~~~~Highway reviews ~~~~~ - Page 7

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Posted: 11 years ago
#61

Box Office Prediction For HIGHWAY

Film has 11 cr of COP and 8-10 cr of marketing. Film has Imtiaz Ali too as partner under his banner Window Seat so actual cost is around 25 cr. So film needs huge buzz in order to attain hit status at box office.

Wednesday, 19th February 12:00 PM IST





Box Office Prediction For HIGHWAY



''Highway'' is releasing day after tomorrow and this film is directed by none other than Imtiaz Ali, the best director in country as far as romantic genre is concerned. Though this film is not usual Imtiaz Ali film as far as settings of the film are concerned. Film is produced by Sajid Nadadwala and distributed by UTV.



Alia Bhatt has dream debut with ''Student Of The Year'' and now she is going in not so familiar territory. Randeep Hooda is in usual intense mode and A R Rahman adds lot to the film with his maestro touch. But film failed to create any sort of buzz and will need lot more than reviews to score at box office.




Film will have slow start at box office and exceptional word of mouth can take film to some sort of respectable zone. Film will look to cross 20 cr nett weekend but the moment 15-18 cr nett bracket looks more realistic.




Filmhas 11 cr of COP and 8-10 cr of marketing. Film has Imtiaz Ali too as partner under his banner Window Seat so actual cost is around 25 cr. So film needs huge buzz in order to attain hit status at box office.




Box Office Prediction:

Domestic Business

First Weekend

17 cr

First Week

25 cr

Lifetime Overseas Business

10 cr

Lifetime Domestic Business

35 cr

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Posted: 11 years ago
#62

Highway movie review

(Drama)
Saibal Chatterjee
Thursday, February 20, 2014
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Highway movie review

Cast:Alia Bhatt, Randeep Hooda
Music: A R Rahman
Director: Imtiaz Ali

SPOILERS AHEAD

Writer-director Imtiaz Ali has hit a road less taken. The result is a stylish two-hander that is defiantly unconventional, if not entirely satisfying.

Shot on stunning locations spread from Delhi all the way up to the slopes of Himachal Pradesh and Kashmir, via the plains of Rajasthan and Punjab, the film yields bewitchingly beautiful images.

But it isn't just the visual and auditory delights on offer that make Highway a sensitive, understated entertainer.
Its two exceptional characters sway to the kind of subtle emotional riffs that usually elude mainstream Hindi cinema.

Days ahead of her wedding, Veera Tripathi (Alia Bhatt), happy-go-lucky daughter of a politically connected Delhi tycoon, goes for a spin on an impulse in her beau's swanky sedan.
At a deserted gas station off the highway, the city girl is abducted by a gang led by a gruff, rustic criminal, Mahabir Bhati (Randeep Hooda).

The petrified lass is shoved into the back of a mini-truck and driven off to a hideout in the city's outskirts.

Realising that a ransom call to her dad would be an invitation to big trouble, Mahabir decides to go into hiding with his quarry.

Veera is whisked away first to Ajmer Sharif and from thence to a seedy bolt-hole in the middle of an erosive salt pan in Rajasthan.

When the shock subsides the Stockholm syndrome kicks in. The lady in distress develops a bond with the tormentor.

Up until this point, Highway, notwithstanding the off-beat captor-captive dynamics, looks like standard fare.
But the back stories that emerge as well as the ride ahead contain startling twists.

The loquacious Veera has a dark secret buried in her past. The strong-headed Mahabir, on his part, is nursing the effects of a rough childhood.
As they begin to chip away at each other's brittle outer shells, an extraordinary love story, shorn of all hints of carnality and built solely on the need for mutual solace, takes shape.

Not all of it is convincing though. For one, the heroine's shift from the initial pangs of fright to the ultimate sense of freedom in captivity appears arbitrarily rushed.
Moreover, the gangster's messed-up mind is revealed only in sporadic, fuzzy snatches.
It is established a bit facilely that crime is the bitter man's rebellion against wrongs heaped on his mother by an abusive father and an unfeeling society.

Impressive vistas and an eclectic musical score made up of a lullaby, a pop mash-up and Sufi ditties, among much else, provide the backdrop to the girl's outward and inward voyage of discovery.

Highway bears the unmistakable Imtiaz Ali stamp. The songs are niftily integrated into the narrative; the focus is squarely on the plot; and the female protagonist isn't a mere object of desire.

The film would have been a bigger triumph had the plot, which hinges on a collision between two diametrically dissimilar individuals and worlds, packed a little more punch.

As the slim storyline unfolds, it becomes clear that the hostage-taker and the victim, despite coming from different ends of the Delhi NCR social spectrum, have a lot in common.
Their scarred psyches draw them closer to each other, but not in the manner associated with standard screen romance.

It is here that Highway takes a wonderful detour into fresh territory.

It adopts a novel mode to address issues pertaining to the class and culture divide, the exploitation of women in feudal communities, and the safety, or lack of it, of the girl child within and without the family.

Imtiaz Ali litters the narrative with little touches that speak of human connections in ways that are disarmingly simple but effective.

Veera asks her captor: "What do you like more - the sea or the mountain?"
"I have never seen the sea," Mahabir replies. "I love the mountains too," the girl concludes airily.

A little later, Veera is perched on a rock in the middle of a gushing river, the waters swirling all around her.

We do not hear her, but see her guffawing and gesticulating uncontrollably, visibly asking herself why she is cracking up.

The audience does know the answer: the onset of true joy has opened "the knots" in her mind.

That is exactly what Veera would have wanted in the first place when she talked her feckless fianc into taking her on a drive in the middle of the night.

The ever-dependable Randeep Hooda delivers a solid performance.
A measure of his confidence in his craft is provided by the restraint that he brings to the characterisation, never seeking to get ahead of the plot.

Alia Bhatt is a revelation. She responds to the demands of the role with all the skill at her disposal, nailing both the vulnerability and the tenacity of a harried but spirited ingnue.

The burden of the film's message is: when the home and the world feel like a cage, the wide open road, no matter where it leads, is a surefire path to liberation.
Imtiaz Ali articulates this thought with a sense of quiet purpose, and with Zen-like serenity.

But that is not to say that Highway is anywhere near perfect.

It has many a moment that is endearing and exquisitely etched, but the film is not always engaging enough to be able to offset the occasional inertia that stems from its lack of physical action.

But doubtless, Highway is a must watch as much for what it is as for what it isn't.

It is not a typical romantic drama, nor an average love story. It is a road movie with a difference.

Highway dishes out a trip that is definitely worth the price of the ticket.
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Posted: 11 years ago
#63
^ Good reviews of Highway .. 👏

Looking fwd to seeing with this movie
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Posted: 11 years ago
#65
Watched a wonderful subtle movie (with no masala and item songs) after a long time. Aliya and Randeep are fantastic. People who like masala movies stay away but for others it's a must watch.
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Posted: 11 years ago
#66
i am so excited watching in the afternoon(EST)
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Posted: 11 years ago
#67
Waiting to watch this movie. Looks its away from crappy masala movies and thank god for that
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Posted: 11 years ago
#68

Highway

Srijana Mitra Das, TNN, Feb 20, 2014, 05.41PM IST
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Tags:Highway Movie Review|Highway
STILL FROM THE MOVIE
Critic's Rating: 3.5/5
Cast: Randeep Hooda, Alia Bhatt
Direction: Imtiaz Ali
Genre: Drama
Duration: 2 hours 14 minutes
Avg Readers Rating: 4/5
  • Times Of India
  • Mumbai Mirror
Story: Wealthy Veera is kidnapped by brutish Mahavir. Is she on a Highway leading to hell - or away?

Review: Straight up, Highway is not a sunny, funny road-trip. It is Imtiaz Ali's starkest, darkest work yet. Rich Veera (Bhatt) steps away from her Monsoon Wedding-style shaadi preparations (a handheld camera capturing gold, ghaghras and a girl going, "Bhaiyya, flavvers lappet do!") for a break with her reluctant fiance. Driving into a foggy Delhi night, Veera steps out to breathe free - and gets kidnapped by violent criminal Mahavir Bhaati (Hooda) and his gang. Gagged, tied-up, slapped and starved, Veera's thrown onto a terrifying truck that drives off on a never-ending highway, leaving established society far behind. What does Veera experience on this trip?

  • Highway: Trailer

  • AR Rahman's 'Maahi Ve' from 'Highway'

  • Highway: 'Sooha Saha' song making

  • Highway: 'Patakha Guddi' song

  • Top 5 reasons to watch 'Highway'


  • Official Site


Highway belongs unabashedly to Alia Bhatt. Her Veera is stunning - sincere and simple, prettily earnest, shakily emotional. Bhatt's range and prowess are evident in her timid confidence, the slow swagger Veera gains as she takes control of the situation, captivating her captor, confronting assault. Hooda's Mahavir is frightening, tightly controlled, the actor conveying dark dislike with crackling tension, switching to bewilderment with comic ease. Alongside, Aaroo (Durgesh Kumar), Mahavir's companion, who breaks into a delightful trance-wala dance with Veera as she sways to 'English music' on the road, is memorable.

But what stamps this film indelibly is its sheer boldness. Imtiaz Ali must be congratulated for his daring novelty, for a powerful heroine-centric story, for his heroine who looks like a Vermeer painting dressed in a dusty ghaghra. At times, Highway feels like an unending Bharat darshan, a long look at suffering souls through several deserts and eucalyptus trees. But some meandering is its only flaw. Watch it for its cathartic creativity, for colours akin to Iranian palettes, for sound design where melting qawwalis, chirruping crickets and a screeching train make layers of noise - for that shot where Veera rests her head on a pillow of water.

Highway is not an easy ride. But it offers fresh breezes and new sights.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/entertainment/hindi/movie-review/highway/movie-review/30733812.cms?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=referral
Edited by .Shona93 - 11 years ago
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Posted: 11 years ago
#69
Looking forward to catch this movie.Really intrigued by reviews here.😃
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Posted: 11 years ago
#70

Highway is Alia Bhatt's homecoming!

Posted February 21, 2014 @ 12:56 pm
by Subhash Jha

Being in the world this enchanting film inhabits is like being in the state of a waking dream. The world is fatally flawed. But it's also beautiful in spite of the deep flaws, or maybe because of them?

No other actress could have played Veera with such infectious passion as Alia, who breathes fire and life into every moment of her screen time.

Imtiaz Ali's new intriguing work takes us into the heartland of India, much in the same way that "Jab We Met" and to a lesser extent "Rockstar" did. Imtiaz loves his India. With all its gigantic contradictions, anomalies and aberrations.

And Veera, the arresting protagonist of "Highway", is an anomaly herself. A misfit, akin to the one that Parineeti Chopra played so aptly in "Hasee Toh Phasee" recently. Alia's performance nails Veera with a persuasiveness that belies her two-film old history.

Veera is a girl ridden with complexities and contradictions. Wealthy and spoilt, in a superbly staged highway drama, she is kidnapped on the eve of her wedding by a hood, played by Hooda with his habitual clenched intensity.

The rest of the narrative is pretty much in character with what we expect in a film that constructs its wistful fable out of the harsh reality of the ailment known as the Stockholm Syndrome. Going by the book of "How To Fall In Love With Your Kidnapper", Veera promptly falls for her scowling kidnapper whose associates (played effectively) conveniently fall off the plot's radar to leave the lovers alone.

Whether Veera genuinely feels a love or whether that love is born out of defiant rejection of the life of luxury and affluence, we will never know. As played majestically by Alia, Veera appears to be a bundle of snarled contradictions, some compelling, others purely annoying.

At times we feel she is doing what she is doing and behaving in that gratingly headstrong manner only to get even with the life that she wants to leave behind.

"Highway" is riddled with ironies, not necessarily intentional. Veera falls in love with Mahabir's angst-laden past, but is aware she has no future ahead with him. So the tragic ending, when it comes, is no surprise. A responsible director can't be accused of glorifying a life of crime. Hence in the end, the entire premise of the love story, constructed with painstaking intensity, falls apart all of a sudden, leaving us with a sense of emptied-out expectations.

But the journey, while it lasts, is exhilarating and even inspiring. No Bollywood filmmaker shoots the Indian heartland with the aesthetic affection of Imtiaz Ali. On this occasion, he has cinematographer Anil Mehta to capture the sand and the snow, the angst and the ecstasy in enrapturing welters. Mehta is the magician behind the film's textured feel.

Many passages in this voyage through North India are sheer poetry.

No other actress could have played Veera with such infectious passion as Alia, who breathes fire and life into every moment of her screen time. Luckily, she is there almost across the entire length and breadth of the narrative imbuing the canvas with tender glory and slender strength.

A lot of the film's blemishes - for example, the predictability of the plot and the rather strained attempts to introduce an element of grim social realism, are covered up by the sheer spontaneity of the main performance.

Matching Alia's fearless portrayal is the director who steals up into her darkest secrets and then allows the character to smell the air's freedom in a world where the stench of decadence is a given. You can't escape corruption and violation except when thrown together with someone who is as violated as you are. This is what Veera's tale of road romance seems to say.

In some vital ways, "Highway" resembles Gyan Correa's Gujarati masterpiece "The Good Road". One sequence where the kidnap victim helps her kidnappers to escape detection by the police at a check-point on the highway is almost inter-changeable in the two films.

In Correa's film you could empathize with the child protagonist's growing attachment to the truckers. In "Highway", it's really hard to be one with the wayward Veera's heart.

Randeep Hooda is in fine, if somewhat typecast, shape. Though his accent is distracted from his performance, the character's pain made itself apparent through its mawkish mother-fixated past-history.

It's tough if not impossible to make a politically correct film about a rich girl falling in love with her kidnapper. To a very large extent, "Highway" manages to travel a credible road, letting the sleeping dogs lie by simply believing in Veera's truth (for whatever it may be worth).

Admirably, Imtiaz Ali is not afraid of silences. The sound design by Resul Pookutty is rich in the sounds of nature. The bubble of the brook, the chirp of a bird, the groan of a tired soul and breaking of a heart...are all tangible. A special mention must be made of the texture of incidental noises on the soundtrack and the quality of the folk songs that play in the background as Veera and her kidnapper traverse a spectrum of cultures in search of...what??? We really don't know!

At the end, we are left with a deeply dissatisfying film whose very incompleteness lends a sense of beauty to the narrative. "Highway" is a sprawling stretch of splendour, created by a director who shoots every frame in a painter's vein. Layered, luminous and evocative, this is a world that M.F. Hussain would have created if he were a filmmaker.

Is this really a film? Or is it a poem that spills out metres of magnificence in a road journey where you measure life's worth not in years, but in kilometers.

MTV RATES: 3.5/5

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