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Posted: 11 years ago
#1

Movie review: The Lunchbox

VINAYAK CHAKRAVORTY SEPTEMBER 18, 2013 | UPDATED 14:52 IST
The Lunchbox

Cast: Irrfan Khan, Nimrat Kaur, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Bharati Achrekar

Direction: Ritesh Batra

Rating: 4 Star Rating: Recommended4 Star Rating: Recommended4 Star Rating: Recommended4 Star Rating: Recommended

Here's what Bollywood never did before. It never narrated a love story where the lovers don't meet. Ever, not even in one scene. And yet you are left with an overwhelming completeness of emotions as the end credits roll.

That's a first that writer-director Ritesh Batra's debut feature serves up, giving love in the time of social networking an impressive new flavour.

The Lunchbox, releasing this week after a remarkable tour of the global festival circuit including Cannes, uses an unconventional catalyst to push its love story. Playing Cupid here is food, in a tale about an aging man on the brink of retirement and a homemaker dividing her time between cooking, motherhood and a loveless marriage.

Food essentially becomes a character in this film. Not many Bollywood filmmakers have drawn thematic context from gastronomic sights and colours this way - Stanley Ka Dabba comes to mind as a rare recent example - which is what makes The Lunchbox a unique experience.

Batra creates a feel-good romance that, departing from norms of the genre in Bollywood, comes with starkly real characters and situations. In an age of email and SMS, The Lunchbox uses the old-fashioned letter as expression of emotions. It is something that gives the film a unique charm.

Batra's screenplay focuses on the dabbawallah culture of Mumbai - delivery men who transport lunchboxes from housewives to their husbands in offices. The system has been around for ages and analysis shows the chance of a wrong delivery is one in millions.

One such rare error lands the lunchbox Ila (Nimrat Kaur) prepared for her husband on the table of Saajan Fernandez (Irrfan Khan), sarkari babu and loner who is a few months from retiring. Ila discovers the mix-up soon enough, but doesn't inform her husband who wouldn't care anyway. Fernandez doesn't mind, the regular hotel from where he gets his lunchbox can never cook meals as delicious.

The arrangement continues and the two strangers start an unlikely relationship through notes they regularly exchange in the lunchbox. The notes gradually becoming more intimate. Soon, they are revealing slices of their seemingly hopeless lives to each other.

The Lunchbox imagines its characters with warmth, adding a twist of wit to their dreary lives. Irrfan is perfect rendering a character far older than his actual age. He lets Fernandez evolve gradually from a grumpy old man to someone who finds hope in love, adding deadpan resilience to a miserable existence.

Nimrat Kaur is captured interestingly in close-ups, the faint scar on her forehead almost symbolising Ila's silent pangs in a life that was meant to be beautiful. She is a big reason the film remains adorable.

The narrative is enriched by a couple of other characters. Nawazuddin Siddiqui as the goodnatured Aslam Sheikh, trainee who will take over from Fernandez, is a pleasant add-on. Sheikh plays a vital role in the transformation of Fernandez.

But the really intriguing character in this film is of the auntyji upstairs. We never get to see her. She chats constantly with Ila through their kitchen windows as Ila is busy cooking lunch for her husband, often suggesting garnishing that could spice up the latter's marriage. Bharti Achrekar's is a class voice act as auntyji.

Ritesh Batra's grasp of imagery belies the fact that he is a debutant, as Mumbai comes alive in its crowded locals, children playing cricket on the streets, rickshaws and ramshackle taxis. The imagining of the localities Fernandez and Ila reside in is quietly used to define their socio-cultural divide. Overall, the tone maintained never misses the point that The Lunchbox is essentially a love story.

Send it to the Oscars? Why not. If the grudge against this film is it comes with little or no hype, at times the wrong train too can take you to the right station - as Nawazuddin's Aslam Sheikh spiritedly keeps saying all along.

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Johnny.Balraj thumbnail
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Posted: 11 years ago
#2
Komal Nahta @KomalNahta

Saw Lunchbox last night at long last. Wow!What a film!What superlative performances!U can hav Lunchbox for breakfast, lunch or dinner!

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Posted: 11 years ago
#3
riya gupta @priyaguptatimes

TOI rates Lunchbox 4.5 stars. Must watch film! Strong contender for Oscar entry from India. @irrfan_k @karanjohar @ankash1009 @nimratkaur13

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Posted: 11 years ago
#4
I want to watch this movie!!
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Posted: 11 years ago
#5
HollywoodReporter prediction

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM (*submission not yet confirmed)
Frontrunners
The Past (Iran)*
The Great Beauty (Italy)*
Gloria (Chile)
The Great Passage (Japan)
The Lunchbox (India)*

Others
Two Lives (Germany) NEW
The Hunt (Denmark)*
The Rocket (Australia)
Bethlehem (Israel)*
The Wall (Austria)
An Episode in the Life of an Iron Picker (Bosnia & Herzegovina)
Omar (Palestine)*
Wadjda (Saudi Arabia)
The Disciple (Finland)
Ilo Ilo (Singapore)
Boy Eating the Bird's Food (Greece)
The Missing Picture (Cambodia)
In Bloom (Georgia)
Circles (Serbia)
Bad Destiny (Montenegro)
Soongava: Dance of the Orchids (Nepal)


Edited by DAKDAK - 11 years ago
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Posted: 11 years ago
#6

The Lunchbox movie review

(Romance)
Saibal Chatterjee
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
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The Lunchbox movie review

Cast:Irrfan Khan, Nimrat Kaur and Nawazuddin Siddiqui
Director: Ritesh Batra

SPOILERS AHEAD

Literally speaking, this lunchbox has no meat. Moreover, its masala mix is markedly understated. But no worries, it offers much that you can dig your teeth into.

Pasanda is mentioned a couple of times and keema pav is alluded to on a solitary occasion. But, in keeping with the norm of Mumbai's dabba delivery biz, neither finds its way into the diurnal meal at the centre of writer-director Ritesh Batra's felicitous feature debut.

It's veggies all the way - okra, aubergine, cauliflower and apple gourd are the ingredients of choice. But the film's mistress of spices, a neglected Malad housewife, works such magic with her ladle that she soon has a stranger, an enervated Bandra accountant, eating out of her hands.

This quirky plot device hinges on a freak occurrence - a dabbawala delivers a lunchbox to the wrong address and sparks an unlikely romance.

But nothing else in Batra's remarkable film is fuelled by happenstance. It is a unique piece of cinema crafted with great dexterity and attention to detail.

A strikingly original, idiosyncratic and charming love story, The Lunchbox dismantles the established structures of the genre in ways that are at once startling and effective.

An immaculate screenplay provides the sturdy under-wiring on which Batra constructs his subtle drama about lonely souls in a teeming metropolis seeking to connect with each other across a vast divide.

Besides the amazing quality of its craft, what props up The Lunchbox is a troika of splendid performances by Irrfan Khan, Nimrat Kaur and Nawazuddin Siddiqui.

The film is a compelling study of despair and loneliness on the one hand and unrequited love and unrealized dreams on the other.

But it is also about loss and memory, and about missed opportunities and intimations of redemption.

At its heart are emotionally fettered individuals grapple with their ingrained fears and doubts even as they seek solace in the little joys of life that could set them free.

The Lunchbox is set in contemporary Mumbai, but Batra's sharply delineated characters are enchantingly old world. They reach out to each other through scribbled notes in an era of electronic,mobile messages and social media.

Ila (Nimrat Kaur), egged on by an elderly neighbour who we only hear but never see (voice of Bharti Achrekar), seeks to use her culinary skills to wrest the attention of her distracted husband, Rajiv (Nakul Vaid).

The lunchbox she prepares reaches the wrong man. The recipient is a weary government employee, Saajan Fernandes (Irrfan Khan), a widower on the verge of superannuation, a man who appears to have been shortchanged by fate.

Realising by the evening that her lunchbox has gone amiss, Ila sends Saajan a note the next day, thanking him for doing justice to her dishes. The latter sends a reply dripping with characteristic coldness.

But soon enough, the notes become longer, more intimate and unabashedly revelatory of their inner selves.

Saajan rues the fact that he did not devote more time to his now-deceased wife and join her to watch her favourite Sunday morning television shows; Ila reveals that her hubby might be having an extra-marital affair.

The character of the reticent, fastidious Saajan is contrasted with that of Dongri resident Aslam Shaikh (Nawazuddin Siddiqui), a garrulous and carefree understudy who has been brought in to replace the veteran.

The latter, a hardened Mumbaikar, has learnt to take life's blows on the chin. So, when Saajan wards off his repeated attempts to make friends with him, he perseveres until the senior gives in.

What we see on the screen is bewitching; what we don't is no less so. Even the absent or rarely seen characters cast their own, if only fleeting, spells.

Yes, they all come alive for the audience: the comatose Mr Deshpande who spends all his waking hours staring at the ceiling fan in the apartment above Ila's; Saajan's unnamed wife who would recordYeh Jo Hai Zindagi episodes for repeated viewings; Shaikh's non-existent ammi who strays into his cheerful conversations; Ila's mother (Lillete Dubey) who has spent the last few years nursing an ailing husband; and of course, the worldly wise, ever helpful Deshpande auntie.

Every curry' that The Lunchbox rustles up is redolent of magic (both cinematic and culinary) of a transformative kind.

It isn't just the life of the male protagonist that it touches. It spills out of the screen and seeps deep into the viewer's soul with the kind of all-encompassing force that is rarely encountered in a Mumbai film.

Keenly observed rituals of daily existence in a metropolis provide substance to this simple, unpretentious, heart-warming tale.

In essence, The Lunchbox is a nostalgic ode to the Mumbai of yore. It is peopled by characters that still yearn for Doordarshan's early serials and sitcoms and the unalloyed sentimentality of 1980s and 1990s Hindi film songs.

Besides Saajan's drab and functional office space and Ila's modest middle-class home, the film plays out in crowded trains and buses, and occasionally in auto-rickshaws.
On their trips back and forth from their workplace, Saajan and Shaikh are hemmed in by fellow passengers, yet they always seem to stand apart from the crowd. They are both outsiders' at odds with the big city and yet an essential part of it.

Mishaps and miracles occur here every day and nothing represents the dynamics of Mumbai quite as eloquently as the 5000-odd dabbawalas who unfailingly feed millions of office-goers in the metropolitan maze.

Batra captures that spirit with an unfailing and unsentimental eye, and gives the real-life dabbawalasand their songs a central place in the screenplay. The three central performances are terrific, with Irrfan and Nawazuddin striking up a duet that is absolutely spectacular.

Nimrat Kaur is clearly a bundle of natural talent that Hindi cinema will do well do draw upon whenever a role demands more than just eye-candy appeal.

Gorge into it and savour its lingering aftertaste. The Lunchbox holds riches that aren't likely to be forgotten in a hurry.
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Posted: 11 years ago
#7
Fiver Star--🥳

Film Review: The Lunchbox'

SEPTEMBER 16, 2013 7:51 AM BY PRONOTI DATTA

Director: Ritesh Batra
Cast: Irrfan Khan, Nimrat Kaur, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Bharati Achrekar
Rating:

Ritesh Batra's debut feature film is, to risk using alimentary similes that every reviewer is likely to employ while describing this movie, like a well-rounded dabba. One in which the sabzi is lightly spiced (and anything other than cabbage), the daal perfectly tempered, the chapatis thinly rolled and the rice mildly slick with ghee and flecked with jeera. The pleasant buzz such palate-pleasing dabbas induce is exactly the sort of feeling we were left with at the end of The Lunchbox, which will be released on Friday, September 20.

This is partly due to the attention lavished on food, something that rarely gets screen time in Indian cinema. Ila (Nimrat Kaur) makes an effort to cook tasty lunches to win back her husband, who barely notices her. She's helped by Deshpande aunty (Bharati Achrekar), Ila's friendly neighbour and agony aunt, who dispenses advice and cooking ingredients from the floor above. But instead of reaching her husband, Ila's dabba lands, thanks to a rare error committed by the city's famously efficient dabbawalas, on the desk of a lonely accountant with the unlikely name of Saajan Fernandez (Irrfan Khan). For Ila and Saajan, this mistake proves almost providential. They start exchanging notes written on ruled exercise book paper and slipped into a compartment of the dabba. Happy to let the mistake continue, Ila whips up creamy kofta curries and stuffed karelas for Saajan, on whom she unburdens her sadness over her failing marriage.

The actors put out remarkably restrained performances. This is expected of Khan, who's adept at conveying a range of meaning with a raised eyebrow here and a furrowed forehead there. He's perfect as the withdrawn curmudgeon unused to human company since his wife died. Gradually his epistolary relationship with Ila and her food thaws the ice around his heart. He cracks a smile now and again and warms towards Shaikh (Nawazuddin Siddiqui), his annoyingly chirpy replacement who, like the other two characters, has his own strife. An orphan, he has struggled to make something of himself and even after landing a government job, making two ends meet is tough as is evident from his daily lunch of bananas. Kaur, who is also famous for messily relishing a bar of chocolate in the latest Cadbury commercial, is equally understated in her desperation over both her disenchanted husband and the drudgery of domestic routine.

The fourth lead in The Lunchbox is Mumbai. Shot on location, Batra's film is a window to thedaily grind of middle-class life in the city - the train commute in the super-dense-crush-load of peak hours, and the travel from station to home and back in equally packed buses. Our hardy dabbawalas are shown traversing the city on train, cycle and foot bearing their load of tiffins through downpours and sun day after day with stoic purpose. Scattered through the film, like peas in a pulao, are delicious details of middle-class living. Those who take the train regularly will feel a little jolt of recognition when they see Siddiqui chopping vegetables meant for dinner, in his briefcase on the train. Then there's Deshpande aunty, who we only hear and who sends Ila masalas and other items in a little basket that she drops from her window above, a practice common in housing societies. It's really the small things like these observations, Batra's subtle humour and the economy of acting that make The Lunchbox such a delectable dish.


http://mumbaiboss.com/2013/09/16/film-review-the-lunchbox/

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Posted: 11 years ago
#8
Seems like a interesting movie & with Irfan in it I want to watch this movie!!
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Posted: 11 years ago
#9
I really want to watch this movie.. Some amazing reviews coming in👏
And being an Irfan Khan movie.. well that says it all..

Sorry for spamming in the review thread😃
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Posted: 11 years ago
#10

4-1/2 stars


The Lunchbox

Srijana Mitra Das , TNN, Sep 19, 2013, 02.40PM IST
Tags:The Lunchbox Movie Review|The Lunchbox|Nimrat Kaur|Nawazuddin Siddiqui|Irrfan Khan
A STILL FROM THE MOVIEMORE PICS
Critic's Rating:
Cast: Irrfan Khan, Nimrat Kaur, Nawazuddin Siddiqui
Direction: Ritesh Batra
Genre: Romance
Duration: 1 hour 50 minutes
Avg Readers Rating:
More from The Lunchbox
Trailer
Story: Two strangers fall in love over a lunchbox of letters - do they ever meet?

Review: Like a tiffin carrier, The Lunchbox has levels - it is the story of a man so lonely, he's forgotten what any companionship means. It is the story of a suburban housewife, deeply alone. It is the story of meeting via eating. It is a love-story - and a love-letter to Mumbai, to trains that go dhak-dhak, to dabbawalas and rain, to love and life, sugar and spice, the despair and hope that mark every heart.

Saajan Fernandes (Irrfan) is an accountant. His wife having died, the childless Saajan is a cold, prickly grouch avoided by all. One day, a lunchbox prepared by Ila (Nimrat) for her husband somehow reaches Saajan instead. He devours her delicacies, the empty box returned evidence of his enjoyment. Annoyed by the stranger's lack of thanks, Ila sends him another lunchbox with a sarcastic note - he responds. Suddenly, the two are writing daily, sharing jokes, fears, passions for keema and kadhi - then, a desire to meet.

This movie is held together by delicate performances. Irrfan leads the way, underplayed, yet lasting, like a cardamom between your lips. With moments like Fernandes catching himself in a street painter's sketch, Irrfan shows an ordinary life with extraordinary deftness, resurrecting that childhood uncle, who, begged to return your ball, would snarl, "Do I look like your servant?"

Irrfan is matched by Nimrat's Ila, soft as a sandesh, but with a mysterious, molten heart. Quiet moments, like Nimrat's expression when she smells the world on her husband's shirts, catch you. Ila's story, housewives living for husbands who switch off, is beautifully conveyed. The two are ably supported by chirpy, pesky Shaikh (Nawazuddin), Saajan's trainee, chopping vegetables on office files, melting the final barriers to Fernandes' frozen heart.

Warming this feast is a wonderful screenplay - Bharti Achrekar, visible in voice as 'Aunty' - and sound recording that must be heard to be believed. As Fernandes eats Ila's lunches, every lick, every slurp, every little swallow comes through. Its finesse qualifies this charmer as India's potential entry to the Oscars, The Lunchbox an unusual banquet, raising a bitter-sweet toast to life.

Note: You may not like this movie if you don't like softly spiced whimsical tales - or food
Edited by DAKDAK - 11 years ago

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