Delhi - 6 - Review, Please post all reviews here. - Page 4

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Mistyy thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#31

from Taran's review , looks like movie might help sonam but Abhi is going to continue his solo flop streak!

Zareena thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#32
Audience might like it, you never know. I might go and watch it this saturday for Sonam and ROM. He made RDB so brilliant, how bad could it be?
Mistyy thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#33
i hope u r right, i actually wanted this movie to work for Sonam's sake..but it seems unlikely!
TallyHo thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#34
My Review

Have ever longed for the fragrant earthy smell that fills the air after the first showers of monsoon? It is just a moment not very exceptional or out of the world...but it does bring back memories of times gone by...Delhi 6 was an amalgam of such moments for me. Those who have ever visited Delhi- 6 will agree that this is one place which has probably remained the same over the years and has a certain character which towns and cities in this age of globalization lack.

The movie is just a glimpse into the life of people who stay there...more from the perspective of an NRI who returns there with his ailing grandma. A myriad of colours, thoughts, customs, traditions and of course people just hit him. How from being an amused outsider he transforms into a person who gets intricately involved in the lives of the inhabitants is the story of Delhi 6. The whole ensemble of cast is impressive. Right from Waheeda Rahman who plays the full of life woman, addicted to paan and betel nut, counting her days and cheerfully preparing for her death to the neighbours- the estranged brothers, their spirited wives, the silent suffering sister, the naughty lads...and of course there is Bittu played by Sonam ! Sonam looks pretty and lights up the screen...she has improved over her Saawariya performance and looks much more confident. This girl, if she plays her cards right, can really go a long way. Abhishek delivers a good performance and really shines in a couple of scenes- my favourite is the one where he breaks down in front of his grandmother! His scenes with Sonam are also nice and they look good together. Big B 's appearance isn't anything earth shattering..

Delhi 6 uses a subtle form of narration...the viewer has to bring his brains along for this one...and if going by the recent trends you forgot to take it along you might not enjoy this one. The parallel references to the Ram Lila especially the Shabari episode or Bharat milap are great. And there is one scene with Cyrus and his lover which also evokes a few laughs.

Some of the sub plots are really interesting- Divya Dutta being treated as untouchable (she has given a stellar performance btw), Rishi kapoor's narrating the story of his lost love (could have been explored further...could even have been the focal point of the script but unfortunately remained underdeveloped), Bittu's longing for freedom...

The major disappointment is the Black Monkey bit which is over used and gets repetitive ...Some of the songs too are only partly used which is a pity because the tracks by ARR are superb... and the songs could have also broken the monotony of the screenplay...Editing leaves something to be desired because sometimes the pace becomes too fast and confusing to understand. Cinematography is superb ...loved the shots of people offering Namaaz at the Jama masjid and one scene in particular of Sonam and Abhishek shot with diffuse lighting!

Overall I feel it is an intelligent film but ROM could not find that right balance for his brilliant elements that could have made it a much- much better fare..

I would still give it a 3.5/5

neela_asma thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#35
[B][/B]bad reviews!! watever,may be Billu ke barbadi ki bad some ppl nehi chahte ki ye film chale.but we r gonna watch it:))
Jasmine... thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#36
well the film got 2 1/2 stars from starnews channel.
acc to them the movie is a bit confusing..lol
but i crsly hope it does well...!!
wishing all the best to the movie
Sonam is being appreciated a lot!!goood!!!
193980 thumbnail
Posted: 16 years ago
#37

Cast: Abhishek Bachchan, Sonam Kapoor, Rishi Kapoor, Waheeda Rahman
Director: Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra
Music: AR Rahman
Anupama Chopra, Consulting Editor, Films, NDTV

At one point in Delhi 6, Bittu, played by Sonam Kapoor, tells a photographer – "Life black aur white mein hi samajh aati hai".

But Delhi 6 shows us that life, especially in India, is an intricate tapestry of people, their faiths, their temperaments and narratives that weave together to make our many splendoured nation.

The diversity that both makes and breaks India is seen through the eyes of the ultimate outsider – Roshan, played by Abhishek Bachchan, who is half-Muslim and half-Hindu, or as another character calls him 50-50, and a non-resident.

An Indian-American, Roshan brings his dying grandmother from America back to her house in old Delhi. This is presumably his first trip to his ancestral city.

Roshan has an awkward accent and a tendency to describe things as cool but other than that he blends in quite easily into this colourful, crowded world of Ram Leelas, roadside jalebi stalls, narrow lanes and cows who stop traffic by giving birth on the street. There is little culture shock, bewilderment or impatience.

In director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra's vision of Chandni Chowk, which incidentally was recreated on a set in Rajasthan, there aren't any flies, heat or grime either. There aren't even any crows. Instead, Old Delhi is inhabited by beautiful white doves, including Massakali, who inspires a lovely song.

The first half is a loose, impressionistic portrait of this world. There is very little plot. In between vignettes establishing characters, we have repeated references to a Monkey Man who is terrorising Delhi.

This is taken from actual incidents in 2001 when Delhi was afflicted by a monkey man menace, which the police later dismissed as public hysteria.

In the second half, these various threads come together climaxing in a Hindu-Muslim confrontation, which turns violent. Ultimately the residents see the light only because of the not so subtly named Roshan.

This lack of subtlety is what ultimately undoes Delhi 6. Mehra is an astute and passionate filmmaker who has never been afraid of big themes. But while in Rang De Basanti, he weaved the narrative beautifully with the message, Delhi 6 has the finesse of a sledge-hammer.

The film asks you to look within so there is an actual character, a sort of Shakespearean fool, who walks around carrying a mirror, asking people to literally look within.

In the climatic violence, the mirror is shattered. The climax itself feels unearned. The script barely hints at the tensions simmering below the bonhomie on the streets. There are some beautifully done moments – one that brought tears to my eyes has the grandmother asking her grandson to take her home because after a communal confrontation, she says, she doesn't even feel like dying there.

But there are just as many moments that feel so laboured and sanctimonious that you just want to groan.

Mehra's heart is in the right place but he is hobbled by his own script and platitudinous dialogue like – "India works, the people make it work".

The film brims with talented actors but they don't have enough meat to bite into. Roshan, the prime mover of events, is under-written so Abhishek comes off as an earnest NRI with a bad accent and little sub-text.

Bittu has more flesh on her and the lovely Sonam imbues her with grace and attitude. There are flashes of fire in some scenes with Rishi Kapoor and Waheeda Rahman but not enough to light up Delhi 6.

Ultimately then, the film is a noble failure. Delhi 6 is ambitious and well-intentioned, but good intentions don't always translate into good cinema.

See it if you must.
Courtesy: ndtv.com
193980 thumbnail
Posted: 16 years ago
#38

Originally posted by: TallyHo

The parallel references to the Ram Lila especially the Shabari episode or Bharat milap are great. And there is one scene with Cyrus and his lover which also evokes a few laughs.

That should be interesting. Even in RDB he made parallels between freedom fighters and the characters.
Yours is one of the reviews which is positive.
FreeBird03 thumbnail
19th Anniversary Thumbnail Sparkler Thumbnail + 3
Posted: 16 years ago
#39
another bad one...this time from Raja Sen!

Yeh silly hai mere yaar

Raja Sen

February 20, 2009 12:19 IST

Just about a month ago, my closest friend and I took the Metro from Delhi's Connaught Place, the offically acknowledged center of New Delhi, to the arteries and valves of the unpredictably throbbing Chandni Chowk, the city's heart. We met an old buddy, walked through gallis of stores like in a timewarp, and ended up at a joint famed for its gilafti kababs. The place positively reeks with atmosphere, and you can't help but be entranced by the way this patch of old Delhi feels.

We sat back and wolfed down our awesome mutton, a pair of south Delhi boys breathing in the regular mid-afternoon awesomeness that is Chandni Chowk, New Delhi 110006.

The primary difference between our photographs and commentary from that day and Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra's [Images] Delhi-6 [Images] is that ours ended up on a Facebook album, and his have been released in theatres worldwide.

Which is why, nostalgic and earnest as it may be, it's hard to qualify Delhi-6 as an actual film.

It starts off as a plotless set of well-drawn vignettes, a series of quirky characters doing their own charming thing, which one almost gets used to because of the fine acting on display, until suddenly there is a full-blown national integration message blared at you in the audience, a message so simplistic it doesn't seem like anybody would make an entire motion picture throwing it at you. And yet, here it is.

The film is about the Delhi 6 [Images] area being terrorised by a monkey-man, a 'kaala bandar' who has -- increasingly sensationalised rumours tell us -- blinking lights on his chest, springs on his feet, and, as a couple of locals memorably boast to the omnipresent news channel cameras, 'is invisible, we've seen him.' It is the topic of the month, the kind of thing that is leading some hapless innocents to their death while making for gossip fodder between bored housewives desperate for any kind of buzz.

In the midst of all this stands the outsider, Abhishek, playing Roshan Mehra. The young NRI has come to Chandni Chowk to bring his grandmother (the ever-amazing Waheeda Rahman) to her home, where she wishes to welcome her imminent death. Like all of us, even those who pop in regularly and are no stranger to the area's irresistibility, Roshan bites in, thrilled, capturing everything he sees on his cellphone camera. So far so great, and as we're introduced to the constantly likeable group of Hindu-Muslim friends and neighbours, we're reeled in by the fine acting on display and the wonderful way the director captures flavour.

It is a brave move indeed to make a film where the narrator, the leading man, is singularly the least interesting character. Roshan is an observer, a tourist taking in the madness around him, and we're never told much about him, seeing him only through his reactions to his surreal surroundings. In the same vein, Rakeysh flits from snatches of dialogue to snatches of dialogue with an arbid sense of dynamism, giving us a bunch of very well-acted characters laden with quirks where they would normally have had backstories. It is the kind of thing that must have seemed conceptually thrilling on paper, but on screen leaves the audience rudderless, because there isn't a single character to emotionally connect with.

The only character who has a proper graph, and the ability to take the narrative forward is Bittu, the feisty young Indian Idol [Images]-wannabe played by Sonam Kapoor [Images]. Kapoor, for her part, is quite astonishing in the role, creating the character through body language and mannerism, and it is genuinely exciting to see a young actress this nuanced. Hers is the film's only finely-etched character, one with conflict and a need for action, and even though she does smile-provokingly well, her perfect pitch seems out of place with the film's obviousness. And Mehra makes the cardinal sin of sorely under-utilising his films greatest assets -- the girl and A R Rahman's magnificent soundtrack. For a film with a title song that says 'yeh sheher nahin mehfil hai,' ('this is not a city, it's a party') it's a pretty lackluster mehfil.

I remember watching a television interview many years ago, where Pritish Nandy was questioning Lata Mangeshkar [Images]. Every time the journalist would thrust a question in immaculate English, she'd parry in chaste Hindi. They never quite connected, but at least it made for an interesting, if somewhat flummoxing, interview. Here Roshan and Bittu get the same treatment, the hero who knows Hindi speaking frustratingly in English to this girl, as if talking down to her, while she snaps back in Hindi with thankfully the odd English jibe ('tum thode slow ho, na?' she says endearingly, while Bachchan remains irritatingly standard-issue NRI in his conversation). As far as I can remember, Mr Nandy never asked Lataji out for dinner, and the convenience with which the Bittu-Romance blooms is just as far-fetched.

And what's with the preachiness? I'm all for the entertaining message movie, a format Mehra completely mastered in his previous, phenomenally well-packaged effort Rang De Basanti [Images]. Yet this film, trying to tell us that there's god and a monkey within each of us, hammers in the message with the same repetitive stubbornness that crippled Mehra's first edgily made film, Aks [Images]. A beatific mad fakir roams around, mirror in hand, telling people who don't care to listen that they should look within themselves, and its a great touch until Abhishek takes the mirror from him and proceeds to spell out -- to an inflamed Hindu community and a furious Muslim brigade -- exactly what the old man is saying, his accent conveniently evaporating just as our patience begins to. A public service announcement this basic? Really?

The ensemble cast is spectacular, by the way. Pawan Malhotra is the pick of the bunch as he becomes the ubiquitous Dilliwala next door, Vijay Raaz [Images] sinks his teeth into a meaty role after ages, and Deepak Dobriyal is reliably stellar. Waheeda-ji is gloriously hard to resist, Divya Dutta [Images] just seems to be getting better and better, and there's a wonderful discovery called Aditi Rao who plays a delightful young bua with a broken marriage, a bua hard to take eyes off. Rishi Kapoor [Images] is fast becoming one of the industry's better character artistes, and there are two little kids we are never quite introduced to, but who are freakin' awesome.

The cast's only weak links lie in the form of Abhishek -- who is pretty good in parts, but mostly obvious, wearing his expressions like masks (hand me my 'Disappointed' face, will you?) -- and Cyrus Sahukar, who deserves a rap on the head for being so, so bad.

There is a scene in the film where two characters are making out in bed, their toes occasionally hitting a TV remote that switches from news to primate lovemaking to news of a missile launch, and the gag provides an authentic laugh. The scene cuts to another scene, of different people watching the news, but perplexingly Mehra chooses to cut back to the lovemaking, where the missile launch news clip is now shown climactically launching. It's alarming, this joke-reprisal, as if to tell his audience that they should laugh again, and this repetitive simplicity is symptomatic of this whole film and its ludicrous climax.

And if dying means I get to wear white and sit next to Amitabh Bachchan [Images] and eat jalebis, I really wouldn't mind being run over by a bus.

Rediff Rating:


http://www.rediff.com/movies/2009/feb/20raja-review-delhi6.htm


friends_rock thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#40
^
oh my thats a very bad review!

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