Tag: Hate Story

  • Bong beauty Paoli Dam set to rule IFFI GOA

    Bong beauty Paoli Dam set to rule IFFI GOA

    MUMBAI: Paoli Dam, who made a sensational debut with Hate Story, is all set to dominate at IIFI GOA 2013 that kicked off recently. Paoli Dam is the only actress at IIFI, whose two films Baga Beach by the highly acclaimed director Laxmikant Shetgaonkar, and Ajana Batash directed by two times National Award winning director Anjan Das are a part of the festival.

     

    Paoli had met Laxmikant Shetgaokar at the Cannes Film Festival in 2011, and later when she heard Baga Beach’s script, she liked it and thought that it would be a unique experience working in a Konkani film, especially with a highly acclaimed director.

     

    Paoli always researches her character well and has learnt the discipline while acting with stalwarts like Rituparno Ghosh and Gautam Ghose. Paoli feels that when recognition follows hard work, it is a fulfilling experience.

  • Housefull 2 joins Rs 1 bn club

    Housefull 2 joins Rs 1 bn club

    MUMBAI: Housefull 2 continues to do very well at the box office, maintaining steady figures in its second week with a net collection of Rs 297 million to take its total to Rs 955 million.

    Interestingly, the film has already crossed the Rs 1 billion mark during its third weekend by adding approximately Rs 100 million during the Friday-Sunday period.

    Meanwhile, last Friday‘s release Vicky Donor has been appreciated well and despite a weak opening, the positive word of mouth has helped the film tremendously as its Sunday collections showed as much as 90 per cent improvement over its opening Friday figures.

    The film has collected Rs 81 million in its first weekend having found much favour with multiplex audience.

    Hate Story lured some crowds at single screens thanks to its bare back publicity. But in the absence of appreciation, the weekend collected stood at Rs 58 million, indicating that the film‘s best showing may have come to an end looking s evident from its Monday performance.

    Bittoo Boss, a film sans star value as well as content, met a poor fate as it managed to collect Rs 21 million in its first week. Chhodo Kal Ki Baateinalso failed to find audiences.

    Agent Vinod collected Rs 1 million in its fourth week, taking its total to Rs 436.5 million.

    Kahaani continued to contribute a decent Rs 6 million in its sixth week. The movie has so far collected Rs 590.9 million.

    Paan Singh Tomar added Rs 0.8 million in its sixth week, taking its six-week tally to Rs 168.8 million.

  • Vicky Donor is a thoroughly entertaining fare

    Vicky Donor is a thoroughly entertaining fare

    MUMBAI: Vicky Donor is a brave effort. The makers take up a contemporary subject of sperm donors, which very few would be familiar with, and knit it around a normal day-to-day family and romance stories in a middle-class Delhi Punjabi household. Many films are touted as contemporary but this one really is and what is more, it is a thoroughly entertaining fare.

    Vicky (Ayushmann Khurana) is 25-year-old man from Lajpat Nagar, Delhi, a locality identified as that of post-partition settlers. While his widowed mother runs a beauty parlour, Vicky generally loafs around till a job drops into his lap. He is a typical loud Delhi Punjabi but has his way with people as he charms his way through life. While he is sleeping, his room has been robbed clean by thief.

    Vicky‘s reaction to this is to go sell off his dog to a neighbourhood kid. This sets the tone of what is to follow.

    But this ‘transaction‘ of selling off an idle dog to a kid is observed by Annu Kapoor, a doctor specialising in finding solutions for couples who can‘t have children. In Vicky he sees an ideal sperm donor.

    But it takes a while before Vicky agrees to the deal. These scenes are not only funny but on the way also explain the concept of sperm donation to a layman. For Vicky, money is the main attraction and his reports liken him to someone close to Aryan breed!

    Vicky‘s life is set to change as yet another event happens in his life: while running errands for his mother, he visits a bank to open a new account and deposit money where he meets Yaami Gautam, a Bengali executive at the bank and after some boisterous, Delhi-brand of stalking, love blossoms. It is a tightrope walk for the hero to keep his secret from his family as well as his lady love and he often finds it hard to explain where he earns hordes of money from and how costly gifts keep pouring into his house.

    What make Vicky Donor more fun to watch are the relationships between its various characters: between Ayushmann and Yaami Gautam, between him and Annu Kapoor, between him and his mother (Dolly Ahluwalia) as well as grandmother (Kamlesh Gill), between Annu Kapoor and his assistant and between Yaami Gautam and her father, Jayanta Das.

    The most hilarious is the one between his mother and grandmother; these give a perfect foil to the film‘s casting. After a joyous debate between virtues (or lack of them) in Punjabis and Bengalis, the families agree to the marriage of Ayushmann and Yami Gautam. But soon the fun is over for Ayushmann as his secret is revealed and his love walks out on him.

    Vicky Donor has been instrumental in siring 53 children in five years and now his wife is yearning for one of her own. The joy ride does get an agreeable and plausible ending.

    Vicky Donor‘s triumph is in its well scripted story and dialogue. Nowhere is the comedy forced nor made to look cheap; the pace is fast. Performances are excellent from just about every character in the film.

    Ayushmann and Yaami Gautam may be new to films but both are veterans of television and do their part most convincingly. Annu Kapoor reminds of his role in Mr India where he made his mark; his vocabulary is not complete without using the word sperm. Dolly Ahluwalia and Kamlesh Gill bring to life the lonely middle-class women. Their interactions are hilarious. Jayanta Das as the Bengali father is very good. Songs, though without lip-sync, blend with the mood of the film without hindering the tempo.

    Cinematography is good. However, the ultimate praise should go to story-screenplay-dialogue writer Juhi Chaturvedi for her work.

    With new names in credits, Vicky Donour may not have opened well but the word of mouth will surely help it improve its prospects.

    Hate Story borders on banal

    The phrase “Hell has no fury like a woman scorned” has its origins in the 17th Century. It has often been the source of a story for films. In Hate Story, this theme is a mere excuse to sell a titillating drama.

    Normally, however, even before the story starts the woman scorned should look vulnerable, win over the viewers‘ hearts and sympathies and the revenge should be honourable. Hate Story does not really care for such norms.

    Paoli Dam is a reporter with a business publication who, along with her photographer colleague-cum-silent admirer, exposes a cement company‘s scam. The heir to the cement empire, Gulshan Devaiya, is infuriated and singles her out to avenge the defamation of his company‘s name. Taking revenge on the male photographer would not make an interesting story and provide no scope for nude scenes!

    So, Devaiya offers Pauli Dam a job in his company at triple her present salary. She accepts and he takes her on a jaunt abroad. Celebrations starts come evening and after one swig of wine, Paoli Dam is not only ready to be seduced, she has also fallen deeply in love with her boss! Back in Delhi she finds her access to office denied. She has been dumped unceremoniously; the cement tycoon has had his revenge. This is cause enough for Pauli Dam to be scorned and to want to destroy her ex-boss and his empire.

    For this story based on an old phrase, she chooses to take up the world‘s oldest profession, prostitution, to take her revenge. She even takes a crash course in prostitution from a local top-rated veteran in the trade.

    What follows is a script of convenience as the protagonist goes on seducing first the cement empire‘s CEO and later the minister who favours the company. Nobody seems to care that she is not looking desirable as long as she is available. The CEO reveals to her all his company secrets while the minister not only bails her out of jail but even appoints her as a bank nominee director on the board of the cement empire!

    The story and script in Hate Story border on banal. The makers seem to count on Paoli Dam‘s frequent exposure as the draw. No matter that the viewer finds no identification with either the woman‘s plight or her approach to revenge. The positive aspects of the film are its cinematography and few good dialogues.

    Direction is clichéd. As for its casting, the makers seem to have chosen to opt for day-to-day faces rather than looks and personality. Gulshan Devaiya does well; Paoli Dam can‘t carry her role except when stripping. Nikhil Dwivedi and Joy Sengupta are okay. Saurabh Dubey is the one who does justice to his character.

    Hate Story is aimed mainly at the single screen mass that will follow the film‘s posters to the cinema and come out mentally fatigued.

  • Kolkata HC orders to cover back of actress in ‘Hate Story’ in posters

    Kolkata HC orders to cover back of actress in ‘Hate Story’ in posters

    MUMBAI: In an unprecedented order, the Kolkata High Court has upheld the directive given by West Bengal Board of Censorship to distributors there not to display posters that showcase lead actress Paoli Dam in sensuous positions in the posters of Vikram Bhatt’s film Hate Story releasing on 20 April.

    It is said that Jalan Distribuors moved the High Court challenging the directions of the state Censor Board to display the posters only after painting the bare back of the actress as displayed in one of the posters, with blue paint.

    Earlier, the Censor board had banned two posters of the film where in one poster the actress shows her bare back while in the other she is seen in a compromising position with a man.

    The Board cleared the other six posters only after the bare body of the actress was painted in blue.

  • Rajvi Ent. to release Hate Story and 1920 Evil Returns

    Rajvi Ent. to release Hate Story and 1920 Evil Returns

    MUMBAI: Ajay Bagdai‘s Rajvi Entertainment has acquired the India theatrical rights of Hate Story and 1920 Evil Returns.

    Both the films are being presented by Vikram Bhatt under his banner BVG Films along with ASA Productions and Enterprises.

    Hate Story, starring Paoli Dam, Nikhil Dwivedi, Gulshan Devaiah and Mohan Kapur, will release on 20 April while 1920 – Evil Returns, a sequel to 2008 hit 1920, will release on 22 June.

    While the first film has been directed by Vivek Agnihotri, the second film starring Aftab Shivdasani, Tia Bajpai and Vidya Malvade has been directed by Bhushan Patel. Both the films have been written by Vikram Bhatt.