Posts

Showing posts from December, 2014

UGLY: Ugly in a beautiful way

UGLY *ing: Rahul Bhat, Ronit Roy, Girish Kulkarni, Siddhanth Kapoor, Tejaswini Kolhapure Rated: 6/10 Where there is Anurag Kashyap, there is darkness, greyness, extremities of human character and negativity in all their unimagined but intrinsic hues.  Ugly  goes hook, line and sinker into this uncomfortable but compelling zone of human ill-will, greed and unrelenting ugliness and draws you in too, this time in the garb of a police procedural around a little girl’s disappearance. You may call it ill-timed for festival season, but that’s Kashyap for you — totally and brazenly in-your-face with a mirror that you may not want to peep into even at the worst of times. His choice of characters to show you the ugly side of societal existence is apt — no one could have played the role of a sadistic, revengeful and edgy cop as beautifully as Ronit Roy does. He taps his alcoholic wife’s phone and keeps her caged in a scary marriage from where there is no escape, other than suic...

Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb: Godbye William & All others

Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb *ing: Ben Stiller, Robin Williams, Owen Wilson, Dan Stevens, Ben Kingsley Rated: 5.5/10 It’s time to go son,” says Robin Williams — now late — and it was uncomfortable see him go. Night at the Museum is about multiple closures — Williams is very sadly gone, the Museum trilogy is over and Stiller’s predecessor night guard Mickey Rooney has signed off from life too.In that sense, you could call this one a film full of heartfelt goodbyes — Williams who committed suicide this year in August stars as Theodore Roosevelt for one last time, signing off from films and life one last time. This being his last screen presence, he gets a tribute with more meat as Theo than he did in the preceding two editions of this unique Museum saga. The trilogy itself comes to an end without too much of a bang and an unshaven (was he really that tired of this series?) Ben Stiller walking off into the night as the museum artefacts enjoy their nocturnal aliveness ...

PK: PK lacks OMG moments

PK Staring:  Aamir Khan, Anushka Sharma, Sanjay Dutt, Sushant Singh Rajput, Boman Irani, Saurabh Shukla Rated:  5/10 PK is an idea whose time has, sadly, long gone and the only thing new here is Aamir Khan’s complete and prolonged nudity. After the  Munna Bhai  series, expectations from Raj Kumar Hirani had risen to such an extent that fulfilling them would have been impossible and that’s where  PK  stumbles. Hirani, to me, is a fulfilled, subtle but very potent philosophy propeller showing up human failings and obsessions with a very rare stroke of everyday normality that is missed out by almost everyone. In  PK  too, Hirani tries to be the master propeller of this brand of story-telling but fails on many counts, some self-made, others circumstantial. At best, the film is a gentle mix of the  jaadu  syndrome which Rakesh Roshan propelled long back through his alien, and OMG!  which Paresh Rawal powered much more as Kanji ...

The Hobbit: The battle of the five armies -- Battle has begun in style

THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES Staring:  Ian Mckellen, Martin Freeman, Richard Armitage, Evangeline Lilly, Lee Pace, Luke Evans, Benedict Cumberbatch, Cate Blanchett, Christopher Lee, Hugo Weaving, Orlando Bloom Rated:  5.5/10 Hobbit this time is less picturesque and more combative, rather unnecesarily you might say. And your heroes are felled out here, except of course for the hobbit Bilbo Baggins and the pointed cap wizard you have seen in movies of all hues, be it  Harry Potter  or  Lord of The Rings  series, of which this is perhaps the final edition. Having said that, one has to admit that the canvas is large, the cinematography stylish and the fights perfectly choreographed. My personal heartbreak? King of dwarfs Thorin Oakenshield (played to perfection by Richard Armitage) is killed by the marauding Orcs leader. Once that happens, there is nothing much left to savour though the film ambles on for close to 15 more minutes after th...

Jessabelle: Not too spooky for real horror

JESSABELLE Staring:  Sarah Snook, Mark Webber, David Andrews, Joelle Carter, Ana de la Reguera Rated:  4/10 If it is Hollywood and it is haunted, it has to be an unkempt, marooned mansion in the middle of nowhere, preferably shrouded in an unvisited forest, sitting eerily quiet by the side of a placid lake. And, of course, there has to be a new occupant who gets spooked out by the evil spirit, mostly on a revenge binge. Jessabelle  follows this done-to-death holy grail of Hollywood to the T with just an added thing — the new occupant here is wheel-chair bound and she is here as daddy’s daughter. The film takes too much time to pick up the heebie-jeebie content and is felled by its predictability even though there is a cause-hunt that the victim of spirits launches with her “friend from school.” Even the end is something you figured out earlier so there is hardly any scream factor in the proceedings. Sarah Snook as the disabled girl does give in an arresting ...

Action Jackson: OTT on all counts

ACTION JACKSON Staring:   Ajay Devgn, Sonakshi Sinha, Yami Gautam, Kunaal Roy Kapur Rated:  3/10 So you want to know where you can start seeing this movie from? I would say, the very end when the credits starts rolling — that’s the only and the highest point of this otherwise nonsensical film with no shape, form or reasonable intent. But as the credits roll, you wish they were longer, perhaps running through the length of the film. Because it’s here that master dancer, the real action Jackson starts happening — Prabhudheva comes to the show with his amazing dance moves. Other than that, Devgn despite his attempts at being a one-in-all hero (dancing, singing, trying to tickle your funny bone and, of course, beating the guts out of the baddies and also finding time to romance in between all the bullets, dialogue- baazi  and  maar-dhaad ), the film falls flat. For one it’s too OTT on all accounts — the violence is too stark, the songs too many and mostly ill...

Exodus: Gods and Kings - A gripping historical

EXODUS: GODS AND KINGS Staring:  Christian Bale, Joel Edgerton, John Turturro, Aaron Paul, Ben Mendelsohn, Sigourney Weaver, Ben Kingsley Rated:  6/10 There are two big things happening to this historical — one, it unravels the biblical journey by Moses from the slavery den of Egypt to the promised land with millions of Jews who followed him in faith; and two, this oft repeated legend has been put on screen by master director Ridley Scott. On paper, he has done nothing new. I saw  The Ten Commandments  when I was in junior school. The  Prince of Egypt  which came more in Ridley’s time dealt with the same subject. And now comes  Exodus: Gods and Kings. None of the three can change the story of Moses and the journey of the Egyptian slaves to freedom walking through a parted Red Sea even as Moses holds the shepherd spectre to guide them to their promised land. So Scott could not have done much except enhance the special effects and spice up th...

Bhopal, A Prayer For Rain: Subject is potent enough

BHOPAL A PRAYER FOR RAIN Staring:  Martin Sheen, Mischa Barton, Kal Penn, Rajpal Yadav, Tannishtha Chatterjee, Fagun Thakrar, Vineet Kumar, Lisa Dwan Rated:  6/10 The Bhopal Gas leak tragedy of December 2, 1984 was so potent and the plight of the victims so moving that even when a loosely stitched together caper on the deadly leak comes 30 years later, it stuns you into shame and silence — shame because it is yet again in the open for all to see that for the Indian Government the price of the life of its citizens is dirt cheap; and silence because all safety norms were ignored with impunity, Warren Anderson (played to perfection by Martin Sheen in the film) was allowed to escape and generations of families close to the Union Carbide factory continue to suffer in neglect. Ravi Verma’s docu drama  Bhopal: A Prayer For Rain  brings this unfortunate story of apathy and neglect of an entire population back to public memory as the tragedy turns 30 — maiming, sile...

Moulin Rouge - The Ballet: Dash of style, dance & romance

MOULIN ROUGE-THE BALLET Staring:  Troupe of 80 dancers from 14 different nationalities Rated:  8/10 Moulin Rouge-The Ballet  is nothing like Moulin Rouge the real act which unfolds every evening in a windmill theatre sitting atop the Monserrat in Paris. But it is nevertheless seductive, alluring, enchanting and a wonderful tapestry of colour, style, subtlety, romance, not to talk of brilliant dancing. Without a single dialogue but holding the audience in thrall by its engaging music, sometimes dulcet sometimes on a crescendo, the way this ballet takes you back into 19th century Paris where a love story unfolds amid intrigue and duel is highly engaging. It is to the credit of PVR’s special shows initiative that such sophistry of dance and romance is brought in for the Indian viewers to enhance their taste through differently enabled shows as opposed to just Hollywood and Bollywood movies. Though restricted to just one show a week, this delightful ballet is much...

The Hunger Games: Mocking jay Part 1: Transitory & introverted

The Hunger Games:   Mocking jay Part 1 Staring:   Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Julianne Moore, Donald Sutherland Rated:  7/10 Katniss Everdeen is back but sadly she is not really in her elements this time round. The hunger is all but gone, doused by her extremely lovelorn state after Peter is imprisoned by the Capitol. There is a rebellion that needs her fury and passion to catch fire but she has only tears and helplessness to offer. That’s not what the  Hunger Games  series were ever meant to be. Its USP has been the high octane teenage adventure pegged on a fight that’s always won by Katniss, the ultimate icon of perseverance and courage, the Mocking Jay, symbol of victory against all odds. Mocking Jay Part 1  pegs its story far away from this hue of undiluted passion. But still, and despite its slow motion activity, it grows on you. It gets serious with Catnis’ love lost syndrome and it dra...

Horrible Bosses 2: Only a patch on a patchy original

HORRIBLE BOSSES 2 Staring:  Jason Bateman, Charlie Day, Jason Sudeikis, Jennifer Aniston, Jamie Foxx, Chris Pine, Kevin Spacey Rated:  5/10 Serenading stupidity seldom endears you enough to indulge entirely in fools.  Horrible Bosses 2  is not just fooliash but quite uneventfully lazy. Add all these three traits to its three masterminds — Jason Bateman, Charlie Day and Jason Sudeikis as bumbling entrepreneurs Nick, Dale and Kurt — and you have quite a test of endurance at hand. I don’t know about others but I failed this test horribly, as horribly as the trio on the screen in front of me made a mess of their shampoo showers, getting economically bludgeoned by a seasoned trick master tycoon and his son. The sequel to the 2011  Horrible Bosses  original is nowhere near the predecessor though one couldn’t really glow with tributes to the first one either. But, at least it did not laze around without having too much fun, a snag that runs through the...

Penguins of Madagascar : M’gascar sidekicks hold on their own

Staring (voice): Tom McGrath, Chris Miller, Conrad Vernon, Christopher Knights, Benedict Cumberbatch, John Malkovich Rated: 6/10 Come on let’s move it move it…. The sidekicks of the Madagaskar series have taken centrestage. And, for you information, they are pretty good at keeping the proceedings on a crescendo not just of action and adventure but also gentle humour. Of course, with Dreamworks in the picture, the animated objects are more than cute, and the situations they create are gently friendly too. For kids this thanksgiving, it is a penguin treat with the foursome holding the stage on fire. They do it all that’s common for a comic book — they fight, they spend some family time together, they travel, they have an adventure and they fight the villain with all their might, emerging victorious in the end. It’s great that the film is compatible with children’s sense of humour though the adults may just find it a tad juvenile — which, one must remind you, was never the case w...