Tag: Randeep Hooda

  • Box Office:  Housefull 3 does well amidst other disastrous releases

    Box Office: Housefull 3 does well amidst other disastrous releases

    MUMBAI: Te3n opens to a poor response only to do a little well over the weekend to drop again as the new week begins. The film, which opened weak, improved marginally on Saturday and Sunday to end its opening weekend withRs 10.7 crore. The Monday drop being inevitable, the prospects are not bright.

    *Do Lafzon Ki Kahani is poor and fails to draw the audience. While Randeep Hooda is accepted in certain characters, accepting him playing a romantic hero is rather asking for too much. To add to that, he and Kajal Agarwal make no chemistry. This love story spells disaster. The film collected a poor Rs 2.2 crore for its opening weekend.

    *Houseful 3 did very well to end its first week with an impressive Rs 80.4 crore. The film has also been maintaining well during its second weekend and promises to emerge a safe project.

    *Waiting collects Rs 50 lakh in its second week to take its two week tally to Rs 2.4 crore.

    *Phobia collects Rs 10 lakh in its second week to take its two week total to Rs 3.05 crore.

    *Sarbjit adds Rs 90 lakh in its third week to take its three week total to Rs 26.95 crore.

    *Project Marathwada, Veerappan and Fredrick prove total loss adventures.

  • Box Office:  Housefull 3 does well amidst other disastrous releases

    Box Office: Housefull 3 does well amidst other disastrous releases

    MUMBAI: Te3n opens to a poor response only to do a little well over the weekend to drop again as the new week begins. The film, which opened weak, improved marginally on Saturday and Sunday to end its opening weekend withRs 10.7 crore. The Monday drop being inevitable, the prospects are not bright.

    *Do Lafzon Ki Kahani is poor and fails to draw the audience. While Randeep Hooda is accepted in certain characters, accepting him playing a romantic hero is rather asking for too much. To add to that, he and Kajal Agarwal make no chemistry. This love story spells disaster. The film collected a poor Rs 2.2 crore for its opening weekend.

    *Houseful 3 did very well to end its first week with an impressive Rs 80.4 crore. The film has also been maintaining well during its second weekend and promises to emerge a safe project.

    *Waiting collects Rs 50 lakh in its second week to take its two week tally to Rs 2.4 crore.

    *Phobia collects Rs 10 lakh in its second week to take its two week total to Rs 3.05 crore.

    *Sarbjit adds Rs 90 lakh in its third week to take its three week total to Rs 26.95 crore.

    *Project Marathwada, Veerappan and Fredrick prove total loss adventures.

  • Te3n disappoints while Do Lafzon Ki Kahani seems never ending!

    Te3n disappoints while Do Lafzon Ki Kahani seems never ending!

    MUMBAI: Sujoy Ghosh has to his credit a score of movies by now. However, the one that is a feather in his cap and gave him recognition was Kahaani, a thriller par excellence with twists and turns lost to Hindi cinema for a long time. Wanting to be comfortable with his actors, Ghosh repeats Amitabh Bachchan, VidyaBalan and Nawazuddin Siddique, all of whom he has worked with earlier. The maker chooses the same genre, detective thriller; only the detectives fail, but the protagonist-turned-detective succeeds. 

    A small boy has been kidnapped in Kolkata. His mother is a heart patient and father serves on the Eastern border and is home only for brief periods.The boy is closest to his maternal grandfather. Now he has gone missing. A ransom is demanded and the police get involved. 

    The cop who is on the case is Vidya Balan. She finds a lot of similarities between this kidnapping and one that happened eight years ago involving the granddaughter of Bachchan. There is a joke about Kolkata that if you leave a rock on a major arterial road of the city, you will still find it in the same spot a decade later. In that case, it is no wonder that Vidya, who handled Bachchan’s case eight years ago, is still around handling the new kidnap case at the same police station. Vidya seeks the help of Nawazuddin, a policeman turned church pastor, who was a part of the investigation eight years back.

    Bachchan has been restless for the last eight years since his granddaughter, left in his care, was kidnapped and found dead. He has either been dormant or ineffective and only seen pleading with the police to solve the case. But he suddenly comes to life. He connects the two kidnappings. 

    So Te3n seems to be about three people’s perspective of a crime, that of the policewoman, Vidya, an ex-policeman turned church pastor, Nawazuddin, and Bachchan. All three have different convictions about what happened eight years back vis-a-vis the current kidnapping. 

    Vidya and Nawazuddin are on different tracks and it is Bachchan who seems to have figured out the angles.

    Te3n, unfortunately, is a grossly contrived script taking liberties galore. Logic has no place here when it comes to convenience of scripting. The maker likes to show the drab, depressing and dilapidated nooks and corners of Kolkata to accentuate his theme which shows the influence of 1940s films. A victim’s pursuit of justice is an interesting idea for a film.That is what made Kahaaani and Badlapur successful.But in the case of Te3n, the thrill is just not there. The first half does not seem to be going anywhere and it is only towards latter parts that the narrative manages to generate some pace only to lead to a tame ending.

    With the script and direction both based on compromises, the film has mainly the performances to count on. Since only Nawazuddin has a role with some sensibility, he does well though his priest costume seems alien. Vidya has nothing to do. Bachchan spends too much energy on looking old and overdoing the old man’s mannerisms. Music has no place here but forced in. Editing needed some crisp cutting. 

    Te3n has poor prospects at the box office.

    Producers: Gulab Singh Tanwar, AnirudhTanwar, Abhijit Ghatak, Deepak Dhar, Ram Mirchandani.
    Director: Ribhu Dasgupta
    Cast: Amitabh Bachchan, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Vidya Balan, Nassar, Sabyasachi Chakrabarty, Padmavati Rao

    Do Lafzon Ki Kahani…….That seems neverending!

    The flavour of the season with Indian filmmakers to find ‘inspiration’ is Korea; copying or remaking Hollywood films would be a giveaway now since its films get an extensive and simultaneous release in India and the rest of the world. Do Lafzon Ki Kahani is based on the 2011 Korean film – Always. Looking at the film, one wonders why did the producers need to go as far as Korea for inspiration, they could have easily been inspired by any 1960s Hollywood B-grader or an Indian film of the same genre a few years thence. 

    There have been scores of movies where romance blooms between total opposites in stature, nature, character as well as able and disabled. 

    RandeepHooda is a rogue, a rough man, because he has been brought up in an orphanage (that seems to be an unwritten law in Indian film stories to breed such characters). He does three jobs a day because, as he says, he has some obligations to fulfill. But, to who, why, etc., is a mystery which is never revealed. One night, he signs into his third job of the day at a toll plaza or some such thing when a blind girl, Kajal Agarwal, walks in. She is a friend of Hussain chacha, the attendant at the plaza from whom Randeep is talking over. 

    Kajal, though blind, walks miles to the plaza to take in a TV serial with Hussain chacha. She so takes the soap opera to heart that she starts to identify with the lead character of the serial. It happens for a few days that she walks into the cabin to catch the TV serial and Randeep already starts missing her if she is late. By day six, it is romance and promises of togetherness. 
    It is time for her to learn about Randeep’s past. It is all chequered. The orphanage he grew up in was swept away in a river surge. He turned into a street fighter for bounty, but, when deceived once by an opponent pleading to lose a bout on the grounds of humanity, he decided to become a villain and go bashing all and sundry. He also decides never to raise his hands on anybody after an accident caused by him leaves a bitter taste in his mouth. 

    That is when he meets Kajal and his world starts revolving around her. It is love all the way. There is more footage unreeling without the film moving an inch till, in a typical 1960s style, the doctors tell Randeep that Kajal’s eyesight can be restored if a procedurecosting 3 lakhs is done within 15 days.

    Whatever happens thereafter leads to nothing. Some new villains spring up from vacuum and Randeep’s love is put on trial. 

    Do Lafzon KI Kahani spells juvenile, which is to say just everything about it is amateur. The film gets everything wrong from the choice of source material to adapt to the casting. Randeep as a tough man turning a devoted lover, is a misfit?Kajal is mediocre. The chemistry between the lovers just does not happen.The direction is poor to say the least and songs are forced in to no avail. As for editing, this 127 minute film feels like 254 minutes and no editor could have changed that. The rest of the aspects don’t help either. 

    Do Lafzon Ki Kahani is poor fare.

    Producers: Dhiraj Shetty, Avinaash V Rai, Deepak Tijori, Dhaval Jayantilal Gada.
    Director: Deepak Tijori
    Cast: Randeep Hooda, Kajal Agarwal, Mamik, Yuri Suri

  • Te3n disappoints while Do Lafzon Ki Kahani seems never ending!

    Te3n disappoints while Do Lafzon Ki Kahani seems never ending!

    MUMBAI: Sujoy Ghosh has to his credit a score of movies by now. However, the one that is a feather in his cap and gave him recognition was Kahaani, a thriller par excellence with twists and turns lost to Hindi cinema for a long time. Wanting to be comfortable with his actors, Ghosh repeats Amitabh Bachchan, VidyaBalan and Nawazuddin Siddique, all of whom he has worked with earlier. The maker chooses the same genre, detective thriller; only the detectives fail, but the protagonist-turned-detective succeeds. 

    A small boy has been kidnapped in Kolkata. His mother is a heart patient and father serves on the Eastern border and is home only for brief periods.The boy is closest to his maternal grandfather. Now he has gone missing. A ransom is demanded and the police get involved. 

    The cop who is on the case is Vidya Balan. She finds a lot of similarities between this kidnapping and one that happened eight years ago involving the granddaughter of Bachchan. There is a joke about Kolkata that if you leave a rock on a major arterial road of the city, you will still find it in the same spot a decade later. In that case, it is no wonder that Vidya, who handled Bachchan’s case eight years ago, is still around handling the new kidnap case at the same police station. Vidya seeks the help of Nawazuddin, a policeman turned church pastor, who was a part of the investigation eight years back.

    Bachchan has been restless for the last eight years since his granddaughter, left in his care, was kidnapped and found dead. He has either been dormant or ineffective and only seen pleading with the police to solve the case. But he suddenly comes to life. He connects the two kidnappings. 

    So Te3n seems to be about three people’s perspective of a crime, that of the policewoman, Vidya, an ex-policeman turned church pastor, Nawazuddin, and Bachchan. All three have different convictions about what happened eight years back vis-a-vis the current kidnapping. 

    Vidya and Nawazuddin are on different tracks and it is Bachchan who seems to have figured out the angles.

    Te3n, unfortunately, is a grossly contrived script taking liberties galore. Logic has no place here when it comes to convenience of scripting. The maker likes to show the drab, depressing and dilapidated nooks and corners of Kolkata to accentuate his theme which shows the influence of 1940s films. A victim’s pursuit of justice is an interesting idea for a film.That is what made Kahaaani and Badlapur successful.But in the case of Te3n, the thrill is just not there. The first half does not seem to be going anywhere and it is only towards latter parts that the narrative manages to generate some pace only to lead to a tame ending.

    With the script and direction both based on compromises, the film has mainly the performances to count on. Since only Nawazuddin has a role with some sensibility, he does well though his priest costume seems alien. Vidya has nothing to do. Bachchan spends too much energy on looking old and overdoing the old man’s mannerisms. Music has no place here but forced in. Editing needed some crisp cutting. 

    Te3n has poor prospects at the box office.

    Producers: Gulab Singh Tanwar, AnirudhTanwar, Abhijit Ghatak, Deepak Dhar, Ram Mirchandani.
    Director: Ribhu Dasgupta
    Cast: Amitabh Bachchan, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Vidya Balan, Nassar, Sabyasachi Chakrabarty, Padmavati Rao

    Do Lafzon Ki Kahani…….That seems neverending!

    The flavour of the season with Indian filmmakers to find ‘inspiration’ is Korea; copying or remaking Hollywood films would be a giveaway now since its films get an extensive and simultaneous release in India and the rest of the world. Do Lafzon Ki Kahani is based on the 2011 Korean film – Always. Looking at the film, one wonders why did the producers need to go as far as Korea for inspiration, they could have easily been inspired by any 1960s Hollywood B-grader or an Indian film of the same genre a few years thence. 

    There have been scores of movies where romance blooms between total opposites in stature, nature, character as well as able and disabled. 

    RandeepHooda is a rogue, a rough man, because he has been brought up in an orphanage (that seems to be an unwritten law in Indian film stories to breed such characters). He does three jobs a day because, as he says, he has some obligations to fulfill. But, to who, why, etc., is a mystery which is never revealed. One night, he signs into his third job of the day at a toll plaza or some such thing when a blind girl, Kajal Agarwal, walks in. She is a friend of Hussain chacha, the attendant at the plaza from whom Randeep is talking over. 

    Kajal, though blind, walks miles to the plaza to take in a TV serial with Hussain chacha. She so takes the soap opera to heart that she starts to identify with the lead character of the serial. It happens for a few days that she walks into the cabin to catch the TV serial and Randeep already starts missing her if she is late. By day six, it is romance and promises of togetherness. 
    It is time for her to learn about Randeep’s past. It is all chequered. The orphanage he grew up in was swept away in a river surge. He turned into a street fighter for bounty, but, when deceived once by an opponent pleading to lose a bout on the grounds of humanity, he decided to become a villain and go bashing all and sundry. He also decides never to raise his hands on anybody after an accident caused by him leaves a bitter taste in his mouth. 

    That is when he meets Kajal and his world starts revolving around her. It is love all the way. There is more footage unreeling without the film moving an inch till, in a typical 1960s style, the doctors tell Randeep that Kajal’s eyesight can be restored if a procedurecosting 3 lakhs is done within 15 days.

    Whatever happens thereafter leads to nothing. Some new villains spring up from vacuum and Randeep’s love is put on trial. 

    Do Lafzon KI Kahani spells juvenile, which is to say just everything about it is amateur. The film gets everything wrong from the choice of source material to adapt to the casting. Randeep as a tough man turning a devoted lover, is a misfit?Kajal is mediocre. The chemistry between the lovers just does not happen.The direction is poor to say the least and songs are forced in to no avail. As for editing, this 127 minute film feels like 254 minutes and no editor could have changed that. The rest of the aspects don’t help either. 

    Do Lafzon Ki Kahani is poor fare.

    Producers: Dhiraj Shetty, Avinaash V Rai, Deepak Tijori, Dhaval Jayantilal Gada.
    Director: Deepak Tijori
    Cast: Randeep Hooda, Kajal Agarwal, Mamik, Yuri Suri

  • Baaghi exceeds expectations; Jungle Book continues strong

    Baaghi exceeds expectations; Jungle Book continues strong

    MUMBAI: Baaghi, a romance- action film and only the second film for Tiger Shroff, has with an opening response, exceeding all expectations. The film went on to cross the Rs 12 crore mark on its opening, on Friday. For a change, many single screens displayed House Full boards. The film held on very well on Saturday and excelled on Sunday to end its opening weekend with an impressive tally of Rs 38.7 crore.

    Short Cut Safari, a film aimed at children remained poor. It was too amateurish even for kids.

    Nil Battey Sannata could not cash in on its tax exemption in Delhi and UP and managed to put together only Rs 2.75 crore in its first week.

    Laal Rang, despite rising familiarity of the moviegoer with Randeep Hooda, failed to draw viewers. The film could manage just about Rs 1.7 crore in its first week.

    Santa Banta Pvt Ltd, a pathetic attempt at comedy, fared very poor. The film collected Rs 70 lakh in its first week.

    Fan dropped drastically in its second week collecting just Rs 11.1 crore. The theme and the pace of the film did not quite go down well with the audience. The two week total for the film is Rs 82.6 crore.

    Jungle Book continued with its triumphant march. The film collected an impressive Rs 30.7 crore from all versions in its third week to take its tally to Rs 151.5 crore.

    Ki & Ka added Rs 50 lakh in its fourth week to take its four week tally to Rs 51.15 crore.

  • Baaghi exceeds expectations; Jungle Book continues strong

    Baaghi exceeds expectations; Jungle Book continues strong

    MUMBAI: Baaghi, a romance- action film and only the second film for Tiger Shroff, has with an opening response, exceeding all expectations. The film went on to cross the Rs 12 crore mark on its opening, on Friday. For a change, many single screens displayed House Full boards. The film held on very well on Saturday and excelled on Sunday to end its opening weekend with an impressive tally of Rs 38.7 crore.

    Short Cut Safari, a film aimed at children remained poor. It was too amateurish even for kids.

    Nil Battey Sannata could not cash in on its tax exemption in Delhi and UP and managed to put together only Rs 2.75 crore in its first week.

    Laal Rang, despite rising familiarity of the moviegoer with Randeep Hooda, failed to draw viewers. The film could manage just about Rs 1.7 crore in its first week.

    Santa Banta Pvt Ltd, a pathetic attempt at comedy, fared very poor. The film collected Rs 70 lakh in its first week.

    Fan dropped drastically in its second week collecting just Rs 11.1 crore. The theme and the pace of the film did not quite go down well with the audience. The two week total for the film is Rs 82.6 crore.

    Jungle Book continued with its triumphant march. The film collected an impressive Rs 30.7 crore from all versions in its third week to take its tally to Rs 151.5 crore.

    Ki & Ka added Rs 50 lakh in its fourth week to take its four week tally to Rs 51.15 crore.

  • Fan fans a disastrous box office week

    Fan fans a disastrous box office week

    MUMBAI: This has been a disastrous week at the box office with exhibitors taking a big hit. This comes soon after the setback as they were made to pay high MGs and advances for Fan which they could not recoup. The three small time films released this week, Laal Rang, Nil Battey Sannata and Santa Banta Pvt Ltd have been rejected outright with their collections limited to a few lakhs each day of their opening weekend. Sadly for the exhibitors, they have nothing to curtail the shows of these films, as is done usually, with other films such as Jungle Book has. Fan is in its third week and limited footfalls, would have no takers anymore, since its collections went only downhill from the fourth day onwards.

    Nil Battey Sannata had a title that went over one’s head, these titles fail to tell a prospective viewer what is in the offing. The film has merit and was also exempted from paying entertainment tax in Delhi and UP state. If other states also grant it exemption, as it deserves to, it will be too late to help the film. The film could not put together even Rs one crore for its opening weekend.

    The makers may, however, take solace from the fact that, having been shot entirely in UP, this low budget film’s investment would be assured from the subsidy scheme of the UP government.

    Laal Rang drew a few hundred more footfalls over others due to Randeep Hooda in the lead, yet remained in the  Rs one crore range over the weekend. Hooda does not yet enjoy the status to assure a multi crore opener.

    Santa Banta Pvt Ltd may well be the frontrunner for the status of the year’s worst, amateurish and juvenile film. To add to its problems, the film was withdrawn from many cinema halls due to the Sikh community protesting against defamatory and derogatory projection of the community.

    The Jungle Book continued to do roaring business. The film has added an impressive Rs 46.8 core in its second week to take its two week total to Rs 120.8 crore. The trend for the third week is steady.

    Fan, which had a reasonable opening on day one, it being a national holiday, started dropping from day two and three, failing to add the weekend audience. However, the drop from Monday onwards for rest of the four days was rather steep. The film could add about 30 per cent for the next four days to its three day opening weekend collections to end its first week with Rs 71.5 crore with the second weekend adding another Rs 7.75 crore.

    KI & Ka added Rs 1.45 crore. The film’s three week tally stands at Rs 50.65 crore.
    Kapoor & Sons collected Rs 20 lakh in its fifth week, taking its five week total to Rs 72.1 crore.

  • Fan fans a disastrous box office week

    Fan fans a disastrous box office week

    MUMBAI: This has been a disastrous week at the box office with exhibitors taking a big hit. This comes soon after the setback as they were made to pay high MGs and advances for Fan which they could not recoup. The three small time films released this week, Laal Rang, Nil Battey Sannata and Santa Banta Pvt Ltd have been rejected outright with their collections limited to a few lakhs each day of their opening weekend. Sadly for the exhibitors, they have nothing to curtail the shows of these films, as is done usually, with other films such as Jungle Book has. Fan is in its third week and limited footfalls, would have no takers anymore, since its collections went only downhill from the fourth day onwards.

    Nil Battey Sannata had a title that went over one’s head, these titles fail to tell a prospective viewer what is in the offing. The film has merit and was also exempted from paying entertainment tax in Delhi and UP state. If other states also grant it exemption, as it deserves to, it will be too late to help the film. The film could not put together even Rs one crore for its opening weekend.

    The makers may, however, take solace from the fact that, having been shot entirely in UP, this low budget film’s investment would be assured from the subsidy scheme of the UP government.

    Laal Rang drew a few hundred more footfalls over others due to Randeep Hooda in the lead, yet remained in the  Rs one crore range over the weekend. Hooda does not yet enjoy the status to assure a multi crore opener.

    Santa Banta Pvt Ltd may well be the frontrunner for the status of the year’s worst, amateurish and juvenile film. To add to its problems, the film was withdrawn from many cinema halls due to the Sikh community protesting against defamatory and derogatory projection of the community.

    The Jungle Book continued to do roaring business. The film has added an impressive Rs 46.8 core in its second week to take its two week total to Rs 120.8 crore. The trend for the third week is steady.

    Fan, which had a reasonable opening on day one, it being a national holiday, started dropping from day two and three, failing to add the weekend audience. However, the drop from Monday onwards for rest of the four days was rather steep. The film could add about 30 per cent for the next four days to its three day opening weekend collections to end its first week with Rs 71.5 crore with the second weekend adding another Rs 7.75 crore.

    KI & Ka added Rs 1.45 crore. The film’s three week tally stands at Rs 50.65 crore.
    Kapoor & Sons collected Rs 20 lakh in its fifth week, taking its five week total to Rs 72.1 crore.

  • Nil Battey Sannata…A must watch film

    Nil Battey Sannata…A must watch film

    MUMBAI: The title Nil Battey Sannata is a colloquial phrase from UP that denotes a lost cause or total hopelessness and so may not make much sense to the ordinary reader But as you watch the film unwind, you identify not only with the title but also with the honest intent of the film. The film deals with aspirations, determination and education (of a girl child) against all odds. It is also about equations between a single mother and a teenaged daughter as well as between a domestic help and her employers.

    Swara Bhaskar is a widow with great ambitions to properly educate her 15-year-old daughter and see her become a doctor or an engineer or something similar. However, her own hurdle apart from the problem of money is her own daughter Ria who has no inclination towards studies. Her logic is simple: a doctor’s child becomes a doctor and an engineer’s child follows his father’s vocation and she is convinced her future is also slated to become a bai, a domestic servant, like her mother. The girl nurses no great ambitions and knows nothing of her mother’s ambitions for her.

    Ria is fully into films and glued to the TV most of the time. Though she manages to get through classes, mathematics is her major problem and Swara, who calls it ‘mess’, knows that maths could be the hurdle in the way of Ria’s good grades. Swara’s moral support comes from one of her employers, a doctor, Ratna Pathak Shah, and her usually quiet husband. Ratna uses her goodwill to get Ria special discount at a coaching class to improve her maths. It is a Catch-22 situation at such classes. They take only bright students because of whom the institutions add to their reputation. Ria has to get at least 50% in preliminaries to get the benefit.

    Ratna has a suggestion that Swara, who never got a chance to finish her 10th standard, go back to school and not only finish her high school but also learn and help Ria learn and that too from the same school and class that Ria attends. This is the beginning of a conflict between mother and daughter; as the latter would be too embarrassed having her mother in the same class as her!

    Actually, telling more about Nil Battey Sannata would amount to spoiling the pleasure of watching it.

    The film’s triumph is in its writing as the script is well woven. The subtly humorous dialogue adds life to the proceedings. The first-time director Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari does a good job generally but for a couple of glitches related to properties on the set. The songs, though in the background, are peppy. The end, justifiably so, moves from wit to the emotional. The actors in the film live up to their roles. Swara, Ria, Ratna and Pankaj Trivedi (this is among his best), all excel as do the kids playing fellow students. The whole feel about the film is natural.

    Nil Battey Sannata is a must-watch film, especially with kids. This would be the most deserving film for a tax-free tag nationally. (The film has already been exempted from entertainment tax in Delhi and UP.)

    Producers: Anand L Rai, Ajay Rai.

    Director: Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari.

    Cast: Swara Bhaskar, Ria, Ratna Pathak Shah, Pankaj Trivedi.

    Santa Banta Pvt Ltd….Juvenile!

    Santa Banta jokes have been a social media favourite for a long time now. It is late in the day, but someone decided to cash in on the brand equity and make a film using these names. But the makers who took ages to strike the idea cannot be expected to be bright. What’s worse, they take all of 112 minutes to prove that. The film starts with a disclaimer in that it praises the loyalty, patriotism and the valour of Sikhs and then proceeds to make them look like buffoons all along.

    Boman Irani is Santa and Veer Das is Banta, a pair of bumbling Sikhs, as rustic as they come. In other words, they are plain stupid. Their life is about gulping down bottles of alcohol and making fools of themselves. That is when the Indian intelligence agency RAW needs two of its top spooks to go to Suva, Fiji, to solve the mystery of the kidnapping of the country’s High Commissioner there, Ayub Khan.

    The depiction of the intelligence agency is just about as bright as the writers of this film for they don’t know where their star spies, Veeru and Jai, are. The boss, Tinnu Anand, dispatches his subordinate, Vijay Raaz, to Punjab to find them! If that is stupid, so is the whole film.

    This film is planned to be a comedy which starts with day-to-day PJs seen on social media as well as Joke of the Day slots in any print publication. But refusing to use those and be ‘original’, the makers let loose both Boman and Veer without a clue, script or content, to be at their funniest.

    Santa Banta Pvt Ltd has all the so-called comedians on the roster including the great Johnny Lever who can entertain even without a script; and sadly, he fails here too.

    Script, direction, editing, music, performances are tough to find in this film.

    To put it mildly, Santa Banta Pvt Ltd is juvenile stuff.

    Producer: Sheeba Akashdeep, Viacom 18 Motion Pictures.

    Director: Akashdeep Sabir.

    Cast: Boman Irani, Neha Dhupia, Lisa Haydon, Veer Das, Johnny Liver, Ram Kapoor, Sanjay Mishra, Vijay Raaz, Vrajesh Hirjee.

    Laal Rang….This not entertainment.

    There are a lot of new filmmakers wanting to experiment with different themes. Usually, such themes are either the result of experiences from where the makers come or from newspaper reports. Unfortunately, such local subjects don’t succeed in appealing to an all-India audience. Neither the viewers identify with such subjects nor, in most cases, do they care about a regional scandal.

    Laal Rang is about a scandal involving pilferage from blood banks and a blood mafia in Karnal, Haryana, with links to the capital, Delhi as well.  Earlier, there have been headlines about organ mafias, so why not blood mafia as well?

    Akshay Oberoi, the son of a peon in a government hospital, is aspiring to be a pathology lab technician. He gets admission to a two-year diploma course. On campus, he meets Randeep Hooda, also an applicant but mainly a fixer. He gets the list of the candidates admitted before it is put up on the board by seducing the rather lusty woman administrator. He then cons those whose name is already on the list by guaranteeing them admission. He also tries to con Akshay who does not fall for his ploy because he knows his admission has been confirmed.

    This is only the tip of the iceberg. It is only Randeep’s seasonal business, once a year. Randeep actually runs a very well organized blood mafia. His only reason to seek a diploma is to qualify for a job in a government hospital which would make it easy for him to run his blood business by being close to the source.

    Randeep has suddenly grown fond of Akshay after their first encounter. Soon, both become friends, or rather more like guru and chela. Randeep takes Akshay into his fold..Seeing Randeep accumulating monies and his RX100 motorbike worth Rs 30,000 has convinced Akshay that Randeep is rolling in money. He asks to be included in the ‘business.’ Akshay is now the most trusted lieutenant and, in Randeep’s company, he graduates to smoking and drinking. Meanwhile, he is also in love with another student, Pia Bajpai, whom he met on the day of admission to the course.

    Randeep encourages Akshay in his love affair because he is also in love with someone, Meenakshi Dixit, who loves him but won’t marry him because her parents don’t approve of Randeep. Akshay tries to reunite them but these reunions are temporary. This chapter could be done away with as it adds to the film’s length.

    Like in all friendship films, the friends soon turn foes. Akshay’s innocent face and student status comes to his rescue when the police catch up with one of their suppliers. He is offered a bait, either name the leader and go scot-free or end up in jail.

    The problem with Laal Rang is that our audience is by now immune to such subjects. Moreover the wise thing would be to not base such narrations on a local level as few people care. The film hangs between a documentary and a human interest story and, for that the duration of about two and half hours is stretching it much too far. While the idea is noble, the script as well as the direction are scratchy. The good thing about the film is performances by all concerned, including Randeep, Akshay, Meenakshi, Pia, Rajneesh Duggal as well as the supporting cast. Also positive are the musical tracks (though it does not have much relevance in such a film) and the dialogue which pack a punch despite being rustic.

    Laal Rang may have some merits but when it comes to commercial prospects: none whatsoever.

    Producer: Nitika Thakur.

    Director: Syed Ahmad Afzal.

    Cast: Randeep Hooda, Akshay Oberoi, Pia Bajpai, Meenakshi Dixit, Rajneesh Duggal, Jaihind Kumar, Abhimanue Arun.

  • Nil Battey Sannata…A must watch film

    Nil Battey Sannata…A must watch film

    MUMBAI: The title Nil Battey Sannata is a colloquial phrase from UP that denotes a lost cause or total hopelessness and so may not make much sense to the ordinary reader But as you watch the film unwind, you identify not only with the title but also with the honest intent of the film. The film deals with aspirations, determination and education (of a girl child) against all odds. It is also about equations between a single mother and a teenaged daughter as well as between a domestic help and her employers.

    Swara Bhaskar is a widow with great ambitions to properly educate her 15-year-old daughter and see her become a doctor or an engineer or something similar. However, her own hurdle apart from the problem of money is her own daughter Ria who has no inclination towards studies. Her logic is simple: a doctor’s child becomes a doctor and an engineer’s child follows his father’s vocation and she is convinced her future is also slated to become a bai, a domestic servant, like her mother. The girl nurses no great ambitions and knows nothing of her mother’s ambitions for her.

    Ria is fully into films and glued to the TV most of the time. Though she manages to get through classes, mathematics is her major problem and Swara, who calls it ‘mess’, knows that maths could be the hurdle in the way of Ria’s good grades. Swara’s moral support comes from one of her employers, a doctor, Ratna Pathak Shah, and her usually quiet husband. Ratna uses her goodwill to get Ria special discount at a coaching class to improve her maths. It is a Catch-22 situation at such classes. They take only bright students because of whom the institutions add to their reputation. Ria has to get at least 50% in preliminaries to get the benefit.

    Ratna has a suggestion that Swara, who never got a chance to finish her 10th standard, go back to school and not only finish her high school but also learn and help Ria learn and that too from the same school and class that Ria attends. This is the beginning of a conflict between mother and daughter; as the latter would be too embarrassed having her mother in the same class as her!

    Actually, telling more about Nil Battey Sannata would amount to spoiling the pleasure of watching it.

    The film’s triumph is in its writing as the script is well woven. The subtly humorous dialogue adds life to the proceedings. The first-time director Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari does a good job generally but for a couple of glitches related to properties on the set. The songs, though in the background, are peppy. The end, justifiably so, moves from wit to the emotional. The actors in the film live up to their roles. Swara, Ria, Ratna and Pankaj Trivedi (this is among his best), all excel as do the kids playing fellow students. The whole feel about the film is natural.

    Nil Battey Sannata is a must-watch film, especially with kids. This would be the most deserving film for a tax-free tag nationally. (The film has already been exempted from entertainment tax in Delhi and UP.)

    Producers: Anand L Rai, Ajay Rai.

    Director: Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari.

    Cast: Swara Bhaskar, Ria, Ratna Pathak Shah, Pankaj Trivedi.

    Santa Banta Pvt Ltd….Juvenile!

    Santa Banta jokes have been a social media favourite for a long time now. It is late in the day, but someone decided to cash in on the brand equity and make a film using these names. But the makers who took ages to strike the idea cannot be expected to be bright. What’s worse, they take all of 112 minutes to prove that. The film starts with a disclaimer in that it praises the loyalty, patriotism and the valour of Sikhs and then proceeds to make them look like buffoons all along.

    Boman Irani is Santa and Veer Das is Banta, a pair of bumbling Sikhs, as rustic as they come. In other words, they are plain stupid. Their life is about gulping down bottles of alcohol and making fools of themselves. That is when the Indian intelligence agency RAW needs two of its top spooks to go to Suva, Fiji, to solve the mystery of the kidnapping of the country’s High Commissioner there, Ayub Khan.

    The depiction of the intelligence agency is just about as bright as the writers of this film for they don’t know where their star spies, Veeru and Jai, are. The boss, Tinnu Anand, dispatches his subordinate, Vijay Raaz, to Punjab to find them! If that is stupid, so is the whole film.

    This film is planned to be a comedy which starts with day-to-day PJs seen on social media as well as Joke of the Day slots in any print publication. But refusing to use those and be ‘original’, the makers let loose both Boman and Veer without a clue, script or content, to be at their funniest.

    Santa Banta Pvt Ltd has all the so-called comedians on the roster including the great Johnny Lever who can entertain even without a script; and sadly, he fails here too.

    Script, direction, editing, music, performances are tough to find in this film.

    To put it mildly, Santa Banta Pvt Ltd is juvenile stuff.

    Producer: Sheeba Akashdeep, Viacom 18 Motion Pictures.

    Director: Akashdeep Sabir.

    Cast: Boman Irani, Neha Dhupia, Lisa Haydon, Veer Das, Johnny Liver, Ram Kapoor, Sanjay Mishra, Vijay Raaz, Vrajesh Hirjee.

    Laal Rang….This not entertainment.

    There are a lot of new filmmakers wanting to experiment with different themes. Usually, such themes are either the result of experiences from where the makers come or from newspaper reports. Unfortunately, such local subjects don’t succeed in appealing to an all-India audience. Neither the viewers identify with such subjects nor, in most cases, do they care about a regional scandal.

    Laal Rang is about a scandal involving pilferage from blood banks and a blood mafia in Karnal, Haryana, with links to the capital, Delhi as well.  Earlier, there have been headlines about organ mafias, so why not blood mafia as well?

    Akshay Oberoi, the son of a peon in a government hospital, is aspiring to be a pathology lab technician. He gets admission to a two-year diploma course. On campus, he meets Randeep Hooda, also an applicant but mainly a fixer. He gets the list of the candidates admitted before it is put up on the board by seducing the rather lusty woman administrator. He then cons those whose name is already on the list by guaranteeing them admission. He also tries to con Akshay who does not fall for his ploy because he knows his admission has been confirmed.

    This is only the tip of the iceberg. It is only Randeep’s seasonal business, once a year. Randeep actually runs a very well organized blood mafia. His only reason to seek a diploma is to qualify for a job in a government hospital which would make it easy for him to run his blood business by being close to the source.

    Randeep has suddenly grown fond of Akshay after their first encounter. Soon, both become friends, or rather more like guru and chela. Randeep takes Akshay into his fold..Seeing Randeep accumulating monies and his RX100 motorbike worth Rs 30,000 has convinced Akshay that Randeep is rolling in money. He asks to be included in the ‘business.’ Akshay is now the most trusted lieutenant and, in Randeep’s company, he graduates to smoking and drinking. Meanwhile, he is also in love with another student, Pia Bajpai, whom he met on the day of admission to the course.

    Randeep encourages Akshay in his love affair because he is also in love with someone, Meenakshi Dixit, who loves him but won’t marry him because her parents don’t approve of Randeep. Akshay tries to reunite them but these reunions are temporary. This chapter could be done away with as it adds to the film’s length.

    Like in all friendship films, the friends soon turn foes. Akshay’s innocent face and student status comes to his rescue when the police catch up with one of their suppliers. He is offered a bait, either name the leader and go scot-free or end up in jail.

    The problem with Laal Rang is that our audience is by now immune to such subjects. Moreover the wise thing would be to not base such narrations on a local level as few people care. The film hangs between a documentary and a human interest story and, for that the duration of about two and half hours is stretching it much too far. While the idea is noble, the script as well as the direction are scratchy. The good thing about the film is performances by all concerned, including Randeep, Akshay, Meenakshi, Pia, Rajneesh Duggal as well as the supporting cast. Also positive are the musical tracks (though it does not have much relevance in such a film) and the dialogue which pack a punch despite being rustic.

    Laal Rang may have some merits but when it comes to commercial prospects: none whatsoever.

    Producer: Nitika Thakur.

    Director: Syed Ahmad Afzal.

    Cast: Randeep Hooda, Akshay Oberoi, Pia Bajpai, Meenakshi Dixit, Rajneesh Duggal, Jaihind Kumar, Abhimanue Arun.