Tag: Sonali Cable

  • ‘Bang Bang’ continues to rule at the BO

    ‘Bang Bang’ continues to rule at the BO

    MUMBAI: Though fairly well promoted, Sonali Cable fails to draw enough footfalls and opens to very poor response. Coming as it does during the dullest period of the year, pre-Diwali, and lacking face value showed on the public response. The film has remained limited to less than the four million mark for the opening weekend which is disastrous.

    Mumbai 125KM, a horror film with poor promotion facing dull release period, is a loser. The film has just about managed to reach the one crore mark for its first three days.

    Ekkees Topon Ki Salaami has managed to scrap together Rs 1.55 crore in its first week. Tamanchey manages to cross a crore mark with Rs 1.25 crore to show for its first week. The other two releases of the week, Jigariya and Spark, were lost without a trace.

    Bang Bang has collected Rs 21.3 crore in its second week to take its two week tally to Rs 136.6 crore.

    Haider has managed to collect Rs 10.3 crore in its second week mainly on support at multiplexes to take its two week total to Rs 45.45 crore.

     

  • ‘Sonali Cable’… Stuck in time

    ‘Sonali Cable’… Stuck in time

    Sonali Cable must have been an idea in the mind of its writer-director, Charudutt Acharya, for a long time. Finally, he gets to realize it. Why is it an old thought? Because, cable turf wars are a story of the late 20th century. Providing cable connections was a totally money-and-muscle-wielding business when it started. There was nothing legal about it because there was no control. It just flourished.

    Cable was a way to watch various TV channels and infringing on other cable operators’ turf was the norm. It led to gang wars, murders and all such things that happen in other turf wars; after all, it was all about taking over a territory. But, Sonali Cable talks of a later stage. The stage when cable service was not limited to TV channels but also started providing internet connectivity.

    The story of Sonali Cable is a two-way fight between a multinational powerful company, Shining, owned by Anupam Kher, who wants to control all of Mumbai’s net connectivity which, according to him, will make whole of Mumbai vulnerable to him!! (There have been weirder ideas!) He has bought over all small time operators catering to few thousand connections and Mumbai is all his except for this one small time network provider, Sonali  (Rhea Chakraborty); her 3,000 connections stop him from controlling the entire city. For the convenience of the script, the national service provider, MTNL, is done away with, and so are other poor contenders owned by private companies. It is all about Kher, who walks in like East India Company, and takes over the net connectivity in the business capital of India.

    Then there are the emotional angles. Kher’s mother brought him up supplying khakhras in some Saurashtra village. Today, he swears by a khakhra but has no scruples otherwise. The film waits a long while for Sonali to get her own back. Which, by the way, totally ruins the latter half of the film. The shortcomings and liberties notwithstanding, the film loses the plot post-interval.

    Kher takes over Mumbai: just about every product is his, and just about every politician is owned by him. But this is the computer era as well as spy camera era. So, like all recent films where the villain ends up blabbering in front of a hidden camera, Kher complies too!

    The problem with this film is that the makers, and especially the writer, take the audience for granted. Can anybody monopolise Mumbai? Especially its net connectivity? While some ideas are good, some are farfetched. Also, the film has a Mumbai-Marathi flavour and a generous use of local slang words, which will not be understood by everyone. The film has some good songs. Direction shows promise given a better script (which is also by the director here).

    The story revolves around Rhea, a slum bred independent girl running her cable network with an opportunist politician, Smita Jaykar, whose son, Ali Fazal, is Rhea’s childhood love. Rhea does well except when using Marathi slang. Ali Fazal is getting better with each film. Raghav Juyal is a natural. Anupam Kher does one of his quirky characters with élan. Jaykar does well.

    Sonali Cable is out of tune with time and, otherwise too, goes haywire in the second half. Faces poor prospects.

     

    Producers: Ramesh Sippy, Rohan Sippy.

     

    Director: Charudutt Acharya.

     

    Cast: Rhea Chakraborty, Ali Fazal, Raghav Juyal, Anupam Kher, Smita Jaykar, Swanand Kirkire.

  • Sonali Cable: Apun Kabhi Offline Nahin Jaate

    Sonali Cable: Apun Kabhi Offline Nahin Jaate

    MUMBAI: SCIL (Super Cassettes Industries Limited), Ramesh Sippy Entertainment and NextGen Entertainment have announced the release of their film Sonali Cable on 3 January, 2014. This is the second collaboration of SCIL and Ramesh Sippy Entertainment after the critically acclaimed Nautanki Saala.

     

    Sonali Cable is a David versus Goliath story, in the thick of the cable internet turf war in Mumbai. An ordinary girl puts her love, life and survival at stake, when she and her ragtag team come in the way of the expansion plans of India’s largest corporation. The film wants to establish the growing corporate crushing small businesses without any scope for co existence.

     

    The film is written and directed by debutant Charudutt Acharya with an ensemble cast that includes Rhea Chakraborty, Ali Fazal, Swanand Kirkire and Raghav Juyal (aka Crockroaxz), supported by accomplished veterans Smita Jayakar and Anupam Kher.

     

    The film features a varied soundtrack including tracks by Devi Shri Prasad, Ankit Tiwari, Mikey McCleary and Falak, with lyrics by Kausar Munir.

     

    Director Charudutt Acharya says, “The underdogs of Sonali Cable never give up – their motto ‘Apun Kabhi Offline Nahin Jaate’ captures the spirit of young aspiring Indians all over.”

     

    Producers Ramesh Sippy and Rohan Sippy fell in love with this character driven drama which is humorous and has an emotional core. Producer Ramesh Sippy says, “This story of a girl from a broken home who connects people’s lives through her internet cables and her spirit really captured our hearts.”