Tag: Raees

  • Zee Entertainment to acquire Zee Studios film biz

    Zee Entertainment to acquire Zee Studios film biz

    MUMBAI: Zee Entertainment Enterprises Ltd (ZeeL) is going to the movies. The company has announced that it is all set to acquire the film production and distribution business of its subsidiary Zee Studios on a slump sale basis over the next two months. It has priced the acquisition on a cash payout of Rs 275 crore.

    Zee Studios generated a revenue of Rs 124.11 crore in FY 2019-20, Rs 299.54 crore in 2018-19, and Rs 165.98 crore in FY 2017-18.

    In a regulatory filing to the BSE, ZeeL has stated that the acquisition of the business is going to result in growth opportunities for it. The company’s board gave the transaction the go-ahead on Thursday.

    Incorporated in 2010, Zee Studios has been behind films such as Gadar Ek Prem Katha, Sairat, Rustom, Mom, Secret Superstar, Raees, Fukrey Returns, Half Girlfriend, Hindi Medium, Veeri Di Wedding, Mannikarnika: The Queen of Jhansi, Milan Talkies, Article 15, Good Newz, Uri: the Surgical Strike, Gold, Gully Boy, Dream Girl, among many others. It’s headed by CEO Shariq Patel.

  • Zee TV continues to dominate urban weekend ratings

    BENGALURU: Over the past few weeks Zee Entertainment Enterprises Limited (Zeel) flagship Hindi GEC Zee TV has been dominating urban viewership during weekends. Programmes such as the world television premier (WTP) of the Aamir Khan starring biographical sports drama ‘Dangal’ and anti-prohibition film Raees; the airing of Zeel’s reality shows ‘Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Little Champs’ and the launch of ‘India’s Best Judwaah’ and ‘Fear Factor’, have drawn more urban eyeballs for it than other channels in the genre on weekends.

    Please refer to the figure below for Zee TV and its peer Hindi GECs’ weekend performance  for the past 10 weeks (between weeks 21 to 30 of 2017). Data in this report has been sourced from Broadcast Audience Research Council of India (BARC), TG: HSM (Urban), 2+

    public://F1_17.jpg

    Dangal was a big draw when it was aired in week 21 and then again in week 22 of 2017 as was Raees when its WTP was aired in week 26 followed by a re-telecast in week 28 of 2017. Dangal rated 11.009 million impressions in the three hours 45 minutes slot and the repeat airing on 28 May evening 5:00pm rated 2.963 million impressions, according to BARC data.  Aired on 25 June at 12:00 noon, Raees rated 3.850  million Impressions in the three-hours slot, whereas the second airing on 9 July evening 18:00hrs rated 1.714 million impressions in the same duration.

    Further, the fresh airing of ‘Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Little Champs’ has beendoing well in the urban space andhas been on an increasing trend.As compared to week 21 of 2017 the non-fiction singing reality show has seen a 50 percent increase in viewership in the latest week for which BARC data is available – (Week 30 of 2017).There has been a big jump in ‘Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Little Champs’ from week 26 as the channel increased number of repeat airings of the show. Please refer to the chart below:

    public://F2_8.jpg

    Another broadcast – that of an event which witnessed good viewership was the telecast of the Zee Gold Awards that honour the best performers in the Indian television industry. These were first awarded in the year 2007 and Emami’s Boroplus has been the title sponsor for the first nine editions of the show. The awards were first aired in 2017 in week 29 followed by a re-run in week 30. The Red Carpet part of the show on 16 July at 17:00 hours rated 1.082 million impressions followed by the main event at 17:30 hours which rated 2.968 million impressions. The repeat telecast of the Zee Gold Awards was on 22 July (Week 30) at 16:30 hours which rated 1.425 million impressions.

    Zee TV launched two new reality programmes in the 800 pm and 1030pm primetime slots in week 30 – ‘India’s Best Judwaah’ and Fear Files. Both have performed well in the launch week. How they fare in the coming weeks remains to be seen. Here below are the ratings tables of the two shows.

    public://F3_2.jpg

    Zee TV has been performing well. In week 30, the channel was second in BARC’s list of top 10 channels across genre, just behind the Sun TV Networks flagship Tamil GEC Sun TV in terms of rank. In the Hindi GEC (Urban+Rural) market, three of its programmes – two Balaji Telefilms productions – Kumkum Bhagya and its spinoff Kundali Bhagya and Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Little Champs were among BARC’s top five programmes list in week 30 of 2017.

  • Period films don’t work in India

    MUMBAI: Period films, whether fantasy or based on real events, don’t work in India. They usually spell disaster at the box office. Rangoon adds to the list of recent disasters like Pankaj Kapur’s Mausam (2011), Kunal Kohli’s Teri MeriKahaani (2012) and Anurag Kashyap’s Bombay Velvet (2015). Just when one thought Kashyap’s indulgence called Bombay Velvet was the ultimate disaster at the box office, Rangoon has come as the bigger one.

    The other day, Rangoon director Vishal Bhardwaj stated on a TV show that he had no clue about World War II having been fought on an Indian border and yet he decided to make this film? It was okay to do that if one was making a fantasy but not a period film from a chapter from the history as huge as World War II!

    *Rangoon opened on 24 February, a general holiday for Mahashivratri. The holiday could not in any way help the film generate a decent opening response. In fact, it was pathetic opening of five crore.

    There was no sign of Saturday adding anything much as the film remained stagnant while the Sunday collections hovering at same levels with nil improvement.

    The film ended its first weekend with a tally of Rs 14.5 crore.

    The film may not even recover its cost on print and promotion, proving to be a total disaster.

    *The Attack On Ghazi, a film on the 1971 war of the Indian Navy drowning the powerful Pakistan Navy submarine, Ghazi, is appreciated but not enough to make its mark on the box office. The film collects Rs 11.4 crore from its Hindi version in its first week. The film may gain some more patronage as the week’s release, Rangoon, is poor.

    *Running Shaadi is poor, just managing to cross a crore mark in its first week with a figure of Rs 1.5 crore.

    *Irada, despite the presence of Naseeruddin Shah and Arshad Warsi in the cast, fails to get footfalls and falls short of one crore mark in its first week raking in just about Rs 90 lakh!

    *Jolly LLB seems to be making the most of poor oppositions despite being a mediocre film, especially compared to the first version. The brand equity of the title and Akshay Kumar in the lead have helped the film sustain. The film has added a good Rs 23.8 crore in its second week taking its two week total to Rs 95.9 crore. However, the film still needs to hold its own to emerge as an earning film.

    *Raees adds Rs 20 lakh in its fourth week to take its four week total to Rs 130.6 crore.

    *Kaabil collects Rs 50 lakh in its fourth week to take its four week total to Rs 92.7 crore.

    *Dangal has added another Rs 20 lakh to its total in its ninth week taking its nine week total to Rs 388.1 crore.

  • No film sustained after Dangal

    The bad run at the box office continues as no film released after Dangal has been able to sustain. The new releases have not been able to hold their own post the opening weekend. After the midweek release of two major films, Kaabil and Raees backfired. The films could not draw enough footfalls after the 26 January national holiday.

    On the other hand, the people behind last week’s releases, Raees and Kaabil, have been throwing wild figures in the market through the media. Some gullible media may publish these figures but readers have stopped believing them.

    *The trade held its hopes on Jolly LLB 2 since its lead man, Akshay Kumar, has been having a decent run with most of his films lately. The Jolly franchise was also expected to help the earlier one, Jolly LLB, had done well as the box office.

    Somehow, the promos of the film did not excite people. Also, there was no music with popular appeal. This showed on the film’s opening, which was below average. However, being the only film gracing the screens during the week, it did pick up some pace on Saturday and excelling on Sunday, giving it a healthy opening weekend of Rs 47.1 crore. However, for the collections to maintain through the week will be a tough call as the film has a limited merit.

    *Raees has been doing badly from day one. The only good figures it has to show are on 26 January holiday. Since then, it has been only a downward slide. The film which collected Rs 111.9 crore in its first nine days, has dropped by almost 85% in its second week and collected just Rs 16.4 crore taking its two week total to Rs 128.3 crore.

    *Kaabil released simultaneously with Raees. As both the films could not compete at the box office as both lacked appreciation and, hence, patronage, the competition shifted to issuing false figures to the media. Kaabil lagged behind its competition and these wrong figures were not really adding to the tally. The film did catch up with Raees in its second week as it collected a little more but that will be no help in the final tally. The film added Rs 16.85 crore in its second week taking its two week total to Rs 88.45 crore.

    *Dangal has braved all new releases and finding the residual or the repeat audience even as it comes to the end of its tremendous run at the box office. The film’s seven week total stands at Rs 387.4 crore.

  • Alif & Kung Fu Yoga go unnoticed

    Alif & Kung Fu Yoga go unnoticed

    In their unmindful head to head clash, and their un-businesslike decisions to release their films bang during a midweek, on 25 January, a day before the Republic Day national holiday, both the films, Kaabil and Raees, seemed to be harming their own prospects. And, that is how the results at the box office of both the films show.

    While the opening of the films was below par, the only day they really peaked was on the national holiday of 26 January. The next day, both dropped by almost 50 per cent. The figures thereafter took only downward trend.

    Since the films lacked in content department. Raees, glorified an anti-national as a do-gooder while the other, Kaabil, tried to sell an age-old story of revenge for a raped woman, with a different angle. Both failed to draw crowds — Raees failed or find appreciation, Kaabil, though, liked by a section of moviegoers, was not enough to fill the coffers. The collection figures issued by the production houses don’t stand the scrutiny.

    *Raees collected Rs 111.9 crore (nine days) and, despite an open week as no major film has released this week, there is no benefit for the film to reap.

    *Kaabil, though, remained on the lower side through rest of the week as the film could add just about 14 crore for the remaining four days taking its first week (nine days) total to Rs 71.6 crore.

    *Dangal keeps adding bit by bit to its total as the film seems to enjoy some repeat audience. The film collected Rs 1.8 crore in its sixth week to take its six week tally to Rs 386.86 crore.

  • Strategies rule over content, fail

    Strategies rule over content, fail

    Nothing worthwhile came along since Dangal, the film which helped the cinema halls sustain. When it did, two major production houses decided to release their films simultaneously. Kaabil from Rakesh Roshan’s production house and Raees from Excel Entertainment.

    Both the releases wanted to cash in on the long weekend as the 26 January, the Republic Day holiday fell on Thursday. To start with, both films releasing on the same day, whatever the occasion, was suicidal. And, for a producer to do that in an era when the multiplex owners call the shots had a role to play when having agreed to give both films an equal exposure, reneged and went along with Raees, which was not really meant for the multiplex audience. The outcome for both the films is tragic.

    The idea of releasing the film on Thursday to cash in on the Republic day, made sense. But, what was the logic of both film deciding to hit the screens on Wednesday, the day before the holiday. It was a midweek working day ahead of a long weekend. It turned out to be a bad decision. Both films had a poor opening day collections. While Kaabil suffered because of the competition, Raees was affected as the film’s negative word of mouth spread which reflected on its collections on other days.

    *Raees had an average opening of around Rs 20 crore on Wednesday. On Thursday, because of the holiday, it touched its peak only to drop by as much as 50 per cent on Friday and decline thereafter with even Sunday figures being below par. Looking at these figures, the film showed a potential to reach about Rs 90 crore for the opening weekend of five days.

    *Kaabil opened to a weak response and though the film enjoyed positive word of mouth from a section of the audience, it did not reflect much on the collections. This praise seemed more from the fallout of disappointment with Raees. It was more like a comparison than the real praise for the film. The film opened to half the figures of Raees and had its best day in Republic Day.

    The film collected Rs 57.4 crore for its opening weekend of five days.

    *OK Jaanu collected Rs 3.5 crore in its second week taking its two week total to Rs 20.35 crore.

    *Dangal added Rs 8.92 crore in its fifth week to take its five week total to Rs 383.87. It added another Rs 1.19 crore for the sixth weekend which takes its 38-day total to Rs 385.06 crore.

  • Strategies rule over content, fail

    Strategies rule over content, fail

    Nothing worthwhile came along since Dangal, the film which helped the cinema halls sustain. When it did, two major production houses decided to release their films simultaneously. Kaabil from Rakesh Roshan’s production house and Raees from Excel Entertainment.

    Both the releases wanted to cash in on the long weekend as the 26 January, the Republic Day holiday fell on Thursday. To start with, both films releasing on the same day, whatever the occasion, was suicidal. And, for a producer to do that in an era when the multiplex owners call the shots had a role to play when having agreed to give both films an equal exposure, reneged and went along with Raees, which was not really meant for the multiplex audience. The outcome for both the films is tragic.

    The idea of releasing the film on Thursday to cash in on the Republic day, made sense. But, what was the logic of both film deciding to hit the screens on Wednesday, the day before the holiday. It was a midweek working day ahead of a long weekend. It turned out to be a bad decision. Both films had a poor opening day collections. While Kaabil suffered because of the competition, Raees was affected as the film’s negative word of mouth spread which reflected on its collections on other days.

    *Raees had an average opening of around Rs 20 crore on Wednesday. On Thursday, because of the holiday, it touched its peak only to drop by as much as 50 per cent on Friday and decline thereafter with even Sunday figures being below par. Looking at these figures, the film showed a potential to reach about Rs 90 crore for the opening weekend of five days.

    *Kaabil opened to a weak response and though the film enjoyed positive word of mouth from a section of the audience, it did not reflect much on the collections. This praise seemed more from the fallout of disappointment with Raees. It was more like a comparison than the real praise for the film. The film opened to half the figures of Raees and had its best day in Republic Day.

    The film collected Rs 57.4 crore for its opening weekend of five days.

    *OK Jaanu collected Rs 3.5 crore in its second week taking its two week total to Rs 20.35 crore.

    *Dangal added Rs 8.92 crore in its fifth week to take its five week total to Rs 383.87. It added another Rs 1.19 crore for the sixth weekend which takes its 38-day total to Rs 385.06 crore.

  • Raees…..Don: The twisted tale

    Raees…..Don: The twisted tale

    MUMBAI: Playing a fictional don is not good enough, every hero wants a Deewar of his own, the film that cemented Amitabh Bachchan’s arrival as a star after Zanjeer. Deewar was the legendary film based on the life of Haji Mastan, Mumbai’s first don. But, Deewar was only inspired by Haji’s life with clever writing by the Salim-Javed duo which, without depicting violence in anyway, charted the life of a don more as a family drama as well as a conflict between law and outlaw.

    There have been more attempts recently at adapting real life criminals’ stories for films. None of these films tried to pass judgment on the criminal in its theme or paint him other than what he was. To see where things go wrong with Raees, it is necessary to know what the real don was and how the film presents him.

    Raees, though it does not credit the film as one based on the notorious Ahmedabad based criminal Latif, tries to present him as a benevolent do-gooder, a Robin Hood kind of don. Latif was a petty bootlegger in the city of Ahmedabad who, with the backing of various other criminals started out as a courier boy for a major bootlegger, eventually turning into one independently. Since alcohol in the totally dry state of Gujarat was the privilege of rich and influential,Latif seemed to be dealing with the right kind of people when it came to furthering his career.

    Latif specialized in inciting communal riots and soon became a tool in the hands of politicians. The city faced regular bouts of communal tensions during two occasions: the annual Rath Yatra and Makar Sankranti, the kite festival. Latif was known to play the lead role in inciting these riots. The local goon Latif graduated to become a don when he came into contact with Dawood and was instrumental in transporting the RDX used in the Mumbai bomb blasts. He later took refuge in Karachi with the aid of Dawood.

    Shah Rukh Khan plays the character based on the life of Latif. Suffering from weak eyesight, he can’t read the blackboard in school when asked. The family is very poor and can’t afford to buy him specs. Latif goes and steals the frame from a statue of Mahatma Gandhi. Poverty and his mother’s helplessness lead him to a local bootlegger, Atul Kulkarni, delivering bottles in his school sachet. As he grows up, he plans to start his own business. Talking about “Baniye ka deemag” and “Miyabhaiki daring”, it is strange that he plans to buy supply from Kulkarni himself to compete with him!

    Shah Rukh is now rich as well as influential. Everybody loves him be it Hindu or Muslim for he is a messiah who always stands for the poor and needy. He donates sewing machines to local women and gets justice for unpaid workers. He even plans a huge colony to settle poor people of his locality. So what if they are well settled in the heart of the city!

    There are riots in the city and Shah Rukh has nothing to do with it. He, in fact, is worried about people and children and provides food and milk for families and kids affected by the riots and the curfew-bound city.By now, Hindu and Muslim, both the communities adore him. Shah Rukh attacks an opposition leader’s rally and is asked by the CM to agree to go to jail to save face. He soon realises that the CM has betrayed him. He decides to fight the local municipal elections and wins to avail him bail from jail. (The real Latif fought the elections from six wards and won five.)

    But, now the CM is irritated with Shah Rukh and makes his life miserable. All his resources dry up and he is forced to seek financial help from a Mumbai don who asks him to run an errand for him: deliver a certain amount of smuggled gold which turns out to be RDX used for Mumbai bomb blasts of 1993. 

    There is nothing about Shah Rukh aka Latif running away to Dubai and later finding refuge in Pakistan.

    The film comes across all throughout as making a martyr out of a bad man. And, even otherwise, if one watches the film as a total work of fiction, it is a poorly conceived and executed film. A score of movies have been made on similar don stories and they only get worse with each attempt.

    There are two other tracks, both predictable; one is that of romance. Romance in this film is given. Shah Rukh and Mahira Khan seem to be in love with each other from the first time they meet. Soon they marry and Mahira joins in his illegal business as a helping hand. The other is that of the cop, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, who has sworn not to spare Shah Rukh, wherever he is transferred for doing that.The rest of the characters are mere caricatures. The first half of the film comes across as any making of a don story, the second half turns into a typical South Indian film where the bad man is good man.

    Raees has just about everything going wrong for it, from the choice of subject and the way it is moulded to make Shah Rukh a larger than life character, to the choice of female lead. While Shah Rukh plays his two faced personality sans conviction, Mahira Khan neither charms with her presence nor impresses with her performance. Nawazuddin promises to salvage the proceeds initially but the script holds him back as things proceed. However, he is the best part of the film. 

    The direction is patchy and attempts to portray the 1980s lacks conviction. Sets are shabby. Music is of no help. There is little scope for the editor. The film makes a hero out of criminal Latif in the process of making the film’s hero, Shah Rukh, larger than life.

    Raees has the advantage of a decent opening and a Republic Day holiday as a bonus but adverse reports will soon catch up with its box office status.

    Producers: Ritesh Sidhwani, Gauri Khan, Farhan Akhtar.

    Director: Rahul Dholakia.

    Cast: Shah Rukh Khan, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Atul Kulkarni, Mahira Khan, Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub.

    Kaabil….For select audience..

    Sanjay Gupta’s inspiration usually comes from South-East Asian films at times blended with a film from the West. Kaabil finds resemblance with Blind Fury (1989) and Broken (2014), from the US and Korea, respectively.

    That said, the film turns into a typical vendetta film, a trend started by South Indian films.When an injustice is done to a loving couple or a hero’s sister or mother falls prey to the villains, the hero seeks revenge. What is different here is that the lead actors, Hrithik Roshan and his lady love, Yami Gautam, are both blind.That adds a sympathy factor to the revenge saga. The handicap of momentary blindness has been used in various Kung Fu films over the years so the viewer would be quite familiar with the idea.

    Hrithik is a blind man living on his own. He has a talent for using different voices and is a popular dubbing artist for animation films. Through a common friend who is a matchmaker, he is introduced to Yami, who is also blind. She works for an NGO and also plays piano at a dance academy. While both are independent and reluctant to marry, they plan to meet again. What both also have in common is a sense of perception, a strong sixth sense.

    So far the going is good as there are some nice as well as emotional moments as both discover each other. The initial friendship turns into love and the couple decide to marry. The proceeds become heavy thereafter as a troublemaker, Rohit Roy, has bad intentions for Yami.

    Once while Hrithik is away at work, Rohit along with his sidekick, Md Sahidur Rehman, rapes Yami knowing both are blind and there is little they could do. Going to the police is of no help since Rohit’s politician brother, Ronit Roy, is a local councilor and can pull strings. Encouraged, Rohit decides to make it a routine to take advantage of Yami’s helplessness leading her to end her life.

    Frustrated by the police inaction, Hrithik decides to take matters in his own hands to settle score. This is what the film is about; a blind man plotting and taking revenge while making sure there is no way the cops can nail him. For he challenged the police that he will get even on his own.

    He plots each villain’s death differently using his talent of modulating his voice.
    Kaabil starts off well but the idea of bringing in a local politician, and a municipal councilor at that, makes the villain angle weak. That such a politician should be able to call the shots with a major metro police force does not quite convince. 

    Seeking revenge one by one is also oft seen in many films. That a blind man does all this is the USP of the film which may not be enough. The film’s music is a plus with the title song, Mai tere kaabil hun…… being the pick of the lot while Kuchh din se….. and Kissise pyar ho jaaye…. (Remix of old hit, Dil kya kare…. from film Julie) also being hummable. The cinematography is good. Editing could have been crisper. Action is commendable.

    The best part of the film is the performances by the lead pair, Hrithik and Yami. Hrithik is totally convincing as a blind man carrying a blank sort of look in his eyes through the length of the film. Yami complements him though her role is shorter. Ronit, Rohit and Sahidur are routine. Girish Kulkarni and NarendraJha as the cops are effective.
    Kaabil has had a weak opening. Thursday holiday and the weekend are expected to fare better but the target for the film is too high.

    Producer: RakeshRoshan.

    Director: Sanjay Gupta.

    Cast: HrithikRoshan, YamiGautam, Ronit Roy, Rohiit Roy.

  • Raees…..Don: The twisted tale

    Raees…..Don: The twisted tale

    MUMBAI: Playing a fictional don is not good enough, every hero wants a Deewar of his own, the film that cemented Amitabh Bachchan’s arrival as a star after Zanjeer. Deewar was the legendary film based on the life of Haji Mastan, Mumbai’s first don. But, Deewar was only inspired by Haji’s life with clever writing by the Salim-Javed duo which, without depicting violence in anyway, charted the life of a don more as a family drama as well as a conflict between law and outlaw.

    There have been more attempts recently at adapting real life criminals’ stories for films. None of these films tried to pass judgment on the criminal in its theme or paint him other than what he was. To see where things go wrong with Raees, it is necessary to know what the real don was and how the film presents him.

    Raees, though it does not credit the film as one based on the notorious Ahmedabad based criminal Latif, tries to present him as a benevolent do-gooder, a Robin Hood kind of don. Latif was a petty bootlegger in the city of Ahmedabad who, with the backing of various other criminals started out as a courier boy for a major bootlegger, eventually turning into one independently. Since alcohol in the totally dry state of Gujarat was the privilege of rich and influential,Latif seemed to be dealing with the right kind of people when it came to furthering his career.

    Latif specialized in inciting communal riots and soon became a tool in the hands of politicians. The city faced regular bouts of communal tensions during two occasions: the annual Rath Yatra and Makar Sankranti, the kite festival. Latif was known to play the lead role in inciting these riots. The local goon Latif graduated to become a don when he came into contact with Dawood and was instrumental in transporting the RDX used in the Mumbai bomb blasts. He later took refuge in Karachi with the aid of Dawood.

    Shah Rukh Khan plays the character based on the life of Latif. Suffering from weak eyesight, he can’t read the blackboard in school when asked. The family is very poor and can’t afford to buy him specs. Latif goes and steals the frame from a statue of Mahatma Gandhi. Poverty and his mother’s helplessness lead him to a local bootlegger, Atul Kulkarni, delivering bottles in his school sachet. As he grows up, he plans to start his own business. Talking about “Baniye ka deemag” and “Miyabhaiki daring”, it is strange that he plans to buy supply from Kulkarni himself to compete with him!

    Shah Rukh is now rich as well as influential. Everybody loves him be it Hindu or Muslim for he is a messiah who always stands for the poor and needy. He donates sewing machines to local women and gets justice for unpaid workers. He even plans a huge colony to settle poor people of his locality. So what if they are well settled in the heart of the city!

    There are riots in the city and Shah Rukh has nothing to do with it. He, in fact, is worried about people and children and provides food and milk for families and kids affected by the riots and the curfew-bound city.By now, Hindu and Muslim, both the communities adore him. Shah Rukh attacks an opposition leader’s rally and is asked by the CM to agree to go to jail to save face. He soon realises that the CM has betrayed him. He decides to fight the local municipal elections and wins to avail him bail from jail. (The real Latif fought the elections from six wards and won five.)

    But, now the CM is irritated with Shah Rukh and makes his life miserable. All his resources dry up and he is forced to seek financial help from a Mumbai don who asks him to run an errand for him: deliver a certain amount of smuggled gold which turns out to be RDX used for Mumbai bomb blasts of 1993. 

    There is nothing about Shah Rukh aka Latif running away to Dubai and later finding refuge in Pakistan.

    The film comes across all throughout as making a martyr out of a bad man. And, even otherwise, if one watches the film as a total work of fiction, it is a poorly conceived and executed film. A score of movies have been made on similar don stories and they only get worse with each attempt.

    There are two other tracks, both predictable; one is that of romance. Romance in this film is given. Shah Rukh and Mahira Khan seem to be in love with each other from the first time they meet. Soon they marry and Mahira joins in his illegal business as a helping hand. The other is that of the cop, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, who has sworn not to spare Shah Rukh, wherever he is transferred for doing that.The rest of the characters are mere caricatures. The first half of the film comes across as any making of a don story, the second half turns into a typical South Indian film where the bad man is good man.

    Raees has just about everything going wrong for it, from the choice of subject and the way it is moulded to make Shah Rukh a larger than life character, to the choice of female lead. While Shah Rukh plays his two faced personality sans conviction, Mahira Khan neither charms with her presence nor impresses with her performance. Nawazuddin promises to salvage the proceeds initially but the script holds him back as things proceed. However, he is the best part of the film. 

    The direction is patchy and attempts to portray the 1980s lacks conviction. Sets are shabby. Music is of no help. There is little scope for the editor. The film makes a hero out of criminal Latif in the process of making the film’s hero, Shah Rukh, larger than life.

    Raees has the advantage of a decent opening and a Republic Day holiday as a bonus but adverse reports will soon catch up with its box office status.

    Producers: Ritesh Sidhwani, Gauri Khan, Farhan Akhtar.

    Director: Rahul Dholakia.

    Cast: Shah Rukh Khan, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Atul Kulkarni, Mahira Khan, Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub.

    Kaabil….For select audience..

    Sanjay Gupta’s inspiration usually comes from South-East Asian films at times blended with a film from the West. Kaabil finds resemblance with Blind Fury (1989) and Broken (2014), from the US and Korea, respectively.

    That said, the film turns into a typical vendetta film, a trend started by South Indian films.When an injustice is done to a loving couple or a hero’s sister or mother falls prey to the villains, the hero seeks revenge. What is different here is that the lead actors, Hrithik Roshan and his lady love, Yami Gautam, are both blind.That adds a sympathy factor to the revenge saga. The handicap of momentary blindness has been used in various Kung Fu films over the years so the viewer would be quite familiar with the idea.

    Hrithik is a blind man living on his own. He has a talent for using different voices and is a popular dubbing artist for animation films. Through a common friend who is a matchmaker, he is introduced to Yami, who is also blind. She works for an NGO and also plays piano at a dance academy. While both are independent and reluctant to marry, they plan to meet again. What both also have in common is a sense of perception, a strong sixth sense.

    So far the going is good as there are some nice as well as emotional moments as both discover each other. The initial friendship turns into love and the couple decide to marry. The proceeds become heavy thereafter as a troublemaker, Rohit Roy, has bad intentions for Yami.

    Once while Hrithik is away at work, Rohit along with his sidekick, Md Sahidur Rehman, rapes Yami knowing both are blind and there is little they could do. Going to the police is of no help since Rohit’s politician brother, Ronit Roy, is a local councilor and can pull strings. Encouraged, Rohit decides to make it a routine to take advantage of Yami’s helplessness leading her to end her life.

    Frustrated by the police inaction, Hrithik decides to take matters in his own hands to settle score. This is what the film is about; a blind man plotting and taking revenge while making sure there is no way the cops can nail him. For he challenged the police that he will get even on his own.

    He plots each villain’s death differently using his talent of modulating his voice.
    Kaabil starts off well but the idea of bringing in a local politician, and a municipal councilor at that, makes the villain angle weak. That such a politician should be able to call the shots with a major metro police force does not quite convince. 

    Seeking revenge one by one is also oft seen in many films. That a blind man does all this is the USP of the film which may not be enough. The film’s music is a plus with the title song, Mai tere kaabil hun…… being the pick of the lot while Kuchh din se….. and Kissise pyar ho jaaye…. (Remix of old hit, Dil kya kare…. from film Julie) also being hummable. The cinematography is good. Editing could have been crisper. Action is commendable.

    The best part of the film is the performances by the lead pair, Hrithik and Yami. Hrithik is totally convincing as a blind man carrying a blank sort of look in his eyes through the length of the film. Yami complements him though her role is shorter. Ronit, Rohit and Sahidur are routine. Girish Kulkarni and NarendraJha as the cops are effective.
    Kaabil has had a weak opening. Thursday holiday and the weekend are expected to fare better but the target for the film is too high.

    Producer: RakeshRoshan.

    Director: Sanjay Gupta.

    Cast: HrithikRoshan, YamiGautam, Ronit Roy, Rohiit Roy.

  • Shop CJ ties up with ‘Raees’; offers 60pc discount

    Shop CJ ties up with ‘Raees’; offers 60pc discount

    MUMBAI: As fans across the nation are enjoying the release of Shah Rukh Khan starrer Raees, Shop CJ brings an opportunity to meet the King of Hearts himself. Shop CJ in association with Red Chillies Entertainment and Excel Entertainment is all geared up to run a trivia contest this January for the upcoming movie Raees.

    Shop CJ has extended the contest to social media where all the true blue SRK fans get to unravel interesting clues on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and the lucky winner get a chance to meet the actor. Apart from TV and social media, the campaign is also being played out in outdoor, print and digital media.

    “At Shop CJ, our effort is to understand our partners as well as consumers and work on initiatives which connect with our relevant target group. After tying up with the Rajinikanth starrer Kabali and achieving stupendous success, Shop CJ is delighted to be associated with Red Chillies Entertainment and Excel Entertainment for their upcoming movie ‘Raees’. Bollywood has always struck a chord with our customers and Shop CJ aims at offering them a quintessential experience. We hope to start 2017 on a high note and what better than by associating with the Badshah of Bollywood,” said Shop CJ COO Dhruva Chandrie.

    The impactful association with movies like Kabali and Chennai Express has resulted in Shop CJ reaching out to potential customers across the country. They aspire to continue the trend with the ongoing Raees association. Making the occasion more special, Shop CJ is dropping a mammoth 60 per cent off on products this Republic Day.