Satyagraha Reviews Topic - Page 12

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pakeezah thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
It's like those Ram Gopal Verma repetitive movies all over agn...
Naach, Sholay remake, ghost movies Bhoot copies, etc

Boring

After Raajneeti, where pace was fast and story original, and
KAT n Ranbir provided visual relief...Satuagraha seems
like a movie forced out of Prakash Jha to try n make
some money, tedious n going nowhere


Edited by pakeezah - 12 years ago
DheeJattanDi thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
So I see the negative reviews have started pouring in.. mehh. I so want this film to do well, it might just in a way encourage our Indian youth to keep fighting and protesting. We need more such films, and for that this one really needs to do well.

A first day of 9/10 cr should be okay, considering it does not have Ranbir/Katrina (like Raajneeti).
MostlyHarmIess thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
Cheating the Revolution



Can a film that injects item numbers and street romance in the theme of anger against corruption


Prakash Jha is in desperate need of a makeover - be it the actors he chooses, locations he shoots in or, more importantly, the scripts he writes. Jha, over the years, has made "issue-based" cinema his own brand of film-making. If Apaharan (2006) dealt with rampant kidnappings and extortions in Bihar, then Aarakshan (2009) was based on the issue of reservations in the Indian education system. His last film, Chakravyuha (2011), tried to bring the Naxal problem to light. His latest, Satyagraha, is inspired by the Anna Hazare "revolution" of 2011 which tried to take on the perennial issue of corruption in the Indian system. But all Satyagraha does is scratch the surface of a serious problem and bores you into submission after 152 minutes of viewing.

Amitabh Bachchan plays the role of idealist Dwarka Anand, a retired school principal. Ajay Devgn is cast as an industrialist who turns into a revolutionary, while Kareena Kapoor plays a TV journalist, and Arjun Rampal, a local bahubali. Manoj Bajpayee, as he always does in Jha's films, takes up the role of an evil politician. Jha's characters look like they have walked in from his previous films, mouthing similar dialogues but on different subjects. Bachchan and Bajpayee, as you would expect, deliver decent performances. Kapoor and Devgn are barely believable in their roles, while Rampal is hardly noticeable.

The problem with Jha isn't his actors but his script and the way he tries to meddle in everything. There's a very Madhur Bhandarkarish feel to Jha's films these days - and that's not a compliment by the way. The film is inspired by real-life political scams and Jha is bent on showing the might of the social media. So there are Twitter hashtags, Facebook updates on how a small-town revolution started by an idealist to take on the political class turns into a national uprising.

Then there are the songs - especially the absurd Janata rocks, Janata talks - which are the biggest problems with the film. There's an item number, romantic number and the patriotic revolutionary song. One understands the need to inject a dose of song and drama, but in a film that deals with the issue of corruption, the songs are, honestly, pointless. Jha also dramatises the issue of corruption with a needless romantic angle between Devgn and Kapoor, who even on the streets while protesting has her hair in perfect shape and looks made up to for a catwalk rather than to brave water cannons.

It's a laboured effort to fictionalise the Anna Hazare movement and while Jha's other films, mainly Apaharan and Chakravyuha, were far from being perfect films, they weren't over the top. Jha really needs a reality check when it comes to writing. His lines are so out of tune with today's times that most of his main characters don't talk like normal people. Almost every line is meant to be delivered as a killer punch line which either should make you feel angry at the system or pained at the plight characters face. These are statements of intent - they're meant to shake you up and anger you. Unfortunately, neither of that happens. There are certain portions of the film which do make sense - largely due to competent actors like Bachchan and Bajpayee. Overall it's a big disappointment and you're better off avoiding Satyagrah.
MostlyHarmIess thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago

Satyagraha' is an excellent effort to capture the zeitgeist of contemporary India


At the start of my interview with Prakash Jha before the release of his latest film, Satyagraha, I told him that it was my favourite of his since Gangaajal. "Really? But that was such a simple film," he said of his 2003 film about the police in a Bihar district indulging in vigilante justice. My point, precisely. Jha's early films " Damul, Mrityudand, Gangaajal, Apaharan " were ostensibly simple, mainstream movies about life in small towns, but had a lot to say about a rapidly-changing India and its people. Raajneeti, Aarakshan and Chakravyuh, on the other hand, were much more ambitious in scope, setting out to tackle complex political issues, but were watered down by commercial considerations and failed to either say anything substantive about the issues or tell a compelling story.

Satyagraha is, in a way, a marriage of the two styles. It sets out to tackle another major issue " people's anger against corruption " and does cater to the demands of the Bollywood formula, but cleverly subverts it in the second half to make the points it wanted to. It's very deftly done. Until the interval, Jha takes his time setting up the pieces, establishing where each of his primary characters is coming from and how they come together. But the paths they take are so obvious, so typically Bollywood, that you go into the break dreading another hour of good triumphing over evil, of a hackneyed plot celebrating idealism and middle-class angst (complete with peppy anthems) but never really putting that idealism to the test. Thankfully, Jha has quite a few aces up his sleeve and the last third, at least, is a fascinating examination of the thin line between a politician channeling the rage of the people and a rabble-rouser, between uncompromising idealism and ossified maximalism.

Though the film is, at first glance, about corruption, it is also a comment on young India and how it engages with politics. The era of privatisation, liberalisation and globalisation has given India's middle-class youth an unprecedented social mobility, a chance to aspire for something better than a secure government job. For the first decade and a half of that era, this meant an opportunity to make a fortune either within the country or abroad with little thought given to the government of the day or its policies. The system, after all, was heavily skewed in their favour. The political consensus of promoting growth above all else suited them well. But it was a gilded age; the unsustainability of the model is currently playing out on our news channels. The consensus has been, if not discarded altogether, challenged, and the nation's youth has been forced to engage with the process of building a new one that takes into account the many systemic flaws of the country that cannot be brushed under the carpet any longer. With an election around the corner, no one knows which way, if at all, this massive new constituency of young people will vote.

Jha's stand-in for young India is Manav (Ajay Devgn), who eschews the idealism of his do-gooder friend Akhilesh (Indraneil Sengupta) and Akhilesh's father Dwarkanath (Amitabh Bachchan) to go and found a multi-crore business empire. When Akhilesh dies and Dwarkanath, infuriated by the local bureaucracy's refusal to sanction the compensation for his death, slaps the district magistrate and is arrested, Manav is forced to get involved and start an agitation for his release. (It's a classic Jha device, getting his characters involved through apolitical, personal motivations.) His skills at running a company comes in handy in organising protests, and soon the agitation evolves into a movement against corruption and the slimy politicians (epitomised by the excellent Manoj Bajpayee) who run the state.

There are parallels aplenty to Anna Hazare's anti-corruption movement in the film; Jha is at his caustic best when talking about how that agitation lost its bearings. Manav's movement gains traction because Dwarkanath is, like Anna, a symbol for popular outrage. It is characterised by an omnibus anger for all that's wrong with India, an inchoate expression of rage against the machine. The politicians' reactions are also familiar " they first ignore it, then stonewall, then try to co-opt it. Any attempts by the state government to compromise are scuttled by its corrupt coalition partners, making it look weak and ineffectual. But when it comes to taking that anger and using it to create something better, Manav and his lieutenant Arjun (Rampal) refuse to compromise, insisting on a set of demands unilaterally decided and which brooks no alterations. Eventually, the lack of progress rots the movement and people give in to their basest instincts, assuming that their leaders consent.

Creditably, Jha is never hampered by ideology, always trying to understand his characters' motivations, what makes them good or evil. He does pander to commercial sensibilities by restricting them to black and white " Manav's shady past business dealings come out in the open, but all it takes is one contrite apology to win him back his credibility " but does not excise nuance altogether. In an era defined by constant arguments between the State and its people, Satyagraha is an excellent effort to capture the zeitgeist of contemporary India. And, perhaps more importantly, a riveting film.

923402 thumbnail
Posted: 12 years ago

Originally posted by: koiza.k

kareena gets unlucky with directors who once make good films with well written characters

Madhur- priyanka got a meghna and she got a half baked mahi

Prakash Jha- regardless of kat's performance, she got a good enough role in rajneeti but kareena's role seems the weakest here!

why kareena whyy!



Cherry would have been hotter Koizakins. How about a sexy naked politician? 😉❤️
kitkataha thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago

Originally posted by: LoveProfusion



Cherry would have been hotter Koizakins. How about a sexy naked politician? 😉❤️



How can you post this within fifteen minutes of posting you have Cancer? Some people. 🤢 I'm sorry to bring this up into the review topic.
MostlyHarmIess thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
Satyragraha First Day (Friday) Collection Update and Early Trends.
6
Posted by Kaalia You May Also Like News on: Kareena Kapoor at Friday, August 30, 2013

Satyagraha has taken an average start at the box office on Friday. Occupancy is around 30-40% for the day till last report filled in. In some places film is registering very good occupancy of around 50-60% whereas in some places occupancy is as low as 15-20%. Satyagraha is a big budget film and released on wide scale of 2100-2200 screens all India. Hence, it needs to put up good numbers for the opening day.

Film has shown growth through the day, but it is not universal. There are places where film has seen big growth, but there are also places where no growth is registered. Even reports from Single Screens is varied. In some mass dominated centers film is doing well, whereas in some its below average.

Anyways film is reporting good advance booking for Night shows. If Night shows good jump then film might have a chance to touch 10 crore nett for the day. Otherwise it might remain below the 10 crore nett mark. This are only from the early trends of samples and there may be big variance in the actual figures for Friday.
MostlyHarmIess thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
taran adarsh @taran_adarsh 8m

#Satyagraha grew steadfastly and robustly in evening/night shows. Collects Rs 11.21 cr on Friday. Prakash Jha's biggest opener thus far.
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Posted: 12 years ago
My dad wanted to see this but I think he needs to reexamine his choices 😆

he tends to like political films for some odd reason 😆😆
Edited by VictorLordJr - 12 years ago
desigal90 thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago

Originally posted by: BeShArAm

taran adarsh @taran_adarsh 8m

#Satyagraha grew steadfastly and robustly in evening/night shows. Collects Rs 11.21 cr on Friday. Prakash Jha's biggest opener thus far.


That's better than what people were predicting right?
Most trends suggested around 8 crores, but this is an improvement

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