Tag: Mohenjo Daro

  • Rustom for ‘Independence Day’; Mohenjo Daro, a poor film

    Rustom for ‘Independence Day’; Mohenjo Daro, a poor film

    MUMBAI: Of late, Akshay Kumar starrers have become much-awaited. His transition from action to comedies were taken as they came; without much expectations. But, while an interesting story as the mainstay of a film is becoming rarer in Hindi films, Akshay’s films have strong tales to tell lately. And some of his recent films like Oh My God!, Special 26, Airlift, Holiday: A Soldier Is Never On Leave etc have relied on interesting stories mainly providing no scope for his kind of action and romance let alone comedy.

    If one cared to, there are many real life human-interest stories to find in the country and the media if the filmmakers tried to look beyond crime and mafia stories. In fact, Akshay’s recent films, Special 26 and Airlift were also inspired from such real life events.

    Though the film runs a disclaimer to the contrary, Rustom is based on the real life 1959 incident of a senior naval officer of the Indian Navy murdering the paramour of his English wife and the sensation that the court proceedings that followed created. Even as the murder looked like a simple adultery-incited rush of blood, the real life as well as the reel life hint at deeper conspiracy related to the defense system in the country towards which the film deals with towards the end.

    Akshay is Rustom Pavri, an officer of Parsi origin with the Indian Navy, much respected as well as admired by his colleagues as well as friends. He has been sent to UK on a long assignment the purpose of which is to check on an aircraft carrier the Indian Navy plans to acquire.

    Akshay’s stay in UK has been curtailed and his arrival back in Bombay happens before schedule. When back, to his surprise, his wife, Ileana D’Cruz, has been away for a couple of days. She, it seems, has been cheating on Akshay and is shacking up with one of Akshay’s close friends, Arjan Bajwa, on a regular basis in his absence. Arjan is a suave imported-car dealer and, thanks to his clientele, has unhindered access to high society dos and the wives of his clients.

    Devastated by the revelation, Akshay walks into Arjan’s apartment and fires three bullets at him killing him instantly. He then walks into a police station and surrenders to the station in charge, Pawan Malhotra.

    The murder by a naval officer of a high society Sindhi businessman makes banner headlines in the newspapers among which there is a tabloid owned by a fellow Parsi, Kumud Mishra, who sees this as an opportunity to salvage his almost defunct publication as well as to run a crusade to create a sympathy wave in favour of Akshay because he is a Parsi. With Esha Gupta taking on cudgels to avenge the death of her brother, Arjan, this literally turns into a war between Parsi and Sindhi communities. So much so even the public prosecutor appointed is a Sindhi.

    As the court proceedings begin, Akshay refuses to appoint a lawyer, deciding to defend his own cause. It was the era of jury system where a bunch of court-appointed individuals from society sat in judgment while the judge only conducted the proceedings. Akshay works on winning over the sympathy of the jury members while the tabloid supporting him paints him as a true patriot. The judge too picks on the public prosecutor, Sachin Khedekar, from time to time creating more sympathy for Akshay. The court proceedings are meant to cater to the gallery as it regales both, the ‘crowd’ gathered in the court as well as the viewer.

    Written by Vipul K Rawal, himself an erstwhile naval officer, the film has the tricky task of blending a real life saga with fiction as well as to decide where one ends the other takes over. It also applies to execution as recreating 1950s/60s era Bombay has never been convincing on screen. Here, as a compromise, some scenes have been shot in London around its Victorian architecture buildings. What works for the makers is that most of the film is shot in a court room. While the scripting is more like  a stage play, the film sags in the first half as the narration moves from scene to scene at fast pace. This may seem to quicken the pace of the film but gives no time for the viewer to digest what just went past. The director shows ample confidence as a first timer. Songs have no place in the story and whatever is there is functional. Editing needed to be much sharper. Dialogue is good at places.

    As for the performances, this is an Akshay Kumar vehicle all the way. He looks dignified and the uniform of a naval officer only adds to his persona. He does not have to act after that. Ileana carries a singular look throughout the film, weather she is romancing with Arjan or is facing the betrayed Akshay or in court scenes. Esha Gupta’s role is about sneering and jeering alternately. Sachin Khedekar, Anang Desai and Kumud Mishra play up to the masses. Pawan Malhotra and Usha Nadkarni are good in support. Arjan Bajwa is okay in a brief role.

    Rustom has had a decent opening and the Monday, 15th August, Independence Holiday should add to its kitty to see it through safely.

    Producers: Arun Bhatia, Nittin Keni, Aksah Chawla, Virender Arora, Ishwar Kapoor, Arjun N Kapoor, Shital Bhatia.

    Director: Tinu Suresh Desai.

    Cast: Akshay Kumar, Ileana D’Cruz, Arjan Bajwa, Esha Gupta, Usha Nadkarni, Sachin Khedekar, Lakshman Khangan, Kumud Mishra, Pawan Malhotra.  

    Mohenjo Daro…Bad idea!

    Ashutosh Gowariker is said to have been inspired by the sites of the ruins of Dholavira, an excavated city from an ancient civilization in Kutch, Gujarat. That made him think of Mohenjo Daro, (now in Sindh, Pakistan) where the biggest city of an ancient Indus Valley Civilization was excavated in 1922 and, then, declared a Heritage Site by the UNESCO in as late as 1980.
    All that is known about the find is its name, Mohenjo Daro (Mound of the Dead, when translated in English), there is nothing more on record or known to the archeologists who worked on the sites. While some assumptions may have been made about the culture as it existed then and the lifestyle of the people, there are no myths, legends or folklore related to Mohenjo Daro available anywhere or with anybody. In such a situation, a great imagination is needed to build a story around this civilization.

    Here goes the story: we have Hrithik Roshan is a tiller of neel (indigo) in a small town in pre-historic land mass, later called Hindustan. Like all small town lads, he aspires to go to the big city, Mohenjo Daro, on the banks of Indus River. These days, all those who come to big cities become dons or their goons. In the good old days, they became saviours of the masses. Hrithik arrives in the new city and is impressed by its sights, its architecture and the scope for enterprise since people from other worlds also come here to trade.

    The city is throbbing with people all around so much so that there is even a traffic cop to control these people and direct those like cops nowadays direct traffic in big cities! As he learns the tricks of the trade, Hrithik realizes that such big cities have two strata to society: the mass and the elite. Here too the city is divided between them demarcated by Lower City and Upper City settlements.

    Like all such cities, Mohenjo Daro too has its share of evil in the form of Kabir Bedi, who rules the place with an iron hand, and his son, Arunoday Singh. Seeing their tyranny and having his first brush with Singh, Hrithik soon decides to leave the place and return to his own village. But, that is when he spots Pooja Hegde and it is love at first sight. For her sake, he now wants to stay put. In the process, he gets involved with events in the city and sees how injustice is being meted out to people by Bedi and Singh.

    Hrithik has competition when it comes to Pooja as Singh wants her for himself and that has been decided at her birth by the prophesy makers of the city. Determined to stay back and fight with Singh and Bedi for the girl as well as the people, Hrithik’s resolve is only strengthened when he learns that his father, Sharad Kelkar, was one of the ministers in the darbar of Bedi but was murdered for opposing him.

    As the film, which started bad, goes on to becoming worse, there are more treacheries by Bedi and Singh and some song and dance and some fights including an arena fight a la old Hollywood films, between Hrithik and two monstrous cannibal men. Hrithik overcomes all odds and vanquishes the evildoers. Don’t know why maneaters fight with Hrithik instead of just eating him up and be done with it? This was probably their idea of cooking their meal!

    Talking about the imagination needed for a story to fit into the Mohenjo Daro civilization, there is none. In fact, whatever has been conjured up in the name of a great saga is childish to put it mildly. For instance, Hrithik is named Sarman and Singh is Munja; Sarman Munja was the name of a don in the city of Porbandar in Gujarat after whose death his wife, Santokba, went on to become India’s first all-powerful woman don who also has a film to her name. Kelkar is a good guy so Surjan while his brother who fails to stand by him is Durjan! It can’t get any more juvenile!

    The story as such can fit into any B grade film of today if you replace the locale but keep the characters and the story same.

    A poor story idea and a poorer script make for a directionless film: here we have props that loom totally out of place in the viewer’s perception of Mohenjo Daro. There are regular ration shops, costumes few can identify with! There is also word Haramkhor in Bedi’s vocabulary.   The romance does not convince and there is no music to back it save for one song, Tu hia…. Dialogue lacks spirit. Cinematography is fair. Choreography is good. Special effect are routine. Editing is not evident in this film.

    Performances are routine with Hrithik Roshan carrying on with same expressions from Koi… Mil Gaya. Pooja Hegde looks charming but can’t perform.  Kabir Bedi is okay. Arunoday Singh is the victim of a routine role. Of the rest, only Manish Choudhary shows some conviction with what he is doing.

    Mohenjo Daro is a poor film in all respects. If cost is considered, worse still.

    Producers: Siddharth Roy Kapoor, Sunita Gowarikar.

    Director: Ashutosh Gowariker.

    Cast: Hrithik Roshan, Pooja Hegde, Kabir Bedi, Arunoday Singh, Suhasini Mulay, Nitish Bharadwaj, Kishori Shahane, Sharad Kelkar, Manish Choudhary, Narendra Jha, Casey Frank, Diganta Hazarika.

  • Rustom for ‘Independence Day’; Mohenjo Daro, a poor film

    Rustom for ‘Independence Day’; Mohenjo Daro, a poor film

    MUMBAI: Of late, Akshay Kumar starrers have become much-awaited. His transition from action to comedies were taken as they came; without much expectations. But, while an interesting story as the mainstay of a film is becoming rarer in Hindi films, Akshay’s films have strong tales to tell lately. And some of his recent films like Oh My God!, Special 26, Airlift, Holiday: A Soldier Is Never On Leave etc have relied on interesting stories mainly providing no scope for his kind of action and romance let alone comedy.

    If one cared to, there are many real life human-interest stories to find in the country and the media if the filmmakers tried to look beyond crime and mafia stories. In fact, Akshay’s recent films, Special 26 and Airlift were also inspired from such real life events.

    Though the film runs a disclaimer to the contrary, Rustom is based on the real life 1959 incident of a senior naval officer of the Indian Navy murdering the paramour of his English wife and the sensation that the court proceedings that followed created. Even as the murder looked like a simple adultery-incited rush of blood, the real life as well as the reel life hint at deeper conspiracy related to the defense system in the country towards which the film deals with towards the end.

    Akshay is Rustom Pavri, an officer of Parsi origin with the Indian Navy, much respected as well as admired by his colleagues as well as friends. He has been sent to UK on a long assignment the purpose of which is to check on an aircraft carrier the Indian Navy plans to acquire.

    Akshay’s stay in UK has been curtailed and his arrival back in Bombay happens before schedule. When back, to his surprise, his wife, Ileana D’Cruz, has been away for a couple of days. She, it seems, has been cheating on Akshay and is shacking up with one of Akshay’s close friends, Arjan Bajwa, on a regular basis in his absence. Arjan is a suave imported-car dealer and, thanks to his clientele, has unhindered access to high society dos and the wives of his clients.

    Devastated by the revelation, Akshay walks into Arjan’s apartment and fires three bullets at him killing him instantly. He then walks into a police station and surrenders to the station in charge, Pawan Malhotra.

    The murder by a naval officer of a high society Sindhi businessman makes banner headlines in the newspapers among which there is a tabloid owned by a fellow Parsi, Kumud Mishra, who sees this as an opportunity to salvage his almost defunct publication as well as to run a crusade to create a sympathy wave in favour of Akshay because he is a Parsi. With Esha Gupta taking on cudgels to avenge the death of her brother, Arjan, this literally turns into a war between Parsi and Sindhi communities. So much so even the public prosecutor appointed is a Sindhi.

    As the court proceedings begin, Akshay refuses to appoint a lawyer, deciding to defend his own cause. It was the era of jury system where a bunch of court-appointed individuals from society sat in judgment while the judge only conducted the proceedings. Akshay works on winning over the sympathy of the jury members while the tabloid supporting him paints him as a true patriot. The judge too picks on the public prosecutor, Sachin Khedekar, from time to time creating more sympathy for Akshay. The court proceedings are meant to cater to the gallery as it regales both, the ‘crowd’ gathered in the court as well as the viewer.

    Written by Vipul K Rawal, himself an erstwhile naval officer, the film has the tricky task of blending a real life saga with fiction as well as to decide where one ends the other takes over. It also applies to execution as recreating 1950s/60s era Bombay has never been convincing on screen. Here, as a compromise, some scenes have been shot in London around its Victorian architecture buildings. What works for the makers is that most of the film is shot in a court room. While the scripting is more like  a stage play, the film sags in the first half as the narration moves from scene to scene at fast pace. This may seem to quicken the pace of the film but gives no time for the viewer to digest what just went past. The director shows ample confidence as a first timer. Songs have no place in the story and whatever is there is functional. Editing needed to be much sharper. Dialogue is good at places.

    As for the performances, this is an Akshay Kumar vehicle all the way. He looks dignified and the uniform of a naval officer only adds to his persona. He does not have to act after that. Ileana carries a singular look throughout the film, weather she is romancing with Arjan or is facing the betrayed Akshay or in court scenes. Esha Gupta’s role is about sneering and jeering alternately. Sachin Khedekar, Anang Desai and Kumud Mishra play up to the masses. Pawan Malhotra and Usha Nadkarni are good in support. Arjan Bajwa is okay in a brief role.

    Rustom has had a decent opening and the Monday, 15th August, Independence Holiday should add to its kitty to see it through safely.

    Producers: Arun Bhatia, Nittin Keni, Aksah Chawla, Virender Arora, Ishwar Kapoor, Arjun N Kapoor, Shital Bhatia.

    Director: Tinu Suresh Desai.

    Cast: Akshay Kumar, Ileana D’Cruz, Arjan Bajwa, Esha Gupta, Usha Nadkarni, Sachin Khedekar, Lakshman Khangan, Kumud Mishra, Pawan Malhotra.  

    Mohenjo Daro…Bad idea!

    Ashutosh Gowariker is said to have been inspired by the sites of the ruins of Dholavira, an excavated city from an ancient civilization in Kutch, Gujarat. That made him think of Mohenjo Daro, (now in Sindh, Pakistan) where the biggest city of an ancient Indus Valley Civilization was excavated in 1922 and, then, declared a Heritage Site by the UNESCO in as late as 1980.
    All that is known about the find is its name, Mohenjo Daro (Mound of the Dead, when translated in English), there is nothing more on record or known to the archeologists who worked on the sites. While some assumptions may have been made about the culture as it existed then and the lifestyle of the people, there are no myths, legends or folklore related to Mohenjo Daro available anywhere or with anybody. In such a situation, a great imagination is needed to build a story around this civilization.

    Here goes the story: we have Hrithik Roshan is a tiller of neel (indigo) in a small town in pre-historic land mass, later called Hindustan. Like all small town lads, he aspires to go to the big city, Mohenjo Daro, on the banks of Indus River. These days, all those who come to big cities become dons or their goons. In the good old days, they became saviours of the masses. Hrithik arrives in the new city and is impressed by its sights, its architecture and the scope for enterprise since people from other worlds also come here to trade.

    The city is throbbing with people all around so much so that there is even a traffic cop to control these people and direct those like cops nowadays direct traffic in big cities! As he learns the tricks of the trade, Hrithik realizes that such big cities have two strata to society: the mass and the elite. Here too the city is divided between them demarcated by Lower City and Upper City settlements.

    Like all such cities, Mohenjo Daro too has its share of evil in the form of Kabir Bedi, who rules the place with an iron hand, and his son, Arunoday Singh. Seeing their tyranny and having his first brush with Singh, Hrithik soon decides to leave the place and return to his own village. But, that is when he spots Pooja Hegde and it is love at first sight. For her sake, he now wants to stay put. In the process, he gets involved with events in the city and sees how injustice is being meted out to people by Bedi and Singh.

    Hrithik has competition when it comes to Pooja as Singh wants her for himself and that has been decided at her birth by the prophesy makers of the city. Determined to stay back and fight with Singh and Bedi for the girl as well as the people, Hrithik’s resolve is only strengthened when he learns that his father, Sharad Kelkar, was one of the ministers in the darbar of Bedi but was murdered for opposing him.

    As the film, which started bad, goes on to becoming worse, there are more treacheries by Bedi and Singh and some song and dance and some fights including an arena fight a la old Hollywood films, between Hrithik and two monstrous cannibal men. Hrithik overcomes all odds and vanquishes the evildoers. Don’t know why maneaters fight with Hrithik instead of just eating him up and be done with it? This was probably their idea of cooking their meal!

    Talking about the imagination needed for a story to fit into the Mohenjo Daro civilization, there is none. In fact, whatever has been conjured up in the name of a great saga is childish to put it mildly. For instance, Hrithik is named Sarman and Singh is Munja; Sarman Munja was the name of a don in the city of Porbandar in Gujarat after whose death his wife, Santokba, went on to become India’s first all-powerful woman don who also has a film to her name. Kelkar is a good guy so Surjan while his brother who fails to stand by him is Durjan! It can’t get any more juvenile!

    The story as such can fit into any B grade film of today if you replace the locale but keep the characters and the story same.

    A poor story idea and a poorer script make for a directionless film: here we have props that loom totally out of place in the viewer’s perception of Mohenjo Daro. There are regular ration shops, costumes few can identify with! There is also word Haramkhor in Bedi’s vocabulary.   The romance does not convince and there is no music to back it save for one song, Tu hia…. Dialogue lacks spirit. Cinematography is fair. Choreography is good. Special effect are routine. Editing is not evident in this film.

    Performances are routine with Hrithik Roshan carrying on with same expressions from Koi… Mil Gaya. Pooja Hegde looks charming but can’t perform.  Kabir Bedi is okay. Arunoday Singh is the victim of a routine role. Of the rest, only Manish Choudhary shows some conviction with what he is doing.

    Mohenjo Daro is a poor film in all respects. If cost is considered, worse still.

    Producers: Siddharth Roy Kapoor, Sunita Gowarikar.

    Director: Ashutosh Gowariker.

    Cast: Hrithik Roshan, Pooja Hegde, Kabir Bedi, Arunoday Singh, Suhasini Mulay, Nitish Bharadwaj, Kishori Shahane, Sharad Kelkar, Manish Choudhary, Narendra Jha, Casey Frank, Diganta Hazarika.

  • Barring ‘Sultan’, dull weekend  at box office

    Barring ‘Sultan’, dull weekend at box office

    MUMBAI: While the recent films since the release of Sultan have been bad for the trade, especially the exhibition trade which needs a flow of crowd pulling films to sustain, the next week promises to be full of hope. Two major films releasing simultaneously has been avoided by the trade as both would eat into each other’s business prospects. But, the exhibitors never had it so good as Mohenjo Daro and Rustom face each other this Friday.

    Budhia Singh-Born To Run, a National Award winner for the Best Children’s film, wins much critical acclaim, but no footfalls. The film could manage only Rs. 1.2 crore in its first weekend.

    Fever, an attempt to make a polished thriller, turns out anything but that. It is a badly scripted film concentrating more on steamy scenes rather than thrill and suspense. A good musical score as well as captivating cinematography are wasted in absence of substance. The film collected Rs. 55 lakh in its opening weekend.

    The Legend Of Michael Mishra meets with a disastrous fate at the box office. To think of Arsad Warsi essaying a teenage romance in itself is a put off and to expect the film to draw audience is rather ambitious! There is nothing in the script or direction or music to salvage the film to any extent. The collections have been poor as the film could collect only Rs. 60 lakh in its first weekend.

    Dishoom, an action thriller with a youth favourite. Varun Dhawan, providing the entertainment quotient, does well. The film had its flows and routine second half but managed to make the most of the absence of any decent entertainer for a while.

    The film collects 51.8 crore in its first week. With poor opposition in its second week, the film stands a fair chance of adding another Rs. 16 to 17 crore in its second week for a decent lifetime business.

    Love Ke Funday and Murder Madhuri make it to the total loss category.

    Madaari…Sshhh Desh So Raha Hai collects Rs. 2.75 crore in its second week to take its two week tally to Rs. 15.45 crore.

    Kabaali (Hindi-dubbed from Tamil) drops drastically in its second week taking its two week total to Rs. 24.9 crore.

  • Barring ‘Sultan’, dull weekend  at box office

    Barring ‘Sultan’, dull weekend at box office

    MUMBAI: While the recent films since the release of Sultan have been bad for the trade, especially the exhibition trade which needs a flow of crowd pulling films to sustain, the next week promises to be full of hope. Two major films releasing simultaneously has been avoided by the trade as both would eat into each other’s business prospects. But, the exhibitors never had it so good as Mohenjo Daro and Rustom face each other this Friday.

    Budhia Singh-Born To Run, a National Award winner for the Best Children’s film, wins much critical acclaim, but no footfalls. The film could manage only Rs. 1.2 crore in its first weekend.

    Fever, an attempt to make a polished thriller, turns out anything but that. It is a badly scripted film concentrating more on steamy scenes rather than thrill and suspense. A good musical score as well as captivating cinematography are wasted in absence of substance. The film collected Rs. 55 lakh in its opening weekend.

    The Legend Of Michael Mishra meets with a disastrous fate at the box office. To think of Arsad Warsi essaying a teenage romance in itself is a put off and to expect the film to draw audience is rather ambitious! There is nothing in the script or direction or music to salvage the film to any extent. The collections have been poor as the film could collect only Rs. 60 lakh in its first weekend.

    Dishoom, an action thriller with a youth favourite. Varun Dhawan, providing the entertainment quotient, does well. The film had its flows and routine second half but managed to make the most of the absence of any decent entertainer for a while.

    The film collects 51.8 crore in its first week. With poor opposition in its second week, the film stands a fair chance of adding another Rs. 16 to 17 crore in its second week for a decent lifetime business.

    Love Ke Funday and Murder Madhuri make it to the total loss category.

    Madaari…Sshhh Desh So Raha Hai collects Rs. 2.75 crore in its second week to take its two week tally to Rs. 15.45 crore.

    Kabaali (Hindi-dubbed from Tamil) drops drastically in its second week taking its two week total to Rs. 24.9 crore.

  • UTV Disney to release Hrithik Roshan’s Mohenjo Daro in August 2016

    UTV Disney to release Hrithik Roshan’s Mohenjo Daro in August 2016

    MUMBAI: UTV Disney will release the Hrithik Roshan starrer Mohenjo Daro on 12 August, 2016.

    The movie, which is directed by Ashutosh Gowariker, will also be the debut vehicle of Pooja Hegde, who has been cast opposite Roshan. 

    Mohenjo Daro is produced by UTV Disney in association with AGPPL.

    The movie will get the advantage of the Independence Day long weekend, which is likely to give a fillip to its box office collections.

     

  • Ashutosh Gowariker Productions celebrates 10 years

    Ashutosh Gowariker Productions celebrates 10 years

    MUMBAI: Years ago, Ashutosh told his wife Sunita that he wanted to start a production house under which he would direct his films but only on the condition that she holds the reigns of production. On 17 December 2004, their first film Swades released and it was clear that they made a formidable team and Ashutosh Gowariker Productions Pvt. Ltd.  (AGPPL) quickly became a respected production house in the industry.

     

    Celebrating its 10 year anniversary, AGPPL travelled back in time to bring the audiences the epic romance of Jodhaa Akbar. A visual big screen extravaganza with memorable performances from both Hrithik Roshan and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, the film went on to gross over Rs 100 crore at the box office, and became a popular benchmark. 

     

    AGPPL has previously produced films like Swades, Jodhaa Akbar, What’s Your Raashee?, Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Sey and the recent television production, Everest. Their recent foray into television production began this year with one of the most ambitious projects in Indian television till date. Everest is the unique combination of an emotional story with scale and action.

     

    AGPPL is now focused on what awaits them in the next decade. 2015 begins with the filming of their Hrithik Roshan starrer, Mohenjo Daro. Set during the Indus Valley Civilization, Mohenjo Daro is an epic adventure-drama love story, set in an ancient era but in a modern context. The film brings together award winning international technicians and also introduces new find Pooja Hegde, opposite Hrithik.