Tag: Amit Sadh

  • Star Gold HD to premiere ‘Guddu Rangeela’

    Star Gold HD to premiere ‘Guddu Rangeela’

    MUMBAI: Star Gold HD, known for its exclusivity in curating unique movies for its audiences, once again astonishes them with the World Television Premiere of ‘Guddu Rangeela’. The movie is to be premiered first on the channel, adding a unique quotient to it. Known for his satirical comical dramas Phas Gaye Re Obama and Jolly LLB, Director Subhash Kapoor’s Guddu Rangeela is a quirky take on the real-life incident of Manoj-Babli honour killing case. Not to forget the music, the songs have been composed by none other than Amit Trivedi which has managed to please the music lovers with super catchy tracks like ‘Mata ka email’ that has minimal music and super quirky lyrics.

     

    Based in the dusty plains of north India, the story is about two cousins Guddu (Amit Sadh) and Rangeela (Arshad Warsi), trying to make ends meet in the crime infested surroundings. They are the members of a local village orchestra while moonlighting as khabris for the local gangs. The duo gets embroiled into a controversy and to escape from that they need a huge sum. To arrange the ransom money, they kidnap the deaf and mute girl named ‘Baby’ (Aditi Rao Hydari) only to be shocked to know that Baby has a hidden agenda. Suddenly the terror spilling villainous local political leader Billo (Ronit Roy) gets in action and the story later takes an interesting twist which leads to funny sequences.

     

    So gear up to watch this thought-provoking lighthearted film, ‘Guddu Rangeela’ only on Star Gold HD on 5 September at 8:00 pm.

  • ‘Guddu Rangeela’…Faded patches

    ‘Guddu Rangeela’…Faded patches

    MUMBAI: Subhash Kapoor’s last film was Jolly LLB, which was enjoyable and hence quite a success. Being a journalist operating in North India before he got down to making films, with his latest, Guddu Rangeela, he tries to cash in on his experience. He blends the subject of Khap panchayats with comedy. But the theme of Khap soon overshadows comedy as the film progresses. The problem is that while Jolly LLB had identification for many and where Arshad Warsi, the protagonist, was supported by two great performers in Saurabh Shukla and Boman Irani, here Arshad is left to fend for himself. Khap is not a matter the general public either identifies with or cares for.

     

    Arshad and Amit Sadh are petty conmen. They earn their bread performing modern bhajans like ‘Mata ka email…’ at people’s houses. On the side, they add butter to their bread by acting as informers for robbers, giving them information about the financial standing of big shots at whose homes they perform. However, Arshad’s need for money is greater than his main client pays him and he sells the same information to three gangs of robbers. He gets into trouble with all of them.

     

    The money Arshad needs is for a court battle he is fighting against Ronit Roy, a Khap leader and a local MLA. It turns out that Arshad had married a girl, Shriswara, from a Khap based community and both were shot at by Ronit. While Arshad survived, his Shriswara was assumed to be dead. Arshad had an axe to grind with Ronit and the Khap. What is strange is that, while Ronit advocates the cause of Khap he has himself married outside his community!

     

    Guddu Rangeela gets multi-layered here on in. The duo of Arshad and Amit are talked into kidnapping Aditi Rao Hyderi. It turns out that Aditi is the sister in law of Ronit and she also wants to get even with Ronit for killing his wife and Aditi’s sister.

     

    Halfway through, the film turns into a revenge drama. While Arshad, Amit and Aditi use wit and wisdom, Ronit counts on his might. After all, he is known as the pehelwan by people. And, sadly, things become predictable from this point. Both sides concerned keep challenging each other while playing cat and mouse games. But, villains always have an ace hidden up their sleeve. Shriswara is reincarnated; she did not die of her bullet wound after all and was spared death by Ronit. Arshad has to come out and face Ronit if he wants his wife back!

     

    The climax takes place in a stone quarry, the kind seen very often before where, in the final bout of hand to hand fight, Arshad takes down the mighty Ronit.

     

    The film tries to cram in many angles failing to stick to one agenda for its hero. Direction lacks a purpose. Turning Arshad into an angry man from petty conman using his wit to survive does not work. It does not help as Arshad carries the same look he did in his earlier films. Amit is okay as Arshad’s sidekick. Ronit Roy wears the same stern look throughout like a mask. Rajendra Kala is good as usual. Shriswara has little to do. Aditi is the only one who comes up with a decent performance. The film has a popular number in ‘Mata ka email…’ while ‘Sooyian…’ is appealing.

     

    Guddu Rangeela brings no relief for cinema chains starved of strong content.

     

    Producer: Sangeeta Ahir.

    Director: Subhash Kapoor.

    Cast: Arshad Warsi, Amit Sadh, Aditi Rao Hyderi, Ronit Roy, Shriswara, Amit Sial, Rajendra Kala.

     

    ‘Second Hand Husband’…Third rate idea!

     

    Second Hand Husband has ‘enthusiastic new producers’ written all over it. Since the inception of filmmaking, there have always been people drawn by the glamour of the films and wanting to belong. The film would be called a half-baked idea even in the last century. The film’s only USP is that it stars Dharmendra who still enjoys a fair amount of goodwill and, hence, some following. 

     

    Dharmendra owns a four star-hotel, is married to Rati Agnihotri but is childless, and is a compulsive flirt besides being a drunkard. Gippy Grewal is the manager at Dharmendra’s hotel and, often, his drinking partner. Gippy is a divorcee and is now planning to marry Tina Ahuja. However, the impediment is a court ruling according to which he is supposed to pay an alimony of rupees 30,000 to his ex-wife, Geeta Basra, out of his monthly salary of 45,000. His prospective in-laws don’t mind him being a divorcee but want him to earn enough to support their daughter and his wife-to-be.

     

    Gippy pleads with Geeta to be generous and reduce her alimony so that he can marry Tina. Geeta is not game for this idea. Realising that he has to pay alimony only till Geeta marries again, he gets after finding a match for her. The basic idea may sound similar to a 1979 film starring Amol Palekar where a hypochondriac Amol thinks he is about to die and seeks his friend’s help to find another man for his wife, Ranjeeta Kaur, so that she is not lonely after he is gone.

     

    A lot of footage is spent chasing guys who are rejected by Geeta or vice versa.

     

    Now comes the time to bring Dharmendra into the story. He is caught flirting with Deepshikha by his wife Rati. Her brother Mukesh Tiwari and sister-in-law, Supriya Karnik, suggest she divorce Dharmendra. Gippy realises that a divorced Dharmendra would be an ideal match for Deepshikha: He is rich, generous and emotional. And Deepshikha is totally sold on the idea of handsome, rich, and generous Dharmendra as her second husband. So what if he is much older to her?  He and Tina get working on Dharmendra, a man who also loves his wife Rati very much, but cannot hold himself back from flirting.

     

    Gippy, meanwhile, is also trying to fix up Rati with Vijay Raaz, a local cop, so that she learns to forget about Dharmendra (now that is in poor taste and belittles the very idea of matchmaking!). But, divorce is not for everybody so Dharmendra and Rati reach an out of court compromise after both blaming each other but also realising they are still very much in love.

     

    The film has an amateur story with script and direction to match. It could have at best been an amateur stage play at school level albeit with diluted theme. Dharmendra still looks his debonair self. Gippy fits the ’pind da puttar’ image. Tina is not born to be an actor. Ravi Kishan pretends to be a loudspeaker; he keeps yelling even within earshot. Geeta needs to try a few more expressions next time. Rati is okay.

     

    Second Hand Husband is for Dharmendra fans, whatever a few are still around.

    Producers: Iqbal Singh, Palwinder Singh, Manwinder Singh, Gurvinder Singh.

    Director: Smeep Kang.

    Cast: Dharmendra, Gippy Grewal, Tina Ahuja, Geeta Basra, Deepshikha, Vijay Raaz, Mukesh Tiwari, Ravi Kissen. 

  • Amit Sadh nominated at the prestigious Screen awards 2014 for ‘Kai Po Che’

    Amit Sadh nominated at the prestigious Screen awards 2014 for ‘Kai Po Che’

    MUMBAI: When the film Kai Po Che released last year, it gave some exceptional talent to the film industry. Now, as the award season kick starts, it is time for them to get their share of recognition. One of the actors from the movie, Amit Sadh has received recognition for his brilliant performance in the movie and has been nominated for ‘The Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Male)’ at the Screen Awards.

     

    Amit Sadh showcased his acting prowess in Kai Po Che, the film which opened to house-full screens across the nation. Doing complete justice to the complex character, he played the role of Omkar Shastri a.k.a ‘Omi’, who is torn between his emotions, facing extreme circumstances in life.

     

    Amit won the hearts of the audience with his flawless performance and also left critics spell bound. The actor recently wrapped up shooting for his next, Running Shaadi.com, and currently has other projects in his kitty.

     

    Ecstatic about being nominated, Amit Sadh said, “It is an honour to be nominated at the 20th Annual Screen Awards 2014. Kai Po Che is very close to my heart and being nominated for my performance in the film makes it even more special.”

  • Shoojit Sircar wraps up the shooting of Running Shaadi.com

    Shoojit Sircar wraps up the shooting of Running Shaadi.com

    MUMBAI: It was quite a sprint and now the shooting of Running Shaadi.com is complete. Produced by Vicky Donor director Shoojit Sircar and his partner Ronnie Lahiri (Rising Sun Films) and co-produced by Crouching Tiger motion pictures, the film is a young rom-com starring Amit Sadh (Kai Po Che) and Tapsee Pannu (Chashme Baddoor) in the lead and is directed by debutant Amit Roy, who has previously worked as a cinematographer in films like Sarkar and Dum Maaro Dum. The film went on floors in October and the start-to-finish Patiala schedule ended on December 10.

     

    Running Shaadi.com revolves around a website which helps people elope and get married. When Ram Bharose (Amit) and Nimmi (Tapsee) fall in love while on the run, one hilarious situation leads to another and they have to handle their own runningshaadi. Add to that a wide array of unique characters make for an endearing light-hearted story.

     

    With Sircar himself being the creative mentor of the film, Running Shaadi.com has a head start. “We at Rising Sun Films are committed to making entertaining cinema and this film fits the bill perfectly. We had a fun, fast shoot and now we are getting into post-production to finish the film,” said the filmmaker.

     

    The film will release in mid-2014.

  • Kai Po Che: Newcomers put up an impressive performance

    Kai Po Che: Newcomers put up an impressive performance

    MUMBAI: Kai Po Che is an adaptation of the Chetan Bhagat novel, Three Mistakes Of My Life, about three friends living the Gujarat dream – to become entrepreneurs. This is Bhagat‘s third book to be made into a film after One Night @ The Call Centre (Hello) and, Five Point Someone (3 Idiots).

    Producers: Ronnie Screwvala, Siddharth Roy Kapoor.

    Director: Abhishek Kapoor.

    Cast: Sushant Singh Rajput, Raj Kumar Yadav, Amit Sadh, Amrita Puri, Digvijay Deshmukh, Manav Kaul.

    Raju Hirani‘s 3 Idiots turned Five Point Someone into a cinematic miracle which went on to become the highest Hindi grosser so far. Kai Po Che has the tough task of bettering it or, at least, living up to it. To start with a small correction with spellings, it is ‘Chhe‘ in Gujarati language and ‘Che‘ means nothing in Gujarati.

    A pol in Ahmedabad is a congested one-track settlement where households live as one family; the main doors are always open and you don‘t have to knock to enter. It is typically an old Ahmedabad phenomenon and Hindu and Muslim localities usually share demarcations by a lane or two.

    Govind (Raj Kumar Yadav), Ishaan (Sushant Singh Rajput) and Omi (Amit Sadh) have grown up together in one such pol and are more like brothers than friends. Still, all three are poles apart. Yadav is practical and ambitious with entrepreneurial instincts, Rajput is a cricket fanatic and Sadh is all brawn and no brains, just happy to belong. The centre point of this pol is a temple where Sadh‘s father is the chief priest while his mama, Manav Kaul, is the trustee and treasurer with heavy leanings towards a political party.

    Yadav gives tuitions to local kids and helps his mother with her home industry of delivering popular Gujarati snacks like khakhras and theplas. However, his entrepreneurial side won‘t let him rest with just so little. Since Rajput is a cricket enthusiast and spends time coaching the neighbourhood kids, and Sadh‘s family controls the temple, he suggests they set up a shop in the temple premises selling sports goods. Nobody is convinced initially with the idea but, Sadh being his only nephew for whom he has grand plans in politics, Kaul finances and encourages them to go ahead. The shop is quite a success and there are picnics and celebrations for the trio.

    The lives of three friends are soon destined to follow different tracks. Yadav carries on with his zeal to expand and is in search for a bigger outlet somewhere in the developing parts of the city, finally settling on a mall, Sadh is gradually drawn into politics by Kaul while Rajput has finally found his calling; he has met a young Muslim boy, Digvijay Deshmukh, in who he sees potential to be a cricket star some day. Rajput takes it upon himself to train the boy with all his time and resources. That is when the 26 January, 2001 earthquake hits Gujarat. Among others it has also destroyed the mall in which the three had invested Rs 500, 000 loaned by Kaul.

    No sooner has the calamity been forgotten, the infamous Sabarmati Express episode happens a year later, leading to communal riots. The three have different priorities: Yadav is worried he has impregnated Rajput‘s sister, Rajput wants to save Deshmukh and his family members while Sadh, who has lost his parents in the train disaster, wants to avenge them and is on the move with rioting mobs.

    The first half of the film is all about three friends, their carefree life and finding a cause while post interval, the perspective changes to wider issues, the riots and how they changed lives.

    The feel good film suddenly turns heavy, stuffing in too much. The story of three friends through various moments in their lives does not touch the viewer at anytime. Being a period-specific story, the director has not been very particular about the city he is dealing with. The pol in the story opens on the main road showing traffic, there are green and yellow CNG rickshaws in 2001, and many malls in the making. None of this is accurate. The interiors are shown to be dull and drab which don‘t make for pleasant viewing. There is extensive use of Gujarati language but it neither has Ahmedabadi twang nor is pronounced properly by non Gujarati artistes. The title Kai Po Che has no relevance to the story and the film has just one passing kite-flying scene while kite flying is a passion in the city climaxing on 14 January every year. Also, the title, which is a cry that goes when an opponent‘s kite is cut, it means little to those outside of Gujarat and Mumbai. The songs are soothing.

    The new faces in the film, Yadav, Sadh as well as Rajput do very well while Amrita Puri in her brief role is suitably apt alternating between a coy girl and a bold one romancing her brother‘s best friend on the sly. Deshmukh is impressive. Kaul lives up to his part.

    Kai Po Che has been much hyped yet falls short of expected opening response. While some improvement may be expected over next two days, it may not be enough. 

    Zila Ghaziabad: Of gangs, guns and gore

    Producer: Vinod Bachchan.

    Director: Anand Kumar.

    Cast: Sanjay Dutt, Arsad Warsi, Vivek Oberoi, Paresh Rawal, Ravi Kissen, Chandrachur Singh, Sunil Grover, Minissha Lamba, Charmy Kaur, Eijaz Khan, Ashutosh Rana.

    Zila Ghaziabad is one of those local stories from Ghaziabad, UP, and considering the region, it is about violence and gang wars blended with politics and police to complete the chowkdy (gathering of four).

    The film is supposed to be inspired from a real life war between two Gujjar community gangs of the town, only turned up many notches in violence. In fact, the film is all about violence with a few item/dance numbers thrown in while all other aspects like relations and emotions are mere props.

    Vivek Oberoi wears desi garb, teaches youngsters under a tree and quotes Mahatma Gandhi. That is not all. He is a multi-talented man: a lawyer by qualification, he romances the town head‘s daughter and can even take to arms if it comes to it. The headman, Paresh Rawal, usually engages muscleman Arshad Warsi but is convinced when Oberoi suggests a legal route to solve a land dispute with Ravi Kissen. The sarpanch being the judge and jury, Oberoi wins the day for Rawal whose brother in law, Sunil Grover, is not pleased with his proximity either with Rawal or with his daughter, Charmy Kaur. Thus a couple of enmity angles have opened up.

    Grover, playing the old-fashioned villain, creates a rift between Warsi and Oberoi. Blood flows getting the media attention and it is time for the super cop, Sanjay Dutt, to enter. He metes out instant justice. There are no arrests and no court cases in his law book. Dutt seems to plan his strategies on a chessboard. He studies it like a tarot card and decides to let Oberoi and Warsi loose on each other and for them to fight it out between themselves. Dead bodies drop like nine pins: Chandrachur Singh, Rawal, some women and a horde of henchmen. Nobody is counting.

    Being UP, the politics and gangster nexus is inevitable. It is election time and gangster Kissen, aided by Warsi, decides to throw in his hat, with Oberoi‘s brother, Eijaz Khan, opposing him. Kissen wins hands down giving him a licence to rule the district and eliminate anybody who crosses his path. But before that, he has to eliminate Warsi who has now become a nuisance for him. So there are going to be some more gun fights and some hand-to-hand combat as well. In fact, the film is all about fights except when it breaks for an item number.

    All the while when the gangs are shooting at each other, Dutt does support one of them from behind the scene. You can‘t have Dutt in the cast and not have him be part of the action. Finally, when all the baddies have gone down, Oberoi survives to resume spreading Gandhi‘s philosophies again. His is one case where Dutt has made an exception and got him his due punishment instead of giving justice on the spot, a bullet in the head.

    Zila Ghaziabad has a number of artistes in its roster and as a new one arrives on screen, an old one makes way. Dutt, Oberoi, Warsi, Rawal, Singh, Kissen are all apt. The one who stands out in the lot is Grover. The girls Kaur, Minissha Lamba, and Divya Dutta appear intermittently with nothing substantial to do. Direction is routine and the locations, except a couple of passing ones, have no identification with Ghaziabad or the district. Cinematography is below par while editing is slack. Except for one item number, Baap ka maal…, music has no appeal. The fights are repetitive and the kind seen in many South remakes recently.

    Zila Ghaziabad is a poor fare, the kind they stopped making by 1980. It has been received very well in Ghaziabad and neighbouring districts but is poor elsewhere.

  • UTV’s Kai Po Che to premiere at Berlin Film Fest

    UTV’s Kai Po Che to premiere at Berlin Film Fest

    MUMBAI: UTV Motion Pictures‘ upcoming film Kai Po Che is scheduled to have its world premiere at the 63rd Berlin International Film Festival scheduled to go under way next month.

    The film, based on Chetan Bhagat‘s novel The 3 Mistakes of My Life, will be screened at the film festival on 13 February.

    The film, which stars newcomers Sushant Singh Rajput, Raj Kumar Yadav and Amit Sadh in lead roles, portrays the journey of three friends as they discover cricket, religion and business in their respective fields.

    Said Disney UTV Managing Director – Studios, Siddharth Roy Kapur, “We are incredibly proud that Kai Po Che has been selected for a world premiere at the Berlin Film Festival. What is even more creditable is that it is the only Indian film in the official panorama selection announced by the festival this year.

    For a film dependent entirely on its strong story line rather than its lineup of stars, this is a huge achievement and for that I would like to commend Abhishek Kapoor and his entire cast and crew for bringing all their talent and passion to bear, to make Kai Po Che a film for the ages.”

    Set against the backdrop of religious politics, the story of Kai Po Che underlines the three mistakes made by Govind. The film as well as the book is set in Gujarat and hence the title Kai Po Che.

    Thirty-one fictional features from 23 countries will provide insights into contemporary world cinema production at the 10-day-long Berlin ale festival.

    The film will hit screens in India on 22 February.

  • ‘Maximum’ stress on ones senses

    ‘Maximum’ stress on ones senses

    MUMBAI: In his earlier film Saher, director Kabeer Kaushik took Hindi filmmaking to Lucknow and made a reasonably plausible film. Why the film did not work should have dawned on him though. In Maximum, he imports Lucknow to Mumbai and comes up with a film which has no beginning and an end which makes no sense, with two senior policemen shooting each other in the finale!

    There are no preambles, no once upon a time. As the film Maximum opens, you have this trigger happy policeman, Sonu Sood, shooting at all and sundry with glee. But all cops are normal at home, so we get to meet his family. He has a doting wife (Neha Dhupia), a daughter who can‘t manage her shoelaces and a father (Rajendra Gupta) who adds pathos and human angle to the story by suddenly collapsing of a heart attack.

    Whatever one can understand of the story in the film is that Sonu Sood is a be-all and end-all of cops. He is an encounter specialist of the post-2003 police force of Mumbai and everybody, from fellow cops to politicians to underworld goons to starlets, is scared of him because he has a license to kill and no explanations are sought. He has but one adversary in Naseeruddin Shah, another senior encounter specialist, who wants to be in the place Sonu Sood enjoys. Both have a lobby supporting them, either within the police force or among politicians and builders. Finally, both end up shooting each other at, of all the places, Valsad railway station in Gujarat. The maker has a fascination with trains or probably that is how he defines the pace of life in Mumbai for a scene or sound of local trains is ubiquitous in the film.

    The film is a reunion of Lucknow alumnus in Mumbai in that Sonu Sood is from Lucknow; his dad, Rajendra Gupta, is a professor from Lucknow who has dropped in on Sonu Sood to die on him; politician Vinay Pathak is from Lucknow (and conveniently an ex-student of Rajendra Gupta) and then there is a news channel reporter, also from Lucknow, who is, according to the film, the only and the star reporter on Mumbai‘s TV scene.

    But, then there is a Lucknow reunion wrecker in Naseeruddin Shah. His antecedents are not deemed necessary to be established. He just pops up to spoil Sonu Sood‘s party. It seems that there is a rivalry between Sood and Shah over the body count of the encounter killings both have executed. Both cops, however, have one thing in common; they owe loyalty to opposing politicians, shooting unidentified extras in the day, mingling with big builders in the evening and dancing and making merry with nautch girls in bars at night. That, in general, is the sketch of Mumbai encounter cops for you.

    There is no definite villain in the film. It is about the game of one-upmanship between two cops, two politicians and two builders and that too is given without dwelling on details. As the two cops play their games, Sood has the backing of Vinay Pathak and the news reporter, Aman Sadh, while Naseeruddin Shah has the backing of the all powerful home minister, Mohan Agashe. Someone had to give and it is Pathak who betrays Sood leading to final bloodbath culminating in both policemen killing each other in their fight for supremacy.

    Maximum has no coherent script and comes across more as a live telecast of two warring cops. The story telling skill has been done away with. If the film is trying to tell two facets of a policeman when Sood is a caring husband, son and father at home, it is not relevant or of interest in any way. There is no scope for music but an item number has been forced in and wasted. Sonu Sood performs well but it is pointless as you don‘t know whether he is a hero or an antihero. Naseeruddin Shah has been miscast.

    Vinay Pathak is convincing as a sweet-talking politician. Rajendra Gupta and Neha Dhupia, brought into contribute domesticity to the story, fail to do that as their parts are superficial. Neither dialogue not editing are appealing. The film, even at 106 minutes, is maximum stress on ones senses.

    As for the box office prospects, Maximum has none.