Hey Rosewood thanks for sharing.
What Gaurav is saying may be specifically true for Parzania and Black Friday. (haven't seen either so cant comment on them per se). However, personally i do fall in the category of people who have idealistic expectations from cinema.
Any kind of creative process is always subject to the demands of the market... and thats true not just for today but has been around forever.... for example earlier art was tied up with religious and then secular patronage (The Sistine Chapel is a commissioned masterpiece, remember?).... and Shakespeare is pretty much the Manmohan Desai of his time. So i wouldnt say that aaj kal everything has become commercialised... no, in its own way, creative processes almost always work with an eye on the commercial.
At the same time, a text (a book, a painting, a film, an ad, a show) reflects certain ideologies of the world around. Certain texts make it very obvious what ideologies they reflect whereas other texts work in a multilayered way. And these ideologies and structures of power are reflected not just in a Parzania or a Black Friday but also in seemingly non political texts like Vivaah and Kal Ho Na Ho.
My argument is that while working within its own framework, cinema can still make you stop and think, unfamiliarise the familiar or create that one moment that an audience can take away with them. It is this that i expect from my cinema. And its not that difficult to do it.... the one example that leaps to my mind is of Modern Times.... the scene when Chaplin falls into the machine is so powerful that one cant be rid of it.... and its coming from a very successful actor director.
Anyway, have to rush now so will try and sum this up by saying: i dont know what Parzania and Black Friday are good or bad, i just will continue to demand from my cinema that it be exciting, challenging... even when made for the market. If thats too idealistic, so am I.