Tag: Anand Kumar

  • Big Trunk Communications onboards Anand Kumar as COO

    Big Trunk Communications onboards Anand Kumar as COO

    MUMBAI: Creative-digital agency Big Trunk Communications has roped in DDB Mudra Group’s Anand Kumar as the chief operations officer. He will be based in Big Trunk’s Mumbai office and head all the strategic growth functions of the organisation.

    With an experience of over 18 years in the advertising and media network, Kumar has previously worked with organisations like Komli SVG Media, Radio Mirchi, Vizeum Media, TV18 Group.

    During his last assignment as senior partner – digital at DDB, he has been credited with building the entire team and driving fast track growth for the agency in terms of revenues and profitability. He was primarily responsible for acquiring new business and managing key existing clients like TCSiON, Shapoorji, and Pallonji, HDFC MF, Edelweiss to name a few.

    An IIM Indore alum, Kumar has had a rich career across both offline and online forms of advertising with multiple high-profile awards under his belt.

    “Big Trunk Communications has welcomed me with open arms and has shown great faith in me. My core focus at Big Trunk would be on enhancing the business and catapulting the organisation to the next level. Looking forward to working with amazing minds from the team and #MakeBigHappen together,” said Kumar.

    Big Trunk Communications CEO Akhil Nair said, “Anand has been a champion in all his previous assignments, having a very strong entrepreneurial understanding of managing a P & L, understanding people, systems, and processes and above all having a very strong understanding of organisational culture and value systems. We are absolutely certain that with his rich experience and outstanding capabilities, Anand will definitely propel Big Trunk into the desired path of high growth and increased productivity.”

  • Desi Kattey …..Make in India!

    Desi Kattey …..Make in India!

    MUMBAI: Desi Kattey is yet another film with local Uttar Pradesh flavour with which rest of the country does not usually identify. Again, the film makes one think that UP is the biggest small-scale industry for manufacturing what is locally referred to as ‘kattey’, or a crudely made single-shot gun. The theme is familiar from several other films seen over the decades. But, in an effort to be different, the makers open many tracks and lose the plot.

     

    In the city of Kanpur in Uttar Pradesh, two young lads who should be playing with slingshots wield kattas instead. They think nothing of using a katta, for they are full of anger with the society and their hunger. Such boys need more than a katta and bullets; they need political support to strengthen their standing while politicians need such boys to do their dirty work. Both complement each other. Ashutosh Rana is the local bahubali aka heavyweight referred to by his followers as Judge. The boys worship him and dream of reaching his position someday.

     

    The boys, Jay Bhanushali and Akhil Kapur, have grown up to be expert shooters and eventually graduate to joining Rana’s unit; Rana is due to fight an election soon. As in all such cliques, there are a few who are envious of these new boys’ sudden rise. Rana wins the election but a situation is created whereby they can’t meet him.

     

    This is most how UP-Bihar katta stories go, but here the makers want to not only continue with the great friendship saga  while trying to extract emotional and melodramatic scenes from non-performers, but also give a purpose to the film by channelling their talent with guns to get them glory of the legit kind.

     

    Suniel Shetty, a disgraced army major, spots the talent of Jay and Akhil and decides that instead of wasting it on killing people, they could be trained professionals and win shooting contests instead. Even as the two are being trained, they come across Rana again who beckons them to return to the fold. Time for a dramatic moment as it is also the time for an interval. Akhil decides to go back with Rana while Jay, who has also found his lady love in Shetty’s sister, Sasha Agha, does not.

     

    The first half was tolerable purely due to force of habit having done so often enough. But the pace drops in the second half. Post interval, as Jay works on his shooting practice, Akhil perfects his shooting on Rana’s rivals. In between, having no enemies of his own to kill, Rana turns Akhil to social service asking him to wipe out all the evil-doers, including a land-mafioso, a pimp, a drug peddler and so on! What was this diversion for from the film’s routine?

     

    The separated friends pine for each other and sob all the time which creates unintended comedy. And, to think that both have found their lady love. Akhil’s being Tia Bajpai who, in another clichéd moment, is killed just when she announces her pregnancy.

     

    Desi Kattey is a badly scripted film trying to cram in too much and stretching itself to about 2.45 hours with a weak face value and limited talent. Direction below par and, again, clichéd. Musical score by Kailash Kher is the plus in this film with hummable tracks. Other aspects are routine. Of the two boys, Jay does better while Akhil just passes muster. Girls make little impression. Shetty is okay. Rana is fairly good.

     

    Poor at box office.

     

    Producer: Anand Kumar.

     

    Director: Anand Kumar.

     

    Cast: Suniel Shetty, Jay Bhanushali, Akhil Kapur, Tia Bajpai, Sasha Agha, Ashutosh Rana, Murli Sharma.

     

     3 A.M. … Not worth staying up for

     

    Horror genre being economical and can even work with new faces mainly on the strength of content and technology, it has been catching up in Hindi industry. As for content, there are a lot of ‘inspirations’ all around the world cinema. And, so are film titles can be sourced from other industries; this one for instance, comes from a Thailand film, 3 A.M.

     

    Rannvijay Singh along with his girlfriend, Anindita Nayar and friends, Kavin Dave and Sahil Acharya are on a night out celebrating. Rannvijay proposes to Anindita. That done, Anindita, a journalist, moves on to research on her article on haunted places of Mumbai.

     

    Rannvijay is fast asleep when he hears a woman’s wail and wakes up. It is 3am. He sees his girlfriend sitting in a dark corner sobbing. Rannvijay tries to reach out to her but can neither move nor speak. Finally, when he can, he tries to contact Anindita whose phone is not reachable. But, Rannvijay gets a call from her father instead informing him that Anindita was found hanging at the Rudra Mills where she had gone earlier in the night for her research.

     

    Rannvijay, a nonbeliever in ghosts and afterlife, however, had a weird experience earlier. Anindita had come to him to apologise for leaving him and that she would always love him. He, along with his friends, decides to carry on the research on ghosts at the mill hoping that his girlfriend has turned into one too and he would be able to meet her.  In the process, you keep watching some mix and match from other horror/ ghost movies.

     

    There is nothing much to the story that can thrill you. Direction is passable sans highlights. Visual effects are good at times. Background score is loud. The three friends are on a ghost hunting mission or fun trip is something that one wonders. Rannvijay does fair while Anindita has a brief role. Kavin and Sahil are okay.

     

    3 A.M. has no hope at the box office whatsoever.

     

    Producers: Handprint Pictures, Essel Vision.

     

    Director: Vishal Mahadkar.

     

    Cast: Rannvijay Singh, Anindita Nayar, Salil Acharya, Kavin Dave. 

  • Zilla Ghaziabad maker rebuffs false claim

    Zilla Ghaziabad maker rebuffs false claim

    MUMBAI: Zilla Ghaziabad director Anand Kumar has rebuffed the claim of Krishna Devi, the widow of late former Indian Army man Mahender Singh ‘Fauji‘, who had approached the Delhi High Court seeking to stay the release of the movie.

    “The claims normally become high when a film gets media hype. Zilla Ghaziabad is not a biopic. It‘s just a gangster film with a cop and two criminals. It‘s just a coincidence that Arshad Warsi‘s name in the film is Fauji but it‘s a modern story. When did Mahender Fauji use stylish cars and modern weapons I again say that Zilla Ghaziabad is a complete fiction film,” Kumar aserted.

    In her recent petition, Devi had alleged that the upcoming film was based on the life of her late husband. Claiming that her husband joined the Indian Army in November 1965 and fought for the nation in the 1971 India-Pakistan war, she sought the Court‘s direction to restrain the release of the movie without her prior consent.

    The petitioner said that on Internet they found a description about the film that read, “The film is based on real-life characters. Arshad Warsi‘s role is modeled on the outlaw Mahender Fauji.”