All Movie Reviews: Gulaal - Page 2

Created

Last reply

Replies

18

Views

3.5k

Users

6

Frequent Posters

Zareena thumbnail
17th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 16 years ago
#11
Director: Anurag Kashyap

The leitmotif that runs through Anurag Kashyap's latest film is red—the colour of revolution, and passion; of love and bloody betrayal. 'Gulal' tells the story of an India struggling to come to terms with its contemporary identity and complicated histories. And Kashyap nearly pulls it off.

It comes from a director who main-lines anger and this is his angriest film. It's also his most ambitious film, and the combination is potent enough to give us a film which spills over with compelling characters (some of whom you've never met in Hindi cinema), superb set-pieces, stirring lyrics, and terrific acting. But somewhere along the way, the director gets into montage mode, juggling with too many issues and too many people. If only Kashyap had managed to connect all his dots, this would have been a truly magnificent film.

Dukey Bana (Kay Kay) is an amoral zamindar readying a personal army to further the cause of Rajput pride. He lives in the feudal past, with a wife on the sidelines, a mistress in the middle, and a bunch of fierce loyalists around him. His enemies are both within and without: a strange-acting Rajput lad (Abhimanyu Singh) who doesn't want any part of his princely legacy, a rival potentate (Aditya Srivastava) who wants to usurp Dukey's place in the Bana hierarchy, and a nave, wet-behind-the-years 'senior student' (Raja Singh Chaudhary) who comes into a sleepy, fictional Rajasthan town, and becomes the unwilling catalyst for everything that happens.

How ragging can destroy a life is one of the most powerful threads in 'Gulal'. A teacher and a student are stripped of their clothes, and their dignity, and locked up in a room by some louts, masquerading as students. 'Law karne aaye hoge' is not just an acerbic dialogue flung at Dilip: it's a state of being for a section of an ever-floating student populace. The law faculties of a million universities, run by political satraps who use ageing, directionless so-called students to further their own causes, have countless such tales to tell. These are the badlands where anything can happen, and casual brutality and shattering violence, is just part of the game.

Kashyap's women are again striking, but are peripheral to this all-male, all macho-parade. Aditya's sister, played by debutante Ayesha Mohan, is even scarier than him, because she will use anything—slender body and sharp brains—to get what she wants.

Mahie Gill, the stunning Paro of 'Dev D' does a couple of swingy 'mujras', and spends the rest of her time pouting at Dukey: because neither are fleshed out enough, the film could have happily gone its way without either of them. As it could have minus the heavily-metaphorical 'ardh naareshawra' figure which flits in and out of the storyline, without taking it anywhere.

It's the men who really power this film: Kay Kay, one of Kashyap's faves, delivers a bravura performance. So does Abhimanyu Singh. And Deepak Dobriyal is fast making himself indispensable in films which believe in telling it like it is. The music, the lyrics of which have been written by Piyush Singh, who should have been reined in when he's playing Dukey's soft-in-the-head brother in the film, is outstanding.

Where the film scores big is in the way it ranges caste affiliations, student-and-slightly-dodgy-gender-politics, and the hunger to rule, and presents them as a throbbing, inextricable mix: this is real India, which so many of us do not even know exists. Where it lets its own material is in the way in which the threads are left hanging. But despite its failings, 'Gulal' demands to be watched: this is a film with power.

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/movie-review-gulal/434148/

Zareena thumbnail
17th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 16 years ago
#12
I am going to watch the movie for Anurag Kayshap and Kay kay, Love their work.
Zareena thumbnail
17th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 16 years ago
#13
Masand's Movie Review: Gulaal a fascinating flick

Rajeev Masand / CNN-IBN

Gulaal, directed by Anurag Kashyap is an endlessly fascinating movie about politics and the youth, about love and betrayal, about reform and revenge. It's a film with many layers, and one with solid drama at its core, which makes it such an engaging watch. Kashyap knows the world he's showing us in this film and takes us through it with an assuredness that I found missing in his last picture, Dev D.

He serves up a palette of diverse characters and flirts with interesting issues like campus ragging, student activism, caste biases and the thirst for legitimacy. Set in Rajasthan, Gulaal's central premise involves the efforts of the erstwhile royal community to claim back their Rajputana province from the democratic government.

The film follows meek law student Dileep Singh (played by newcomer Raja Singh Chaudhary) who arrives on campus to pursue graduation and falls into the company of an older student and royal sprog Rananjay Singh (played by Abhimanyu Singh) which changes the course of his life completely. When the local kingpin Dukey Bana (played by Kay Kay Menon) convinces Rananjay to contest college elections on behalf of his Rajputana party, little does our protagonist Dileep realize he too will get sucked into a world of corrupt politics and crime.

Without going into too many details, let's just say Dileep ends up standing for and winning the college elections in place of his friend and roommate Rananjay, and discovers subsequently he's just a pawn in Dukey Bana's larger plans.

There is also the matter of a girl; in this case the ambitious, illegitimate daughter of a royal who loses the campus election to Dileep, but finds another more deceitful way to realize her ambitions. Much of the charm of Gulaal lies in its setting; Rajasthan's varied landscape - a clash between tradition and modernity, becomes as intriguing a character as any, and Kashyap shoots this terrain realistically, rough around the edges even, sucking us into his dark, brooding drama from the word go. Rich with characters and sub-plots, Kashyap opts for a straightforward narration, making this film his most accessible since "Black Friday".

Gulaal is remarkable also for the brave manner in which it mirrors the dangerous political scenario in Mubai by using the Dukey Bana character played by Kay Kay Menon as a metaphor for fundamentalist leader Raj Thackeray and his MNS party. The masterstroke in Gulaal however, is its music. Piyush Mishra, as the eccentric poet Prithvi Bana - an outsider in this violent world - delivers evocative numbers that are hard to get out of your head for the sheer honesty and brutality of their lyrics.

By way of indulgences, there is the unexplained character of the Ardh Narishwar, and also the film's sluggish pace. At two-and-a-half long hours, Gulaal is loose and meanders in places which is a pity because it has the potential to be a taut thriller. Nevertheless it's eminently watchable for its characters and the actors who play them. Of the ensemble, it's Kay Kay Menon as Dukey Bana and particularly Abhimanyu Singh as Rananjay who stand out with powerful performances that remain etched in your memory. I was a little unconvinced by Raja Singh Chaudhary's performance as Dileep, who plays his part adequately but fails to internalise the catharsis he goes through in order to reach upto the film's horrific end. Similarly underdeveloped was Jesse Randhawa's track as the young teacher whose life changes permanently after a shocking incident of ragging.

These are, however, mere nitpickings in a competent, compelling film that is in equal parts humorous and courageous. Unlike No Smoking and even Dev D to an extent which alienated some audiences because of their indulgent storytelling style, this one is not a difficult watch.

I'm going with three out five and a thumbs up for director Anurag Kashyap's Gulaal; it's provocative yet poignant, and that rare kind of film that transports you bang in the middle of its action. Watch it to understand why Anurag Kashyap is one of the most exciting voices in Hindi cinema today.

Rating: 3 / 5 (Good)

http://ibnlive.in.com/news/masands-movie-review-gulaal-a-fascinating-flick/87604-8.html

Zareena thumbnail
17th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 16 years ago
#14
Movie Review : Gulaal (2009)

March 13th, 2009 - 3:29 pm ICT by sampurn -

Gulaal: Anurag Kashyap's best film by far

Rating: 4 out of 5*

Starring: Kay Kay Menon, introducing Raj Singh Chaudhary, Jesse Randhawa, Deepak Dobriyal, Aditya Srivastava, Ayesha Mohan, Piyush Mishra and Abhimanyu Singh.

Director: Anurag Kashyap

Set in the fictional Rajpur town of modern-day Rajasthan, Gulaal is entangled with stories of student politics, a covertly taking shape local rebellion for an independent Rajputana stare and love taking it forward. The meek, Dileep Singh (Raj Singh Chaudhary), is an idealistic man who gets caught in the whirlpool of student politics and much more, as he gets sucked into the world of Rananjay (Abhimanyu Singh), Dukkey Bana (Kay Kay), an autocratic local Rajput leader who is leading a planned armed movement to reclaim Rajputana for Rajputs, a brother-sister couple (Aditya and Ayesha), the illegitimate children of an erstwhile Rajput king who are seething at their bas***d status (Aditya Srivastava, Ayesha Mohan) and Anuja (Jesse), a young teacher who becomes a social misfit in college after a particular incident inflicted upon her by college hooligans. Dilip gets used as a pawn by people who matter to him and ends up being an unwilling player in a sinister plot. What it all leads to forms the rest of the film.

Bollywood gets yet another talented actor in Raj Singh Chaudhari who is also the co-writer of the film. In a film packed with great acting talents, Raj stands out with his convincing act. Kay Kay Menon as always is simply superb. Another show stealer is Deepak Dobriyal who plays his loyal assistant in the film. He speaks volumes just with his expressions without speaking much. Mahie Gill as the mujra girl cum beauty parlour owner is stunning and has tremendous screen presence. Aditya Srivastava and Ayesha Mohan are good as well. Piyush Mishra is terrific as Kay Kay's brother and has the film's best lines.

Gulaal was claimed as Anurag Kashyap's angriest film and it indeed is. It explores the dynamics of royalty vis--vis the democratic system. Sectionalism today has set everywhere in a big way and the film is the true reflection of where our nation stands today. Though been in the making for more than four years now, never once the film gives a dated feeling. The credit for which also goes to cinematographer Rajeev Ravi. Kashyap's dialogues that are replete with sarcastic one-liners, beautiful poetries and philosophies and also the referential meanings are amongst the finest seen on screen for a long long time in Bollywood. Piyush Mishra apart from acting superbly also scores full marks for his hard hitting lyrics and beautiful music that is mix of many interesting things such as sarcasm, peppiness, and sensibility. It is the film's lyrics and music that make the film a completely an extraordinary experience.

Gulaal is something that is extremely relatable, especially for today's youth. Though at a running time of over two and a half hours, there are times when the film tends to appear dragging, it is worth a watch. The film though has Anurag's now trademark abstractness at times, it is not as incomprehensible as it was in No Smoking or in Dev.D. Go watch Gulaal. -Sampurn Media



http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/entertainment/movie-review-gulaal-2009_100166005.html

Zareena thumbnail
17th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 16 years ago
#15
'Gulaal' - Makes little mark

By Nikhil Kumar
Film critic, ApunKaChoice.Com

Stories about a simple man's anger and outburst against the corrupt, corroding system have been seen and forgotten by the dozen, and Anurag Kashyap's angst-ridden Gulaal turns out to be just a statistical addition to the list.

True, the movie is hard-hitting and a telling statement on the degeneration in the political structure both at the micro level of student politics and the macro level of power-hungry, tyrannical megalomaniacs who stop at nothing to realize their political ambitions. It starts off pretty well as Anurag Kashyap introduces the characters, and it develops momentum as the murky motives are unveiled. The movie, however, becomes a hodgepodge in the second half as it climaxes to a blood curdling crescendo all because of a one-sided love story gone horribly wrong.

Dilip Singh ( Raj Singh Chaudhary ), a simple, soft-spoken nerd comes to Rajasthan to study law but gets unwittingly sucked into the vortex of student politics after his roommate Rananjay (Abhimanyu Singh), a candidate contesting college elections, is bumped off.

Dukey Bana ( Kay Kay Menon ), an influential figure who dreams of wedging out a splinter Rajputana state, takes Dilip under his wing and makes him win the post of General Secretary through rigged elections.

Dilip's rival in the elections, Kiran (Ayesha Mohan), and her cunning brother (Aditya Shrivastava) are unable to digest their defeat. Kiran lures Dilip with love and sex. And he – like any able man in his right senses – succumbs to the temptation. But gradually the dirty, murky political game is revealed to Dilip as he finds Kiran take over political powers from him and dump him and move on to play her amorous tricks on the bigger shark – Dukey Bana.

Hell hath no fury like a lover scorned. Dilip, the simple, gullible, bespectacled wimp who was ragged into spending days naked inside a room with a female professor ( Jesse Randhawa ) when he joined the college, now takes to the gun after realizing that he's been used as just a pawn in the bigger game.

'Gulaal' is essentially a character driven story that seems to get too verbose at places. The dialogues are expectedly sprinkled with expletives because the director apparently wanted them to sound 'real'. The cinematography by Rajeev Ravi is superb. Music and lyrics by Piyush Mishra are intriguing.

If there's anything truly worth watching in 'Gulaal' it's the performances by the ensemble of talented actors from Kay Kay Menon as the devious Dukey Bana to Deepak Dobriyal as his assistant or Mahi Gill as his mistress.

Newcomer Raj Singh Chaudhary has an unassuming persona and convincingly portrays the inner transformation of his character. Ayesha Mohan and Aditya Shrivastava as the brother sister duo are terrific in their individual performances.

All said, 'Gulaal' is a seething, simmering, but tortuously predictable tale of all that's rotten in the system. All through the movie you get an uncanny feeling that the director has pooled all his anger, angst and cynicism against the system and spewed it on the screen to be smacked at the faces of hapless viewers in the form of 'Gulaal'.

Frankly, there're better things to do with your time and money than have a taste of someone else's angst.

Rating: **

http://www.apunkachoice.com/dyn/movies/hindi/gulaal/gulaal-review.html

Zareena thumbnail
17th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 16 years ago
#16
Review: Anurag Kashyap's Gulaal as gritty as it gets

Sonia Chopra

In a film about grassroots politics situated in the Rajasthan to Bihar periphery, the film must have all/some of the following: A central god-like leader (in Omkara it was Omkara; here it's Dukey Bana). Cuss words splattered across the dialogue. Illegitimate methods of conducting politics. Folksy songs sung heartily by Rekha Bharadwaj and performed by a fetching lady surrounded by drunk men where she might also audaciously pick someone's cap and playfully cavort with it while dancing. A climax where lots of people get bumped off, and oh yes, Deepak Dobriyal.
Pardon the sarcasm: It's not the film's fault; thing is, we've already seen and been shocked by similar conduct in Omkara. We're seasoned viewers and somewhat expect certain things of a gritty film about student politics in Rajasthan. Of course, Omkara was essentially a love story and Gulaal is anything that. They both show us a peek into the sordid political underbelly.

Dilip Singh (Raj Singh Chaudhary), a soft-spoken sort who comes to Rajasthan to study law, where people point out at his age (mid-30s) and say he ought to be teaching. We're unsure of this character's motive to study law at his age—he doesn't speak of any ambition.

He's sharing a room with Rananjay a self-confessed smoker, drinker, womaniser who roams the place in not much clothing. While looking for the matron of a hostel to shift into, Dilip encounters a room-full of men who give him the third degree. He is stripped and locked up in a room with a lady (Jesse Randhawa) who we later realize is a college professor.

Dukey Bana (Kay Kay Menon) the local uncrowned monarch takes Rananjay and Dilip under his cover and for the forthcoming university elections, puts up Rananjay as his party's candidate. Others competing include the man who spearheaded the "ragging" against Dilip and a college student Kiran (Ayesha Mohan) whose every move is masterminded by her brother (Aditya Srivastav). Then on we see murders, bloodshed, and conniving tactics to get to the top seat.

As far as attachment to characters go, you're unlikely to feel much for anyone, perhaps because it's challenging to relate to their conflicts. Dilip's journey from the spectacled pretty boy, to being involved in the heat of the elections is not that convincing. After all, he came here to study, and we don't see him do that ever.

Dukey Bana's character is supposed to be an enigmatic, magnetic leader (though of questionable instincts) spearheading a Rajputana movement that aims at empowering the Rajput royalty against the government. But here we see a man who gets riled easily, falls for a girl just like that, beats up his mistress, ignores his wife.

Again, the characterisation of all three women is vastly disappointing – one is a housewife waiting on her husband despite knowing he's philandering; the other is an ambitious girl who'll sleep her way to the top – a seductress in a khadi kurta, if you will; or the defeated professor, always whining, constantly dependant, even speaking in tiny, inaudible whispers.

Around this man Dukey Bana's house are two people who he, out of character, tolerates – a singer Prithvi Bana (Piyush Mishra) we assume to be a family member who sings for the mujra, and his companion whom Dukey calls "ardha nari", a man painted blue throughout one half of his body and painted as a woman on the other. This person prances around the house, in the middle of important meetings, and we sometimes see his face in alarming close ups for effect.

Anurag Kashyap switches to and fro time frames to tell the story and extracts flawless performances. Kashyap's eye for spotting undiscovered talent deserves an award in itself: newcomer Raj Singh Chaudhary traverses the complex character graph of Dilip Singh in a stroke, making it look effortless.

Kay Kay Menon is all fire in his volatile speeches held in the dead of the night for his followers and members of the royalty. Deepak Dobriyal is fantastic as the faithful assistant. As Rananjay, Abhimanyu Singh is befittingly intimidating and roguish at the same time, Ayesha Mohan is marvelous as the schemer who we are yet to decide is culprit or victim; and as the brother who plots her every move, Aditya Srivastav gives a performance impossible to get over. Mahi Gill makes an impact in her short, but interestingly etched out role.

Like all Kashyap's films the technical crew gives interesting work: Rajeev Rai's cinematography, often bathed in red, is superb. Editing by Aarti Bajaj negotiates the different chapters of the story-telling, not all of them chronological, seamlessly.

However, the 'Man of the Match' seems to be Piyush Mishra who plays Prithvi Bana with nuance, has given the film a hugely trippy, mad and wonderful music compilation, written lyrics that are at once philosophical and sarcastic, and sung those songs too. Such that the music often overshadows the narrative, conveying more than the story's turns or the character's dialogue.

We all love Anurag Kashyap's films; apart from the usual suspects, I even enjoyed No Smoking immensely. But here, the story leaves you somewhere underwhelmed.

Watch it if you're in the mood for a reasonably gritty Kashyap film, perhaps not as forceful as a Black Friday or Dev D, but with great performances and music nevertheless.

Verdict: Three stars

http://sify.com/movies/bollywood/review.php?id=14869141&ctid=5&cid=2425&?vsv=HP4

Zareena thumbnail
17th Anniversary Thumbnail Stunner Thumbnail + 2
Posted: 16 years ago
#17
Gulaal - Powerful yet flimsy

IndiaGlitz [Friday, March 13, 2009]

Perhaps, here's the best contemporary filmmaker turning yet another glistering motif on his papers into screens. Much avowedly, 'Gulaal' has the clichd vernacular trait of Anurag Kashyap. Aye, the best rigid characterizations and decussate them across has been a patterned style of Anurag. That's been more illustrious right from his script work of 'Satya' made by Ram Gopal Varma. Of course, this isn't a perfect piece of work for all and preferably miniscule groups (film buffs or wannabe filmmakers) would love watching his unique filmmaking. Alike Dev D, it has a strong-love quotients but goes coalesced with politics and violence. Nothing but again a reformative revolutionary is how the protagonist has been delineated.

The film Gulaal is about an innocent student Dileep who comes to Jaipur to study, accompanied by his faithful servant Bhanwar. Here he comes in contact with Rananjay Singh "Ransa" (contemporary intelligent, sensitive young man who refuses to abide by traditions; his ideologies clash with his father's, the local raja), Jadwal (with old school of thought he is the college goon who rags Dileep); Anuja (professor ragged with Dileep; despair brings both together and a strong emotional bond develops between them) Dukey Bana (powerful local figure who leads an army of radical Rajputs struggling to get the Rajputana back from the Government of India challenging the very idea of democracy); Kiran (uses Dileep for power and personal interest).

Against a backdrop of local political intrigue, the film begins with a Rajput conglomerate gaining strengthen as Dukey Bana and a few ex-Royals convince a reluctant Ransa to contest for the college elections on behalf of the Rajputana party; Ransa and Kiran battle it for General Secretary's post. The rivalry between the two gangs intensifies and Ransa is forced to withdraw, which he resists. Eventually this leads to his murder by Karan (Kiran's brother and Rasna's illegitimate sibling). Using the sympathy wave, Dileep is compelled to contest elections in Ransa's place and made to win.

After losing the elections Kiran tries winning Dileep's trust, gets close to him and pretends to fall in love. As he tries to fit into the shoes of the General Secretary an insecure Dileep gets emotionally dependent on Kiran and distance grows between him and Anuja. Dileep finds himself trapped in political maneuvers and realizes that this is not what he had wanted. It dawns to him that he is being used by Dukey; when Dileep confronts Dukey, he is faced with a horrifying truth!

Rest of the story is all about the consequences followed through bizarre…

As mentioned, though characterizations have been marked trenchantly, few minor ones have been stroked carelessly… For instance, Jesse Randhawa and few others have a perfect alpha but the end is left out with finesse. Anurag Kashyap apart from this goes flawed with the screenplay. Though the first half is loaded with a racy style, it's completely contrastive in latter part and an ungratifying climax. Appositely, the most elite group would take it on as a docu-drama genre, but how about the other centres.

Kay Kay Menon overwhelms with a stunning performance. On the role of a rustic aggressive entity, he rules to his best. Piyush Mishra and Deepak deserve the same credits for the justice they've done to their characteristic portrayals. However, Anurag takes the roles of Kay Kay and Raj Singh to a greater extent that's more scattering everyone's attention especially in the penultimate sequences. As the auteur lays to carry on through so many parallel stories, he struggles to let them in latter part.

What makes the film stop from hitting the highest points on the charts is that it lacks certain realities. With the film centering critical issues, Anurag does it so caricaturing things at most of the parts. You can spot them with an ease that lets your frizzled with lots of puzzling thoughts.

Rajeev's cinematography is top-notching. With his particular darkened-tones with best innovative angles, the film obtains an authentic look. It's a thought-evoking-style of lyrics penned by Piyush Mishra. Aarthi Bajaj's editing could've been more crisper.

On the whole, 'Gulaal' does brilliantly excellent in the initial stages, but later dribbles slowly with irksome proceedings. Anurag Kashyap indeed should've penned them bright and shorter to make it powerfully delivered.

Verdict: Strictly for miniscule groups.

Perhaps, here's the best contemporary filmmaker turning yet another glistering motif on his papers into screens. Much avowedly, 'Gulaal' has the clichd vernacular trait of Anurag Kashyap. Aye, the best rigid characterizations and decussate them across has been a patterned style of Anurag. That's been more illustrious right from his script work of 'Satya' made by Ram Gopal Varma. Of course, this isn't a perfect piece of work for all and preferably miniscule groups (film buffs or wannabe filmmakers) would love watching his unique filmmaking. Alike Dev D, it has a strong-love quotients but goes coalesced with politics and violence. Nothing but again a reformative revolutionary is how the protagonist has been delineated.

The film Gulaal is about an innocent student Dileep who comes to Jaipur to study, accompanied by his faithful servant Bhanwar. Here he comes in contact with Rananjay Singh "Ransa" (contemporary intelligent, sensitive young man who refuses to abide by traditions; his ideologies clash with his father's, the local raja), Jadwal (with old school of thought he is the college goon who rags Dileep); Anuja (professor ragged with Dileep; despair brings both together and a strong emotional bond develops between them) Dukey Bana (powerful local figure who leads an army of radical Rajputs struggling to get the Rajputana back from the Government of India challenging the very idea of democracy); Kiran (uses Dileep for power and personal interest).

Against a backdrop of local political intrigue, the film begins with a Rajput conglomerate gaining strengthen as Dukey Bana and a few ex-Royals convince a reluctant Ransa to contest for the college elections on behalf of the Rajputana party; Ransa and Kiran battle it for General Secretary's post. The rivalry between the two gangs intensifies and Ransa is forced to withdraw, which he resists. Eventually this leads to his murder by Karan (Kiran's brother and Rasna's illegitimate sibling). Using the sympathy wave, Dileep is compelled to contest elections in Ransa's place and made to win.

After losing the elections Kiran tries winning Dileep's trust, gets close to him and pretends to fall in love. As he tries to fit into the shoes of the General Secretary an insecure Dileep gets emotionally dependent on Kiran and distance grows between him and Anuja. Dileep finds himself trapped in political maneuvers and realizes that this is not what he had wanted. It dawns to him that he is being used by Dukey; when Dileep confronts Dukey, he is faced with a horrifying truth!

Rest of the story is all about the consequences followed through bizarre…

As mentioned, though characterizations have been marked trenchantly, few minor ones have been stroked carelessly… For instance, Jesse Randhawa and few others have a perfect alpha but the end is left out with finesse. Anurag Kashyap apart from this goes flawed with the screenplay. Though the first half is loaded with a racy style, it's completely contrastive in latter part and an ungratifying climax. Appositely, the most elite group would take it on as a docu-drama genre, but how about the other centres.

http://www.indiaglitz.com/channels/hindi/review/11013.html

104869 thumbnail
Posted: 16 years ago
#18
I watched this movie yesterday and I was spell-bound from the word-go. This movie is anything but conventional- the story the script & the characters are very hard-hitting. The characterisations are so strong that ever one of them stays with you after the movie. But my personal favourite was Piyush Mehra as the John Lennon loving elder brother. I would rate this movie as highly as Shyam Benegal's Kalyug in the genre of polotical/power-based movies. Anurag Kashya is surely the best among the new crop of directors to present our cinema to the worl-wide audience.
xfinity thumbnail
19th Anniversary Thumbnail Explorer Thumbnail
Posted: 16 years ago
#19

Originally posted by: pragya0

I watched this movie yesterday and I was spell-bound from the word-go. This movie is anything but conventional- the story the script & the characters are very hard-hitting. The characterisations are so strong that ever one of them stays with you after the movie. But my personal favourite was Piyush Mehra as the John Lennon loving elder brother. I would rate this movie as highly as Shyam Benegal's Kalyug in the genre of polotical/power-based movies. Anurag Kashya is surely the best among the new crop of directors to present our cinema to the worl-wide audience.

Totally agree with you Pragya. Anurag is a genuis. I havent watched the movie but am dying to watch. I also want to watch Barah Aana. Hopefully will get to watch soon,
Dev D, I heard is fab as well.

Related Topics

Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: cougarTown · a month ago

https://youtu.be/sjDAdvHm7pU?si=YTo3gt4T0xAtllpG https://youtu.be/CxWPt2QLT0A?si=tbMCvuT7TTB7sL4b

https://youtu.be/sjDAdvHm7pU?si=YTo3gt4T0xAtllpG
Expand ▼
Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: priya185 · 1 months ago

Abir Gulaal is releasing- do you think it will it work?...

Expand ▼
Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: oyebollywood · 6 months ago

https://x.com/taran_adarsh/status/1906955248692040145

https://x.com/taran_adarsh/status/1906955248692040145
Expand ▼
Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: oyebollywood · 5 months ago

https://youtu.be/APkTbyzik8c https://x.com/Vaaniofficial/status/1910573717282844679

https://youtu.be/APkTbyzik8c
Expand ▼
Bollywood thumbnail

Posted by: oyebollywood · 5 months ago

https://www.indiaforums.com/article/calls-for-ban-on-abir-gulaal-intensify-amid-pahalgam-attack-outrage_221151

Expand ▼
Top

Stay Connected with IndiaForums!

Be the first to know about the latest news, updates, and exclusive content.

Add to Home Screen!

Install this web app on your iPhone for the best experience. It's easy, just tap and then "Add to Home Screen".