Tag: Rang Rasiya

  • A poor week at the BO

    A poor week at the BO

    MUMBAI: Ungli is poor. The film has managed to garner just about Rs 9.55 crore for the first weekend. The film is stale and suffers due to poor title as well as the content. It is the poorest performers among Emraan Hashmi films.

     

    Zid has proved to be the second best in a very poor week. The film, where the producer and the director parted ways and unwanted, explicit scenes came in, failed to work. The film has proved to be an unmitigated disaster managing to collect about Rs 3.5 crore.

     

    Zed Plus, despite limited screenings, has not been able to draw crowds. Happy Ending is a disaster at Rs 19.1 crore in its first week.

     

    Kill/Dil adds another Rs 2.75 crore to its collections in the second week to take its two week total to Rs 33.57 crore.

     

    Chaar Sahib Zaade rocks. The film has added Rs 8.2 crore in its third week (includes Punjabi and Hindi versions) to take its three week total to Rs 23.1 crore.

     

    Happy New Year has added Rs 40 lakh in its fifth week taking its five week total to Rs 171.6 crore.

     

    Rang Rasiya has collected Rs 25 lakh in its third week to take its three week total to Rs 4.95 crore.

  • Not so ‘Happy Ending’ at the BO

    Not so ‘Happy Ending’ at the BO

    MUMBAI: Happy Ending is a reasonably funny film but opens weak as the film’s star cast lacks the draw at the box office and depends only on its public reports to sustain. During the weekend, the public reports were fair and so were the reviews, but the collections remained below par at Rs 13.5 crore for its opening weekend.

     

    The other release of the week, Titoo MBA remained very poor.

     

    Kill/Dil maintained well through the week, albeit on the lower side as appreciation was missing. Not a film befitting YRF repertoire. The film has collected Rs 30.82 crore for its first week and adding another Rs 1.54 for the second weekend.

     

    Chaar Sahibzaad (Animation) has made a record jump in its second week thanks to its Punjabi version. This should emerge as the biggest Punjabi hit on religious theme since the 1969 Punjabi film, Nanak Naam Jahaj Hai, produced by the Maheshwaris (Kalpanalok) who have a memorable Hindi hit around the same time in Kaajal, a Raajkumar starrer.

     

    The Shaukeens has added Rs 2.1 crore in its second week to take its two week total to Rs 20.6 crore. Rang Rasiya has collected Rs 75 lakh in its second week to take its two week total to Rs 4.7 crore.

     

    Super Nani has collected Rs 25 lakh in its third week to take its three week total to Rs 29.1 crore. Happy New Year has collected Rs 1.4 crore in its fourth week taking its four week tally to Rs 171.2 crore.

  • Dull week at the BO

    Dull week at the BO

    MUMBAI: The week’s major release was Yash Raj’s Kill/ Dil, a very average fare which opened to poor response. Looks like the film may do its best only during the opening weekend with its solo release status being an advantage and not sustain thereafter. The film has managed to collect Rs 20.18 crore for its first three days.

    Chaar Sahibzaade (animation) has done very well in Punjab and has collected Rs 3.75 crore in its first week.

    Last week’s release, The Shaukeens, has not been able to fare well.  A disappointing remake of the 1982 classic by Basu Chatterjee, Shaukeen, and the film falls flat because of poor transcribing and adaption. The film manages about Rs 18.5 crore for its first week.

    Rang Rasiya has not been able to sell its erotica and nudity in the name of the life story of Raja Ravi Varma. The film falls flat at the box office and manages to collect just about Rs 3.95 crore for its opening week.

    Super Nani is the end of the story by its week two. The film manages to collect Rs 10 lakh in its second week to take its two week total to Rs 2.85 crore.

    Happy New Year has added Rs 7.4 crore in its third week to take its three week tally to Rs 169.8 crore.

     

  • A boring week for box office

    A boring week for box office

    MUMBAI: Shaukeens, the remake of 1982 Basu Chatterjee film, Shaukeen, starring old stalwarts Ashok Kumar, Utpal Dutt and AK Hangal is below the mark. The three characters being re-enacted by Anupam Kher, Annu Kapoor and Piyush Mishra are no patch on the veterans they replace. Plus, the script has been mutilated badly in an attempt to better it (old classics can’t be bettered).  The film opened low despite a weak opposition. And, the film has managed to collect just Rs 13.5 crore for its opening weekend.

     

    Rang Rasiya, an attempt to sell some nudity in the name of an artistic biopic about a celebrated artist Raja Ravi Varma, has not worked. Biopics about known recent heroes don’t work with our audience and this film working was a long shot. The film fares poorly, missing a first day crore by miles and going onto end the weekend with a poor Rs 2.1 crore.

     

    Super Nani fails at the box office. The subject, despite Rekha enacting the protagonist, is outdated and treated badly. The film has managed to collect a meagre Rs 2.75 crore in its first week.

     

    Roar, a rare film on human vs man eater tigers in a game of survival offered some novelty value which was not enough to save it at the box office. Laden with heavy special effects, which costs dearly, the film has managed just Rs 7.85 crore in its first week.

     

    Happy New Year, despite its negative reports, gets the advantage of poor oppositions and does better than merited in its second week. Even while on decline after its opening day, the film manages to collect Rs 32.4 crore in its second week taking its two week total to Rs 162.4 crore.

     

    Haidar has added Rs 10 lakh in its fifth week to take its five week total to Rs 40.5 crore.

     

    Bang Bang has collected Rs 15 lakh in its fifth week to take its five week total to Rs 145.75 crore.

     

     

     

  • Shaukeens …Not for a film shaukeen

    Shaukeens …Not for a film shaukeen

    Shaukeens is inspired from the 1982 film, Basu Chatterjee’s successful film Shaukeen, starring Ashok Kumar, Utpal Dutt and A K Hangal. They are replaced here by Anupam Kher, Annu Kapoor and Piyush Mishra. The original had Mithun Chakraborty and Rati Agnihotri as romantic attractions. Their replacements here are Akshay Kumar and Lisa Haydon. Shaukeen was remade in Telugu as Prema Pichollu with Chiranjeevi and others in 1983.

    Producers: Murad Khetani, Ashwin Varde.
    Director: Abhishek Sharma.
    Cast: Anupam Kher, Annu Kapoor, Piyush Mishra, Lisa Haydon, Rati Agnihotri and in cameos Abhishek Bachchan, Kareena Kapoor, Dimple Kapadia, Suniel Shetty and, in a special appearance, Akshay Kumar.

    The actual theme, though with a different ending and with the approach of a thriller rather than a comedy was The Fan Club, a 1974 novel by Irving Wallace, made into a film the same year. Here an actress is kidnapped by a few men. In Shaukeen and Shaukeens, three old men, referred to in India as thirkee/lecherous men, bored with their daily routine, embark on a holiday with the express purpose of finding some sex.
    Kher, Kapoor and Mishra are deprived of sex for different reasons. Kher’s wife has turned full time religious and sex is taboo for her; Mishra’s wife is dead while Kapoor could not marry the woman he loved and, hence, has no sex life. Best they get is to ogle at young girls at morning exercise groups. This proves to be even more frustrating even as their attempts independent of each other fail.
    Having had enough, Kapoor comes up with an idea. Since they are well known in Delhi where they are based, they decide to land up in Bangkok. But the very mention of Bangkok is opposed by the two men with families, Kher and Mishra, as whatever the reason, Bangkok in the family and friends circle would create talks. They decide on Mauritius where they learn Akshay Kumar is slated to shoot his next film.

    They are lucky to get a house to themselves in Mauritius as the owner, Lisa Haydon, has decided to rent it out while she is away. The trio’s first night out at a club is a failure. But, to their surprise there is Lisa sleeping in the lawn; her programme got cancelled at the last minute.

    Haydon is a bindass, carefree girl and a self-proclaimed designer who makes a pendant out of a frog’s eye and glares for Akshay from her nails! Her carefree attitude is taken by the three men as an open invitation. They put their efforts into scoring with Haydon, collectively as well as individually.

    While these three are chasing Haydon, Akshay Kumar is in Mauritius for a film shoot. Haydon is a big fan of Akshay and she proposes that whoever of the three takes her to meet Akshay will get whatever he asks for from her. Kher manages first followed by Kapoor by which time has had enough of her.

    Mishra’s attempt is the last straw. A drunk Akshay (he is a closet alcoholic) is on stage at an Indian community event, bursts out in anger.

    Sadly, Shaukeens is a poorly adapted version of the original. Nothing about it looks natural: the way they behave or the way they try to court Haydon. The comedy is either absent or banal, making one laugh at the attempts to create comedy instead of the comedy itself. Direction is routine and lacking imagination. Music is poor. Not a very long film, but even at 135 minutes it offers much scope for further editing. Performance wise, while Kher and Mishra are routine, Kapoor is a little better. So much so that Akshay Kumar emerges the best of the male cast. Haydon is a wrong choice.

    Shaukeens fails to entertain. Having opened to poor response, it faces tough time ahead.

    Rang Rasiya ……Of colours and women shapes

    Producer: Deepa Sahi, Anand Mahendroo.
    Director: Ketan Mehta.
    Cast: Randeep Hooda, Nandana Sen, Paresh Rawal.

     

    Rang Rasiya is based on the life of the renowned Indian artist and painter of the 19th Century, Raja Ravi Varma, who went on to become a legend. Born in Kerala, Varma was a painter trained in the basics of art followed by water painting and then oil painting by three different masters. He was driven out of his native Kerala by the local ruler for adding the prefix Raja to his name. But he was backed by the ruler of Mysore, who was also his patron, and his paintings adorn the Mysore Palace till date.

    The film version is an adaptation of a novel, Raja Ravi Varma, written by Ranjit Desai. It is a novel and not a life account of Varma and, hence, the film too has a commercial film-like approach. And, it turns out to be more about women and romances in Varma’s life and that is what is expected to attract the moviegoer. After, all painting and painters find their followers at art galleries not in cinema halls.
    Lying in cans since 2008 for want of censor clearance, the film was screened at various film festivals. It has only now finally got an Indian release. Married with five children, Varma, played by Randeep Hooda, has a glad eye for pretty women and admired their bodies; he was an eternal lover. His sexual encounters with women would be dream sequences, otherwise, for a common man. A flirt who uses women for his artistic inspiration as well as for what they are. Finally comes a woman, Nandana Sen, who he soon becomes passionate about.
    Not taking Varma seriously, she eventually becomes his model and lover. He has found a new inspiration only to be vehemently opposed by the self-styled custodians of culture and traditions. From being dragged to court to being blamed for the plague epidemic in Mumbai, he faces it all.

    Varma takes his art and admiration for the female further as he gives faces and form to Hindu gods and goddesses and paints their pictures, and sets up his own lithographic printing press to print and distribute these pictures free of cost to lakhs of people including those not allowed into temples. He provides a God/Goddess to every home. His one admirable act was to financially help the father of Indian cinema, Dada Saheb Phalke with his first film project.

    Ketan Mehta is a fine and sensitive director but here his priorities seem mixed up between depicting the life of one of the most renowned artist and his sex life. Rather than romance, the film and characters seem to thrive on lust. Hooda looks too hard faced to depict Varma. Girls are just okay.

    Biopics are not a very popular genre even about our recent heroes while this one is about one from a long past few can identify with, making the film a commercial liability.
     

     

  • Bangladesh film Guerrilla wins top award at KFF

    Bangladesh film Guerrilla wins top award at KFF

    MUMBAI: The Bangladeshi film Guerrilla, which recreates the heroic deeds of the valiant freedom fighters of the 1971 liberation war, won the best Asian film award in the ‘Asian Select‘ section at the 17th Kolkata Film Festival (KFF).

    In all, 12 films competed in the Asian Select section for the coveted award. This was for the first time that a separate competitive section was added to KFF that was so far the oldest non-competitive film festival in the country.

    Besides, London-based filmmaker Hammad Khan‘s Slackistan, Turkish director Nuri Bilge Ceylon‘s Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, Hungarian director Bela Tarr‘s The Turin Horse and Certified Copy made by Italian director Abbas Kiarostami too proved to be a hit with the audience.

    But the biggest attraction of the festival was Ketan Mehta‘s film Rang Rasiya and the Bangladeshi film Meherjaan. While Rang Rasiya is based on the life of 19th century painter Raja Ravi Varma, Meherjaan, that stars Victor Banerjee and Jaya Bachchan along with a number of actors from Bangladesh and Pakistan, is about a Bangladeshi woman‘s love affair with a Pakistani soldier during the 1971 Liberation War.

    The festival also saw the West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee declare her government‘s plans to felicitate renowned directors and actors of Hollywood and Bollywood from 2012. “From next year we will felicitate and award the famous directors, actors and even good technicians of Hollywood, Bollywood and Tollywood,” she said while addressing the closing ceremony of the 17th KFF.

  • Ketan Mehta’s Rang Rasiya to open Chicago fest on 30 September

    Ketan Mehta’s Rang Rasiya to open Chicago fest on 30 September

    MUMBAI: The Chicago South Asian Film Festival has selected Ketan Mehta’s film Rang Rasiya to open the festival that starts on 30 September.


    The film is the story of artist Raja Ravi Varma‘s passions, obsessions and his fierce struggle for creative freedom. He hurt the religious sentiments of the people by painting nudes of Indian mythological characters. Later on, his muse Sugandha inspired him to create exquisite paintings based on mythological themes and classic literature.


    As many as 27 films have been selected across a variety of genres such as comedy, drama, romance, fantasy, and reality. Among them are Athula Liyanage‘s Bambara Wallala, Geeta Malik‘s Troublemaker, Moinak Biswas and Arjun Gourisaria‘s Spring In The Colony, Hemant Gaba‘s Shuttlecock Boys, Anu Rana‘s Ring Laila, Harjant Gill‘s Roots of Love, Nasir Khan‘s Made in Pakistan, Pankaj Johar‘s documentary Still Standing and Shelley Saywell‘s documentary In the Name of the Family amongst others.


    The much appreciated Nila Madhab Panda‘s I Am Kalam has been selected as the centerpiece of the film festival. It is a heartwarming story of a 13-year-old slum boy who aspires to be like former president of India, A.P.J. Abdul Kalam.


    Amole Gupte‘s Stanley Ka Dabba will also been screened in the feature films category of the festival.


    The short film category will have Snehal Patel‘s The Eggie Files Director, Gursimran Sandhu‘s Homecoming, M.S. Srikanth‘s The Bridge, Vivek Shraya‘s Seeking Single White Male, Abi Varghese‘s The Return Address, Rakesh Chaudhary‘s The Eclipse of Taregna, Jason Wang‘s Second Best, Sofian Khan‘s Small Voices, Sandeep Sharma‘s A Portrait in Bombay and Kenneth Lawrence‘s Ronnie.


    The festival will end on 2 October.