will take place at the Mahindra Indo-American Arts Council (MIAAC) Film Festival 2010 scheduled to open in New York from 10 to 14 November.


    Life! Camera Action… is the story of Reina, a young Indian-American woman who sets off to pursue a career in filmmaking against the wishes of her parents.


    ‘We are delighted to screen Rohit‘s film at the 10th annual MIAAC Film Festival. It is a sensitive film about a filmmaker, perhaps reflecting the lives of many other participants of our festival, as well as showing the audience life behind the camera as they view it from the front,‘said Aroon Shivadasani, executive director in a press statement.


    The film was shot in a week and a half in New York and New Jersey with a crew of two people and a shoe-string budget.


    Shot in three different languages – English, Hindi and Punjabi – the film has been written by the New York-based Gupta and Washington-based screenwriter and lyricist Amanda Sodhi.


    The film will have its world premiere on 14 November.
     

  • Ramayana The Epic to reach USA & Canada in early 2011

    NEW DELHI: ‘Ramayana – The epic’, Ketan Mehta’s animation feature film directed by debutante director Chetan Desai, will be released in north America and Canada early next year.


    The film, distributed in India by Warner Brothers, was released to coincide with Dussehra with over 250 prints in Hindi along with Tamil, Telugu, Gujarati and Marathi versions.


    The Hindi version of ‘Ramayana – The Epic’ has Manoj Bajpai, Juhi Chawla and Ashutosh Rana lending their voices to the lead characters of Ram, Sita and Ravan respectively.


    A Maya Digital Media production, Ramayana – The Epic is one of the most ambitious and expensive full length 3D animation feature films made in India, according to associate producer and international consultant, Bhuvan Lall.


    Lall told indiantelevision.com that “after opening the film in India we are now looking at a global release for the film in early 2011 specially focusing in North America since it had a lot of interest among the buyers at the Toronto Film Festival 2010.”


    ’Ramayana – The Epic’ is a spectacular audio visual experience far beyond anything ever attempted in India with skills and designs matching international standards of Computer animation and Digital Visual effects, he claimed.


    “The two-hour long film is completely at par with international animation, and we are planning to release the film in English as well as several European languages as well,” he added.

  • MGM deadline extension has Lions Gate smiling

    MUMBAI: In its bid to take control of MGM, Spyglass Entertainment suffered a significant setback after the ailing studio extended the deadline for creditors to vote on whether to hand the reins to Spyglass principals Gary Barber and Roger Birnbaum till 29 October.


    The Spyglass plan would give the production company a 4.7 per ecnt stake in the studio and the balance of ownership to more than 100 lenders. The Spyglass plan would eliminate all MGM debt. Eventually, Barber and Birnbaum would seek new loans for MGM operating capital.


    On the other hand, the delay gives rival suitor Lions Gate more time to convince creditors to consider its proposal. Backed by major shareholders including Carl Icahn and Gordon Crawford‘s Capital Research, Lions Gate proposes to merge with MGM to form a company in which it would hold a 45 per cent stake and the lenders 55 per cent.


    MGM isn‘t letting lenders specifically vote on the Lions Gate plan, nor have Lions Gate executives been able to make a formal presentation. But with momentum on its side, the Lions Gate proposal could win by default if lenders vote against adopting the Spyglass plan.


    One way or another, MGM needs to restructure its finances to reduce or eliminate almost $4 billion in debt. Any restructuring likely would culminate in the filing of a pre-packaged reorganisation plan in US Bankruptcy Court.
     

  • Chinese film bags top nomination honour at Asia Pacific awards

    MUMBAI: A Chinese film Tangshan dadizheng (Aftershock) about a family‘s struggle to deal with a devastating earthquake came out tops among 31 films that participated from 15 countries at the fourth annual 2010 Asia Pacific Screen Awards.


    The highest-grossing domestic film of all time in China, Tangshan dadizheng received six nominations including one for the best feature film.


    The second most nominated film with four nominations was Shi (Poetry) by South Korean director Lee Chang-dong that his brother, Lee Joon-dong produced. The film, which took the best screenplay award at Cannes this year, deals with the story of a grandmother searching for meaning as she confronts the aftermath of a child‘s death.


    Rounding out the five films nominated for best feature were, Mengjia (Monga), a gangster movie from Taiwan, a Turkish film Bal (Honey), the third film in director Semih Kaplanoglu‘s Yusuf trilogy and Paju from South Korea.


    “As the Asia Pacific Screen Awards grow in stature and recognition across our vast region, we are delighted to have in the competition some of the most high profile films and filmmakers of contemporary cinema,” said APSA Chairman Des Power in a statement.
     

  • Santa Barbara Fest to honour Nolan next year

    MUMBAI: Christopher Nolan, who gave us films like Inception and Batman Begins will be honoured at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival (SBFF) when he will receive the Modern Master Award to be held in California next year. The Santa Barbara film festival will celebrate its 26th annual event next year.


    The SBFF is an annual event which honours Hollywood stalwarts by paying respect to their talents every year. The Modern Master Award is the highest honour that a person is conferred with at this annual film festival. 


    The organizers of the SBFF make sure that every deserving person from the world of Hollywood cinema, ranging from actors to directors and technicians, is honored at the annual event.


    In the previous years too the Santa Barbara International Film Festival has passed on the Modern master Award to popular personalities like Michael Douglas, Jodie Foster, Sir Anthony Hopkins, Diane Keaton, Sean Penn, Jeff Bridges, Peter Jackson, George Clooney, Will Smith, Cate Blanchett, Clint Eastwood, and James Cameron.
     

  • Michael Caine mulls writing

    MUMBAI: Veteran Michael Caine is in plans to write a novel after he completes the next Batman film. The-77-year-old Oscar-winner says he is sick of lawyers telling him that he cannot write about certain things in his autobiography and wants freedom as a writer.
     
    Caine just released his second autobiography The Elephant to Hollywood, and he has promised his fans that his next book will be a work of fiction. “I love writing so much that once I‘m finished with Batman, I‘m going to write fiction, he said.


    Caine, best known for his performances in Alfie, The Italian Job, Hannah and Her Sisters, The Cider House Rules and Batman franchise, has appeared in over hundred Hollywood films. He recently role was in Leonardo DiCapiro starrer Inception.

  • MFF to have five world premieres

    MUMBAI:Starting 21 October, the 12th Mumbai Film Festival (MFF) will feature the world premiere of five films – three from India and one each from Denmark and France.


    While the Indian films are Biju Kumar‘s The Way Home, Sudhish Kamath‘s Good Night Good Morning and debutant K.M Kamal‘s Alif, the Danish film Abobe the Street Below the Water and French documentary Next Year in Mumbai will sum up the foreign films that will premiere at the MFF.


    Florida Road from South Africa and Sound of Mumbai: A Musical will follow suit with their Asian premieres at the event.


    Over 200 films from 58 countries will be screened during the festival that will conclude on 28 October.


    The world‘s top 25 film distributing companies will also be attending the gala. Over 20 Indian films will be screened at the fest under various segments. Some of these include Aamir Bashir‘s directorial debut Harud, Aparna Sen‘s Iti Mrinalini, Girish Kasarvalli‘s Kanasemba Kudureyaneri, Nil Madhab Panda‘s I Am Kalam, Anjan Dutt‘s BBD and debutant director Vinay Shukla‘s Mirch.


    The venues of the festival are Chandan Cinema (Juhu) and the adjacent five screens of PVR Juhu, which will function as the Main Festival Complex along with two screens of Metro Big Cinemas (Marine Lines) and one screen of R City (Ghatkopar). Organised by the Mumbai Academy of Moving Image (MAMI), MFF is a Reliance Big Entertainment Ltd (RBEL) initiative.

  • Aakrosh: Subject fails to evoke empathy







    Director: Priyadarshan
    Producer: Kumar Mangat Pathak
    Cast: Ajay Devgn, Akshay Khanna, Paresh Rawal, Reema Sen, Bipasha Basu, Amita
    Tripathi


    MUMBAI: While almost every film is being copied from a foreign source, some makers get gutsier and copy classics. The recent hit Raajneeti copied all that was best out of Godfather, while Aakrosh is a straight lift from 1988 Hollywood classic Mississippi Burning. While the latter dealt with a sensitive 1960 subject of Blacks Vs Ku Klux Klan, Aakrosh, set in a small Bihar town, deals with Upper cast Vs Backward class.


    The story follows similar lines as Mississippi Burning, directed by Alan Parker, not risking diverging one bit except giving it a Hindu fanatic touch. A lower cast boy studying medicine in Delhi arrives with his two friends in his home town, Jhanjhar, after receiving an SOS from his high cast girl friend that her marriage is being fixed with a rich boy. While trying to elope with the girl, the boys vanish and are not heard of again.


    Soon, two CBI officers with opposing style of working descend on the town to
    investigate the disappearance of the boys! Nobody is willing to talk, no witnesses; the backward class are too scared and the high cast are in a league. And, the local police on its part feign total ignorance of any happenings around town!


    While the original had Ku Klux Klan, Aakrosh has a Shool Sena, a Trishul burning brigade with the singular agenda to kill low cast folk, especially those aspiring to match their status. The subject fails to evoke any empathy because, while equal rights for black was a burning issue in the US and had its strong advocates, suppression of low cast is as much a political issue here as it is a social one. The writers have found the original sequences so easy and convenient to retain (except the one about chilly powder, lifted straight out of Ketan Mehta’s Mirch Masala), they have not bothered if they fit the local way of life.


    There is nothing much to say about performances as Ajay Devgn has to vary between angry and suspicious look through the film, while Akshaye Khanna wears a quizzical one. The villains of the lot have a better scope to express among whom Paresh Rawal excels. Reema Sen is good while Bipasha Basu and Amita Pathak have little to do.


    The cast of supporting goons is effective. As for direction, the credit should go to Alan Parker for whatever is good in the film. Music is poor. Dialogue is good at places.


    Issue-based films have few takers in India and Aakrosh is as dry an entertainer as it can get to score at the box office.


     


    Knock Out is a taut film


     






    Director: Mani Shankar
    Producer: Sohail Maklai
    Cast: Sanjay Dutt, Irrfan, Kangna Ranaut, Sushant Singh, Gulshan Grover, Apporva
    Lakhia


    Knock Out is a rehash of Hollywood film Phone Booth with a dash of another film, Liberty Stands Tall added. Since it is a single thread, one location film, the trick to hold the viewers interest is in unfolding the story while holding as much back to maintain an air of suspense and drama. As is his wont, director Mani Shankar employs gadgets of all sorts from satellite tracing to laser guns to miniature surveillance choppers.


    Irrfan is a fixer for a particular politician handling his ill-gotten cash and running errands. Contrary to his image of a family loving husband, he is a compulsive womaniser and liar. Being in the kind of business he is, he takes his instructions from the politician’s people from a public phone booth. On one such visit to his regular phone booth, he picks up the ringing phone and, thereafter, the drama unfolds as he is held captive in the booth at gun pointed at him from a building across the booth and made to own up to all his sins as well as those of his mentors as the media is thronging the place covering this drama as it unfolds.


    With little else to distract or divert viewers’ attention to, a lot depends on how the film unwinds and the performances. While Sanjay Dutt, closeted in a room pointing a gun at the booth and eliciting confessions, can’t do much to liven up the proceedings, it is up to Irrfan to make the goings on interesting; to say the least, he does it with flying colours as this role showcases his talents. Kangna Ranaut as a TV journalist passes muster. Sushant Singh is effective. Gulshan Grover and Apoorva Lakhia in brief roles are okay.


    Direction is stylish. There are no songs in the film; background score is effective. Cinematography is very good and so are action sequences. Dialogue is witty.


    Knock Out is a taut film with loose first half and interesting second half. Its drawbacks are in the waning following of Sanjay Dutt and release during a very dull period which will not augur well for its business prospects.

  • Kishore Kumar award conferred on Yash Chopra

    MUMBAI: The Madhya Pradesh Government-instituted National Kishore Kumar Award for the year 2009-10 was conferred on producer-directed Yash Chopra at a ceremony that took place at Khandwa in Madhya Pradesh, the birthplace of the late Kishore Kumar.


    State Cultural Minister Laxmikant Sharma presented him with the award, a traditional shawl and a cash prize.


    Madhya Pradesh education minister Archana Tipnis and the State Tribal Welfare Minister Vijay Shah were also present at the occasion. “By agreeing to accept
    this award, Yashji has added to the reputation of MP as a state. He is one such director whose films have been socially relevant for more than 50 years,” averred Sharma.


    Chopra was overwhelmed at receiving this award and thanked the Madhya Pradesh government for the same. While appreciating the great work done by
    the Madhya Pradesh government in Kishore Kumar‘s honour, Chopra fondly recalled his association with the late actor-director.


    The Kishore Kumar award is given away for direction, acting, script writing and lyrics every year. Past recipients of the prestigious award are Hrishikesh
    Mukherjee, Gulzar, Shyam Benegal and Amitabh Bachchan.


    Chopra, a contemporary legend in Hindi cinema, has played a seminal role in the Indian film industry.
     

  • Knock Out producers to pay Rs 15 mn to Fox for copying act

    MUMBAI: Producers AAP Productions and Sohail Maklai have to cough up Rs 15 million as damages, following a Bombay High Court ruling that their film Knock Out was a copy of the Hollywood blockbuster Phone Booth.


    Firstly, judge Roshan Dalvi watched both the films on Wednesday and ruled in favour of 20th Century Fox the next day, putting a stay on the release.


    Later, the producers approached a division bench of the HC against the order of single judge. After hearing the case for about an hour and a half, the division bench comprising Chief Justice Mohit Shah and Justice D Y Chandrachud put a stay on the order passed by the single judge.


    Making it clear that the relief granted to them was on condition that they deposit Rs 15 million with the High Court by 19 October, the bench at the same time directed the producers to maintain accounts related to business accrued by the film.


    20th Century Fox had filed the case against the makers of Knock Out saying that the film was a remake of Phone Booth.