Category: Movies

  • Crook: A lost cause







    Director: Mohit Suri
    Producer: Mukesh Bhatt
    Cast: Emraan Hashmi, Neha Sharma, Arjan Bajwa, Kavin Dave


    MUMBAI: Crook: It Is Good To Be Bad is a typical Mukesh Bhatt film where the hero has no scruples and would exploit anybody or any situation to his advantage.


    The hero, Emraan Hashmi, is an ordinary liar whose father was a smuggler who unwittingly imported the RDX used in Mumbai serial blasts. While he is confessing his crime like a petty pickpocket (who he looks like, anyway) to Police Commissioner, he is shot by the latter; this is Emraan’s justification for being what he is, a petty and selfish man. To call him crook is glorifying this character.


    Emraan lands in Australia on false papers and passport (why?) as a student. While he is seen indulging in everything, from wooing a desi girl to charming an Australian pole dancer, he is never seen on a campus! He wants PR, Permanent Residence, status in Australia and for that he needs to marry an Australian citizen! He is sheltered by a Punjabi group headed by one Goldie who runs taxis and soon it looks as if Emraan had sheltered Goldie and his boys! The group also believes in keeping out of racist attacks on Indians in the country. It even goes on to show the local police hands in glove with the attackers!


    Thirty minutes into the film and you know it is a lost cause! Nearer end, you don’t even know if this was a love story or a racist issue based film you were watching!


    If Emraan Hashmi has been counting on luck to be in films, he is smart because acting is not his forte; and talking of luck that too seems to be running out on him fast. Neha Sharma is okay. Arjan Bajwa is effective. Gulshan Grover, playing a sub-inspector in a hawaldar uniform, has but two scenes. Rest of the crowd is passable. Dialogue is pedestrian. Music is below par. Direction is average.


    Crook: It Is Good To Be Bad is a confessional title; it is a bad film!


     


    Do Dooni Chaar has a paper thin theme


     







    Director: Habib Faisal
    Producer: Arindam Chaudhury
    Cast: Rishi Kapoor, Neetu Kapoor, Aditi Vasudev, Archit Krishna


    Do Dooni Chaar is about a middle class Punjabi family of four; Mr Duggal (Rishi
    Kapoor), Mrs Duggal (Neetu Kapoor) and their two teenage children which have to try all the tricks in the book to juggle their monthly budget to make ends meet.


    Rishi Kapoor is a school teacher who also teaches at a coaching class to add to his take home. Just when the Duggals feel they have a surplus of few thousands, there is sure to be an unexpected expense. This being a Punjabi family and Delhi, the culture is to show more than one possessed.


    Rishi Kapoor owns a run down rickety scooter which is a subject of ridicule for his students and own kids alike. For the Duggals, things and their meagre finances go out of control when they borrow a neighbour’s car to go to a family wedding to nearby Meerut. The car is dented, the Duggals are insulted and humiliated by the neighbour and, in the heat of the moment, Rishi Kapoor declares to his neighbourhood that he will have a car outside his doors too within 15 days!


    What follows are various ploys employed by the family to work out monthly instalments and, when that done, only to realize that they still needed to raise the 60,000 for down payment. From buying cartons of detergent promising a car as first prize to money for marks in exam paper are the various options.


    While Do Dooni Chaar brings back the romantic pair of 70s, Rishi Kapoor and Neetu Kapoor, to screen as middle class parents, the problem with the film is that it has a paper thin theme and revolves mainly around four characters. It has very ordinary gags and fillers to generate interest of the viewer at any point of time throughout its length. While the family chemistry almost works, the kids’ tracks don’t and resorting to imagination every so often and narration of the story from the daughter’s point of view shows lack of penmanship.


    Rishi Kapoor and Neetu Kapoor excel with the young actors, Aditi Vasudev and Archit Krishna, matching the veterans with natural flair. Director uses his observations well. Music is no help.


    Do Dooni Chaar is too slow and a family in pursuit of realising a dream to buy a car looks too unrealistic and a 60s middle class idea to jell with today‘s audience.


     


    Lava Kusa has a limited appeal


     






    Director: Dhavala Satyam
    Producer: Rayudu V Sashank
    Studio: Kanipakam Creations RVML Animation


    Lava Kusa (2D-Animation) is a colourful animation film about the growing up years of Lava and Kusa at the ashram of Sage Valmiki.


    The twins, oblivious of the status of their mother, are trained in all aspects of warfare. Sage Valmiki has penned Ramayana and the twins are also taught to hero worship Rama. On the occasion of the Ashwamedh Yagna, the twins accompany Sage Valmiki to Ayodhya where they sing in praise of Lord Rama.


    However, they soon learn that Lord Rama had treated his spouse Sita unfairly and evicted her from the palace as well as Ayodhya in a pregnant state on the basis of insinuation of a local washer-man. Raged at this injustice, they march out of Ayodhya and stop singing praises of Lord Rama.


    Lord Rama proceeds with his Ashwamedh Yagna as the white stallion bearing the banner of Ayodhya marches through the country claming allegiance from various kings whose kingdom the Ashwa passes. It is when the Yagna stallion enters the sanctity of the Valmiki ashram that it faces resistance; it is stopped by Lava and Kusa and its escort, Shatrughan, the brother of Lord Rama, is neutralised. Laxman, who comes to check the situation, is also not successful. Eventually Lord Rama himself decides to defeat Lava and Kusa, unaware that they are his sons.


    The film, looking at its treatment, is aimed mainly at kids with its song picturisations and war scene with the army of squirrels, monkeys, rabbits, tortoises, a giant falcon and magic fruits and magical arrows shot at each other.


    Lava Kusa as a film story has a limited appeal since except for the confrontation with their father, there is little drama in their life. Script also has some contradictions and though the music may have cost 10 per cent of the film’s reported total budget of Rs 250 million, there is not a single song that may help prop up the film or become a favourite with children.


    The biggest drawback is the language used; it is highbrow Hindi, which sounds alien even to grownups.


    Prospects: Very poor.
     

  • YRF’s Mere Brother Ki Dulhan to release next year

    MUMBAI: Yash Raj Films‘ has titled its next film as Mere Brother Ki Dulhan, starring Imran Khan, Katrina Kaif and Ali Zafar.


    The film is scheduled to release by the middle of next year.
    Produced by Aditya Chopra, the film is already on the floors. It is directed and written by debutant Ali Abbas Zafar. 


    Mere Brother Ki Dulhan is a musical romantic comedy set amongst upper
    middle-class families in North India. The film is a topsy-turvy tale that takes one on a fun-filled ride of humour and romance where Imran falls in love with his brother‘s wife.


    Incidentally, the director has been with YRF for many years and has assisted on films like New York, Tashan, Jhoom Barabar Jhoom and Badmaash Company.

  • Technoicolor to make animated series Atomic Puppet

    MUMBAI: Technicolor has announced a new action-comedy series targeted for children between six to eleven years titled Atomic Puppet.


    The series will be produced by Technicolor Digital Productions, in association with Mark Drop and Jerry Leibowitz who created the characters and developed the series bible.


    Atomic Puppet is about the exploits of 11 year old Joey Felt and his superhero sidekick Atomic Puppet (a magical puppet that comes to life every time Joey puts it onto his hand), as they travel cross-country with Joey‘s eccentric family in a run-down trailer, meeting dark forces along the way, while vigilantly fighting for truth, justice and quality goof-off time.


    Initial plans for the series include making 52 episodes of 11 minutes each.

  • MGM lenders set to vote on its new owners

    MUMBAI: In the next two weeks, more than 100 lenders of MGM will vote on whether to approve naming Gary Barber and Roger Birnbaum of Spyglass as the studio‘s new keepers.


    A detailed proposal by the Spyglass duo for taking over the studio and reshaping its operations was presented on Thursday to creditors. Finallly, the plan will be filed as a ‘prepackaged‘ Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganisation and turn nearly $4 billion in studio debt to lender equity.


    Once the plan exits the bankruptcy Court, Spyglass and a related subsidiary would get a 4.7 per cent equity of the studio while Barber and Birnbaum would become co-CEOs of MGM.


    The bankruptcy filing is expected by month‘s end, with the subsequent court process likely to take about 30 days.


    Current owners of MGM including Providence Equity, TPG Capital, Sony, Comcast, DLJ Merchant and Quadrangle would have their hold on the studio erased, in the proposed reorganisation.


    Hedge funds Anchorage, Highland, Davidson Kempner and Solis acquired about 35 per cent of MGM‘s publicly traded debt last year. 51 per cent of lenders have to approve a prepackaged bankruptcy representing two-thirds of the amount owed.


    The studio is being currently run by an office of the CEO Stephen Cooper, CFO Bedi Singh and film personality Mary Parent. All of them would exit their posts after the studio‘s revamp.
     

  • Eros, Studio18 keen to remake Don Seemu

    MUMBAI: Salman Khan, Saif Ali Khan and Akshay Kumar are trying their best to acquire the remaking rights of the Telugu super hit Don Seemu. It seems two studios are also pitching in for the remaking rights.


    While Eros International has evinced interest to produce the film with Salman Khan, Studio 18 also wants to make it with Akshay Kumar in the lead. It is also learnt that Madhu Mantena (producer of Ghajini) is also mulling the remake and is keen on watching the film. 


    An insider in Eros has claimed that Salman Khan has won the race and Eros will produce the film, “Since Salman is very busy, the film is expected to go on floors only next year and will be shot entirely in Switzerland,” he says.


    “Eros has indeed seen Don Seemu and has found that it has a great potential to be a Hindi blockbuster. We are working to officially buy the rights,” quips Eros Chief Creative Officer Ram Mirchandani.

  • Robot sets standards for visual effects in film industry

    MUMBAI: Robot is setting the standards for visual effects in the Indian film industry. Several Bollywood producers are reworking their budgets and trying to uplift the standards of special effects.


    Shah Rukh Khan‘s Red Chillies is working out plans to have a more effective VFX in their forthcoming RA 1. It is also learnt that Rakesh Roshan has delayed his ambitious Krrish 2. 


    Though, according to the Roshans, “the film has not been shelved,” the arrival and the subsequent success of Robot has changed equations in the industry. They feel that a lot more work needs to be done on Krrish 2.


    Adds a source in Filmkraft, ” The film will definitely be made, wait for the announcement.”

  • UTV Motion Pictures has no fund raising plan: Kapur

    MUMBAI: UTV Motion Pictures is not looking at raising further capital and is on course to reach its revenue target of Rs 4.50 billion this fiscal as it readies a few big releases including Guzaarish and Tees Maar Khan, a senior executive said.


    The year has seen a string of hits including Rajneeti and I Hate Luv Storys and the company plans to have an annual release pipeline of 12 movies.


    “We are pretty much well funded and have scaled up our operations. The business has reached a self-generation mode,” said UTV Motion Pictures chief executive officer Siddharth Roy Kapur.


    UTV has deployed a capital of Rs 5.46 billion for movies, according to data available till 30 June 2010.


    UTV has almost locked up its slate for the next fiscal. “We are sitting in a pretty position and expect to see strong growth in the next fiscal. We have only 3-4 titles to lock up. The pre-planning is well in place,” said Kapur.


    Kapur expects consolidation to take place in the distribution space. “In the creative side, cost rationalization has taken place. We are seeing a strong growth in theatrical revenues due to expansion in the exhibition business,” he said.


    The business model for satellite TV rights has changed this year as broadcasters are increasingly looking at acquiring exclusive movie content for telecast. “The syndication model is being thrown out of the window. Broadcasters are looking for an exclusive window for anything they acquire. It is working out good for broadcasters as well as producers,” said Kapur.


    Will the success of Enthiran (The Robot) lure UTV to look more aggressively at regional movie production? “We will keep an eye on the regional movie space. We do not expect the dynamics to change much in these markets. Rajinikanth does not make movies too often and regional movies require a different sensibility. Our focus will remain on Bollywood,” said Kapur.
     

  • Freak accident on the sets of X-Men

    MUMBAI: Filming of the new X-Men film had to be abruptly stalled after James McAvoy was involved in a freak accident on the set.


    The shooting of X-Men: First Class was being held at the Pinewood Studios in Buckinghamshire. However, the shooting came to a temporary halt after a buggy, which was taking McAvoy around the sets crashed. 


    Though McAvoy was taken aback, he was not seriously injured. The shoot resumed later.
     

  • Tom Cruise, Jack Nicholson together again

    MUMBAI: Tom Cruise will team up with Jack Nicholson for a new comedy film El Presidente.


    While Cruise has already been signed, Nicholson is considering an offer, it is understood.


    The film follows a dedicated Secret Service agent, played by Cruise, who is dispatched to guard a former US president, the role being considered for Nicholson. The agent‘s day-to-day job is boring – until a serious threat is made on his client‘s life and they are forced to go on the run.


    Cruise and Nicholson were previously seen together in A Few Good Men made in 1982.

  • YRF signs Nupur Asthana to direct movie

    MUMBAI: Yash Raj Films has roped in Nupur Asthana to direct its next feature film.


    The film that has newcomers in the lead will be made under the recently formed banner, Y Production. Under this banner, Yash Raj Films will make medium-budget movies with lesser- known names.


    Asthana is now in the limelight, with her serial Mahi Way produced by Yash Raj Films and telecast on Sony TV.


    Ashthana was supposed to direct a film for UTV Films but the project never took off. She has also written the screenplay of Chain Kulli Ki Main Kulii and Chance Pe Dance.