Saturday 24 December 2016

Festiwitti #5: The Year That Was

Reflections on 2016 ?

Image result for merry christmas and happy new year 2017Saw a new country, and some new animals;Heard some old music;

Lost 5 kilos and jumped into a 2013 suit;
Broke a bone;
Rode a Segway;

Lost some old friends (there’s more than one way to lose a friend!);
Made none;
Met a few more, after a 35-year gap;

Read plenty of old books, no new ones;
Set a record for the longest-held job in 11 years;

Found Vasuda Sharma on YouTube (listen to “Jaagi Jaagi Raina”);
Chanced upon Vivek Govil on Soundcloud;

Crossed 10,000 likes on Instagram;
Didn't cross 10,000 hits on the blog;

Discovered Letterboxd;
Dropped some pills and picked up some others;

Barely blogged;
Passed the 6-year no-smoking mark and forgot to celebrate;

And heard, for the first time, a bank manager say that his safe was empty.

Yes, it’s been an eventful year !
Here’s wishing all of you a wonderful Christmas and a joyous 2017.

Take #37: Arrival



Image result for arrival imagesWhile the film "Arrival" is built on an undeniably absorbing set of premises, the execution make you think longingly of Departure. 


The lighting is unnecessarily dim throughout, even in daytime; the sound is muted and spikes suddenly from time to time, and several scenes drag in a manner that reminded me repeatedly of Gravity, a film I decidedly did not enjoy. Even the presence of Amy Adams didn't help.


This one is pulling them in during its first weekend - but I'll lay long odds that there won't be a second.

Take #36: Dear Zindagi

Image result for dear zindagi images"Dear Zindagi" is definitely not a film for everyone - but to those with whom it resonates, it is a beautiful film. 

Alia is superlative, turning in a nuanced performance, leaving you astonished that someone so young and so relatively inexperienced can essay a role with so many different layers. SRK is restrained and watchable and actually steps back to make room for the talent that unfolds in front of him. The supporting cast have all turned in sterling performances.
Gauri Shinde can certainly craft a story, and direct it to hit its target dead centre. A gifted young cinematographer who lays her inner devils to rest with the help of a hatke psychiatrist with an unconventional modus operandi: an unusual tale, unusually told; we need more such films.

I'm no connoisseur, but I thought that Alia's costume design was exceptionally good and completely in sync with her character. And the music was absolutely on point.

Perhaps I'm going overboard, but I'm ok with that: I'm an unabashed Alia fan, and this is a performance that she is going to be proud of.

And the sheer hilarity of the line: "Are you a Lebanese?"

Take #35: Kahaani 2

Image result for kahaani 2 images
The hype around this film ensured that it was impossible not to come away disappointed.

What could have been a very watchable whodunit tripped a couple of times in the second half and all but fell flat.

The performances weren't particularly exceptional either, and the cinematography was fairly ordinary. Vidya Balan needed to do something remarkable to outdo her performance in the original film- and she turned out to be unequal to the task.

If you miss this one, rest assured that you haven't missed anything.

Sunday 2 October 2016

Take #31:Don't Breathe

Image result for don't breathe imagesWithout giving away anything, it wouldn't be entirely untrue to say that, as a home-invasion film, this one is among the most extreme you'll find. 


Make no mistake, the tension is very real, and you'll have reason to applaud the appropriateness of the title in every minute of the 89-minute runtime of this movie. 


But I personally think that "Hard to Kill" would have been a much better name, had it not already been taken.

Don't miss this. It's an experience.

Take #34: Sully

Image result for Sully imagesIf you remember the front page news in the Indian press one January day in 2009, and you can recall your amazement and your wonder at how such a thing could come to pass, this is not a movie you will want to miss. The unprecedented water landing by a commercial airliner and the subsequent rapid evacuation and rescue of its passengers was "the best news that New York had heard in a long time - especially where airplanes were concerned".

Clint Eastwood's taut script and unerring directorial hand, and Tom Hanks' restrained portrayal of a skilled pilot wondering whether he had made a terrible mistake, make this a remarkable 96-minute telling of a 208-second flight and a 24-minute rescue. An absolute must for pilots, Clint Eastwood fans, Tom Hanks fans, Hudson River fans, and just about everybody else.

Although "Sully" is more like a documentary than a standard disaster film, it is still one of the best-made movies I have seen this year.

Take #33: The Shallows

Image result for the shallows imagesSpeaking literally, this was undoubtedly a Lively film .

Figuratively, it was anything but, although still very skilfully crafted, for all that. Blake Lively did a commendable job (quite unrecognisable from her bimbette part in Green Lantern) and the director was a close second.

This is a two-days-in-the-life-of diary kind of survival film, and isn't for the squeamish. I personally felt that, considering the locale, the cinematographer could have done a better job of capturing the surf, the spray, the sunsets, the sand and the shark.

Blake Lively was pretty good. But I've said that already.

Take #32: The Magnificent Seven

Image result for the magnificent seven imagesHmm, this one is difficult. I have a few suggestions to offer - first, try not to keep either the Kurosawa classic or the Sturges remake in mind when you go for this film; second, try to cope with the fact that Denzel Washington is upstaged by Chris Pratt; third, try not to remember Eli Wallach's lines from The Good, The Bad and The Ugly: "If you want to shoot, shoot; don't talk".

At 132 minutes, this movie was probably 25 minutes too long. The characters have great promise but have not been etched finely enough. The prairie landscape looked distinctly like a painted set in parts.

Sure, as a stand-alone, it's a great entertainer. But we're too complex these days to look at anything stand-alone: like financial results, it has to be consolidated; and in a consolidated view, this film fails.

Monday 5 September 2016

Take #30: War Dogs

War Dogs 2016 poster.jpgIt often happens that the least heralded movies turn out to be the most watchable - and so it was with this one. War Dogs was sharp and witty and made some telling points about how the US Government works its arms deals. Jonah Hill was, simply, brilliant, and the rest of the cast backed him up very well indeed. The soundtrack was refreshing, too , including songs by Pink Floyd and Linda Ronstadt, among others. This film was one of the most pleasant cinematic surprises of 2016; i'm pleased that I was persuaded to see it.

Tuesday 31 May 2016

Tobackoff #9 : Thank You For Not Smoking

So it’s World No Tobacco Day today (just past it for my American friends, and just about there for my Antipodean contacts), a reminder to me that I was an inveterate smoker of 40 sticks a day, and quit completely just under 6 years ago. It’s a day of reflection for me, because I dumped overnight – quite unceremoniously- a habit that had become so completely a part of me that I hadn’t been able to shed it for all of 26 years.


Not too much has changed on the smoking horizon in these 6 years. There are still teens taking up smoking, and there are more women doing it than ever before. Nearly all buildings are no-smoking zones, but all of them have designated smoking areas that are always full. As do airports. Cigarette packs still carry warnings, many of them lurid, which continue to be ignored. And, at 12 bucks a pop for the average long cigi, it’s still a very, very expensive habit to cultivate.

But believe me, the money outflow is just half the cost, if that. There’s the social ostracism – countries such as Australia, for instance, have all but outlawed smoking; there’s the change in appearance – your skin hardens and crinkles, your nails and teeth stain, your complexion darkens; there’s the long-term impact on health – smoking may or may not kill you, but it sure as hell will slow you down.

I’ve been asked very often about how I did it. I say in all honesty that I expected it to be impossible, but I realized that the impossible is just something that takes a little longer.

The seed was sown when I realized that smoking was no longer “fun” (that had indeed been the foolish starting point) – it was messy (you feel like a travelling volcano all the time), compulsive (you smoke because you don’t know what to do with your hands – is that even a reason ?) and intrusive (you need to “administer” it to yourself to kick-start certain mental and physical processes).

From then on, it was just a matter of focus. “Just one day”, I told myself, and that turned out to be fairly easy; and then it was “why not another ?” and so on. At the same time, I stayed off the standard smoking-inducers for a few days – the company of friends; smoking people; alcohol and music; tea and coffee; and so on. The pangs in the first three days were intense – but from the fourth day onwards, it was not unlike waiting for a delayed breakfast. After day ten, I was there. A month later, friends could light up in front of me without a qualm.

Like all bad habits, though, not smoking is valid only until the next time you decide to smoke. You just need to make the right decision.


Choose to quit smoking, or to not start, because you have just one life – and that life doesn’t need the tobacco.

Sunday 6 March 2016

Take #29: London Has Fallen

See this movie ONLY if you're a Gerard Butler fan, a London fan, a US Presidential fan, an action movie fan, a Ghayal Once Again fan......etc.

In short - really way, way too much of a good thing. It starts off well enough, but drops an octave of credibility every few minutes, until you're eventually left with the impression that the City of London is little more than a haven for misguided terrorists and incompetent policemen - and that it always takes just one man to bail out the President from impossible situations.

On a lighter note, don't miss the title credits at the beginning as well as the end. The names are really incredible - the screenplay, for instance, is by a guy named Creighton Rothenberger. Jeepers, that's 21 characters, even more than Alejandro Inarattu, whose movies at least win Oscars.

I hope to God we don't have a Paris Has Fallen after this. Even if Gerard Butler is producing.

Sunday 21 February 2016

Take #28: Neerja

"Neerja" is an outstanding film.

Part of that verdict arises from a long-held desire to understand the full story of that incredible act of heroism; part of it is because one's heart goes out to that achingly young life that is snuffed out with a single callous act by a soulless, animalistic being. But the rest of that opinion is entirely attributable to the genius of Ram Madhvani.

With skilful use of lighting (mostly dim, in keeping with the mood of the film) and camerawork (you sometimes feel that a handheld camera is being used), and with some brilliant editing, enabling several stories to be seamlessly told at once, the director virtually transports you into the interior of the plane and straps you to your seat.

A number of reviews have been quite unkind to Sonam, but I am forced to disagree. In a role that was largely about body language rather than speech, she hasn't done badly at all - and the resemblance of her screen character to the original heroine is actually quite remarkable. The film leans strongly on her, and she proves equal to the task. Like her last release (reviewed elsewhere in this blog) Prem Ratan Dhan Payo, but for vastly different reasons, this film will be good for Sonam's morale, her filmography and her future.


Shabana Azmi was a jewel, as always. The scene-stealer, however (and this is strictly my opinion) was the person who played the role of the rebellious terrorist, the primary villain, (I didn't get the actor's name, unfortunately) - his demoniac hatred was so tangible that, at times, it seemed to jump out of the screen and grab you by the throat.


"Neerja" is a story that needed to be told, and is a movie that should have been made long ago. There are few who could have made it better. Go see it.

Sunday 31 January 2016

Take #27: Airlift

Historical background and patriotic fervour apart, what made this film memorable for me were the restrained and sensitive performances from Akshay Kumar and Nimrat Kaur.
We have seen glimpses of a major talent in Nimrat, with "The Lunchbox"; this film reaffirms the fact that she is someone to watch out for. Her portrayal of a businessman's wife - used to living in luxury, flung into adverse circumstances, watching, with increasing bewilderment, her husband's transformation from a sybarite to a patriot, and then offering him her unstinting support - is both subtle and strongly effective.


Akshay, refreshingly, seemed very comfortable in an action-free serious role, which should earn him an award nomination or two. This khiladi clearly has a few things up his sleeve that we haven't seen yet.
The script was tight, the characters well-etched, the cinematography skilful (there were several haunting shots), the music (by Amaal Malik and Ankit Tiwari) absolutely on point. This is a well-made film, go watch it

Sunday 10 January 2016

Take #26: Wazir

Passionate, poignant, powerful.


Simply put, a gritty, short-and-bittersweet film with excellent 
performances from both Farhan Akhtar and Amitabh Bachchan. These two are good together and should appear in another film someday.


 I have read a string of reviews - some maintain that the film was carried by Bachchan, others that it was Farhan's show. Neither, really - a crisp script from Vidhu Vinod Chopra and taut direction by Bejoy Nambiar ensured that the pace never flagged and you were almost disappointed when you realised that you had reached the last five minutes of the movie.


Great music, interesting cameos, stark cinematography and Aditi Rao Hydari's 

wide, wounded eyes.... this is an unusual film. If only Mr Bachchan's makeup had been a little less Bhootnath and a little more Black.

Sunday 3 January 2016

Take #25: "Arshinagar" (Bengali) - a film by Aparna Sen


The charm of seeing an Aparna Sen film lies principally in the fact that she is a director who dares to be always different; with the result that the viewer rarely comes away disappointed.
And so it is with Arshinagar. The film is a love story between Rawno and Julie, set in the backdrop of a slum named Arshinagar which is set to be overrun by constructors who are bidding for a flyover and the development of the surrounding real estate.

An ordinary love story ? Of course it is. Inspired by Romeo & Juliet ? Certainly, there is also a wee sprinkling of Grease (the T birds and the Pink Ladies), although I doubt that the director intended that.
What makes this movie different is its execution. It is an opera rather than a film, and so skilfully created that you sometimes feel you are watching it live -like a play- rather than in digital form. The editing, lighting and camerawork all contribute to giving the atmosphere its feel; the background score is excellent and absolutely on point, the vocals superlative. Yes, the vocals : the entire dialogue of the film is in rhyme, like Vikram Seth's "The Golden Gate"; rhyme which is occasionally punctutated by song. The effect is extraordinary, since each line is emoted differently and the poetic effect is subtle.

The performances were all effective- the ubiquitous Dev, a menacing Jissu Sengupta, a rustic Swagata Mukherjee, Rupa Ganguly, even the very young Rittika Sen.

Alas, the Kolkata moviegoer is not impressed - the hall was more than half empty, and more than one person left halfway through the film - which is really a pity: versatility is just one of Aparna Sen's many middle names, and we need more filmmakers with her vision, her imagination and her canvas.

Arshinagar is, in its own way, a unique work of cinematic craft. The Kolkata film critics and the film buffs are split down the middle in their opinion of this. You'll either love this movie, or hate it: go see it if you dare.