Toilet : Ek Prem Katha Review&BO (Reviews Page 1) - Page 12

Created

Last reply

Replies

316

Views

40.4k

Users

73

Likes

769

Frequent Posters

-Piku- thumbnail
11th Anniversary Thumbnail Sparkler Thumbnail + 4
Posted: 8 years ago
Faridoon ShahryarVerified account @iFaridoon
More

What's most significant about #ToiletEkPremKatha is the fact that it boldly n progressively questions certain age old customs n practices


Faridoon ShahryarVerified account @iFaridoon
More

For any society,any faith..it's very important to update with times n to reinvent themselves for a better future!! #ToiletEkPremKatha


Faridoon ShahryarVerified account @iFaridoon
More

Akshay stands up 4 women rights n goes the whole distance to move the mountains of superstitions n ridiculous practises #ToiletEkPremKatha


RJ ALOKVerified account @OYERJALOK
More

Performance Message Cinematography Moments Dialogues #ToiletEkPremKatha @akshaykumar @psbhumi Divyendu n Sudheer ji #RjAlok


taran adarshVerified account @taran_adarsh
More

#ToiletEkPremKatha mirrors a reality, shuns superstition, hits where it hurts through brilliant dialogue. Deft direction and skilful writing

1112805 thumbnail
Posted: 8 years ago
There are films that good great message with light entertainment or gripping drama.

Then there are films which are preachy and Toilet seems likes to fit the bill here
TheDarkRock thumbnail
19th Anniversary Thumbnail Visit Streak 30 Thumbnail Voyager Thumbnail
Posted: 8 years ago
2.5 stars from Anupama Chopra
https://twitter.com/anupamachopra/status/895931760340606977
llanswerll thumbnail
10th Anniversary Thumbnail Navigator Thumbnail Fascinator 1 Thumbnail
Posted: 8 years ago

Originally posted by: rockrahul

Toilet: Ek Prem KathaMovie Review - Akshay Kumar's Film Stinks To High Heaven

Toilet: Ek Prem Katha Movie Review - Akshay Kumar's film is inspired by a true story, but little that it offers by way of insight rings true. Some of the dialogues are cringe-worthy, the drama gratingly shrill and the solutions utterly facile


Entertainment | Saibal Chatterjee | Updated: August 11, 2017 12:39 IST


Rating: 2 Stars (Out Of 5)

When what should at best have been a ten-minute public service film bloats into a two-and-a-half-hour, patience-testing, yawn-inducing Bollywood puff-job for a government scheme, it is bound to stink to high heaven. Toilet: Ek Prem Katha does. Editor-director Shree Narayan Singh presents a corny, cringe-worthy mix of entertainment and edification in the service of the much tom-tommed Swachh Bharat campaign. In the end, it is no more than a filmed pamphlet - patchy, pulpy, preachy and painfully protracted.

The partisanship on show here is unprecedented for a Mumbai mainstream flick. When it refers to a big toilet scam, it points out that all of it happened four years ago. It also slips in a laudatory reference to demonetisation too and completely exposes its hand. It is one thing for a political dispensation to equate the Prime Minister's optics-heavy swachhata abhiyan with Mahatma Gandhi's untouchabilty-negating, status quo-defying cleanliness experiments, quite another for a Bollywood film to follow suit. It only dilutes the integrity of an undeniably relevant message.
akshay kumar facebook

Toilet: Ek Prem Katha - Akshay Kumar in a film's still (Courtesy: TEPKTheFilm)

The film's flimsy approach and flaccid structure do not help matters one bit. By the time it lumbers its way to an entirely predictable and unconvincing climax, Toilet: Ek Prem Katha is crying out to be flushed down the very drain it has popped up from. There is very little genuine cinema here. It's all overly melodramatic propaganda of the kind that is better left to the sarkari outreach machinery.

The performances are earnest, if not extraordinary, with Akshay Kumar, trying hard to look 36, leading the way. Bhumi Pednekar, in her second outing after 2015's sleeper hit Dum Laga Ke Haisha, fleshes out a refreshingly relatable college topper who becomes the principal catalyst for a mini-revolution in an immutable village.

Not that the urgency of the theme can be downplayed. After all, more than half the people who defecate in the open reside in this country. But surely there are ways more subtle and less fawning of getting that obvious point across. That's way beyond this film's ken.

Toilet: Ek Prem Katha is about a man compelled by his bride to think of building a pucca latrine in the village. In his conservative neck of the woods, he must move heaven and earth to achieve his goal. The film follows him as he negotiates a series of obstacles, most of them stemming from the obscurantist ways of the village.


The film is inspired by a true story, but little that it offers by way of insight rings true. Some of the dialogues are cringe-worthy, the drama gratingly shrill and the solutions utterly facile.

The intent of Toilet: Ek Prem Katha may be commendable. The execution is hugely hamfisted. When a Bollywood filmmaker assumes the role of a cheerleader for a government campaign on whose efficacy the jury is still out, you know you've been had.

Toilet: Ek Prem Katha is as avoidable as what it rightly rails against - open defecation.

http://www.ndtv.com/entertainment/toilet-ek-prem-katha-movie-review-akshay-kumars-film-stinks-to-high-heaven-1736366


Someone said that NDTV will give negative review and there you go.
DayanHunter thumbnail
8th Anniversary Thumbnail Navigator Thumbnail
Posted: 8 years ago
Going to watch tepk this Sunday .First akki movie in theatre 😆
Reviews are good so I'm expecting paisa vasool drama.
1119479 thumbnail
Posted: 8 years ago
I'll probably watch it over the weekend!
-Piku- thumbnail
11th Anniversary Thumbnail Sparkler Thumbnail + 4
Posted: 8 years ago
Going tomo night. Should have booked for tonight 😭
-Piku- thumbnail
11th Anniversary Thumbnail Sparkler Thumbnail + 4
Posted: 8 years ago

Toilet Ek Prem Katha Review

Watch Anupama Chopra's movie review of Toilet Ek Prem Katha, starring Akshay Kumar, Bhumi Pednekar, Anupam Kher, Sana Khan and Divyendu Sharma. The movie is directed by Shree Narayan Singh.


Toilet: Ek Prem Katha is perhaps the world's first love story to hinge entirely around a toilet. In a country where more people have access to mobile phones than loos, the subject is important and relevant. Inspired by true incidents, it's also compelling material for cinema a girl walks out of her loving husband's home because it doesn't have a bathroom. It's wonderful that Akshay Kumar and Neeraj Pandey have put their might behind this unique and powerful story. Sadly, the film that has emerged doesn't do justice to the cause or the good intentions.

Admittedly, director Shree Narayan Singh and writers Siddharth Singh and Garima Wahal have a tough task they have to wrap an inherently icky topic with enough entertainment to make it palatable. This is a film on defecation. We begin with the Lota party a group of women going into the field at the crack of dawn. Almost every scene has a reference to toilet, sauch, sandas. How do you get people to sit through it?

Humour is an obvious recourse. The best lines come from Divyendu Sharma who plays younger brother to Akshay Kumar's Keshav. With a cheery presence and deft comic timing, Divyendu adds much needed lightness to a film borne down by its own weight.

The first half features a somewhat weird love story between Keshav and Jaya, played nicely by Bhumi Pednekar. First he stalks her and then she stalks him. There's a drawn out sub-plot about how they fool Keshav's superstitious father and marry. We are told that Keshav is 36 years old, which is also a bit of a stretch. But the various threads keep you hooked. And Shree manages to make Keshav walking Jaya to the fields in the morning genuinely romantic. He even sweetly wishes her good luck.

The film has largely been shot on location in and around Mathura. The look and feel is authentic. Shree is too fond of top shots but he gets the textures of small town UP. Akshay and Bhumi play off each other nicely Jaya is tough and smart. Keshav is laidback and a bit of a wuss especially when it comes to confronting his unreasonable father. But underneath the timidity is a strong man who wants to empower and support his wife.

But once Keshav's confrontation gathers steam, Toilet: Ek Prem Katha wobbles. The second half becomes a litany of lectures, brazen plugs for the government, tedious song sequences, a 3000-crore toilet scam and an inexplicable change of heart. The women who once mocked Jaya suddenly decide that they have had enough of their gossip and Lota party. Everything is stitched together hurriedly. There is too much preaching and not enough punch. At over two and a half hours, it's too long and not very satisfying.

I must repeat that it's refreshing to see Hindi cinema tackle such challenging subjects. But a film has to work as a film. This one does, in fits and starts. I'm going with two and a half stars.


[YOUTUBE]https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=51&v=-mPCLe5tPxI[/YOUTUBE]

Edited by -Piku- - 8 years ago
1119479 thumbnail
Posted: 8 years ago

'Toilet: Ek Prem Katha': A directorial triumph (Review)

Film: "Toilet: Ek Prem Katha"; Director: Shree Narayan Singh; Cast: Akshay Kumar, Bhumi Pednekar, Divyendu Sharma, Sudhir Pande and Anupam Kher; Rating: ****

Friday, August 11, 2017 | 1:05:04 AM IST (+05:30 GMT)
0 Comments | By IANS

Film: "Toilet: Ek Prem Katha"

Director: Shree Narayan Singh

Cast: Akshay Kumar, Bhumi Pednekar, Divyendu Sharma, Sudhir Pande and Anupam Kher

Rating: ****

There is a point of no return in the plot when we, the audience, become so immersed in the protagonist's crusade for a better tomorrow that we are cheering and stomping our feet in encouragement for that bright sunshine-drenched tomorrow of which Sahir Ludhianvi dreamt in "Pyaasa" and "Phir Subah Hogi".

Our protagonist Madhav's battle is not really reformatory in the way the great heroes of our times meant it to be. In Hrishikesh Mukherjee's "Satyakam", when the protagonist Dharmendra marries the rape victim, he does it with the least amount of self-congratulations. In "Toilet: Ek Prem Katha", Akshay Kumar's mission to build a toilet for his wife is compared with Shah Jahan building the Taj Mahal for his wife.

I wonder who should feel more affronted by such flamboyant self-glorification: Moghul history or Modi politics. Either way, there is much too much self-congratulations and heroic hurrahs playing at the foreground of this eventful drama, accompanied by an over-punctuated background score.

Akshay Kumar means business. This film is not so much a vehicle to promote the Prime Minister's Swachh Bharat campaign as to promote Akshay Kumar, period. He milks the film for all his trademark chuckles and giggles, making Madhav seem like a Basu Chatterjee hero with a certain sly and smooth sinewiness to his heroism.

It is debutant director Shree Narayan Singh who proves you don't need extra sinewiness to shine in every frame. He is the Basu Chatterjee and Hrishikesh Mukherjee of our times. He makes hygiene and sanitation seem humorous without trivialising or tempering the issue. The sorority evidenced among the village women as they troop off in the morning for nature's call is captured with a respectful laugh.

Here is proof that a film can make a social point without wearing a constantly sullen demeanour.

Throughout the lengthy film, the director maintains a kinetic momentum. He has his character's feelings on his fingertips. He digs into the high-points in the drama with the disarmed delight of a kid scooping into a bowl of icecream. He negotiates the dips and curves in this bombastic tale of a man who must fight 'sanskaar' (no no, not the kind favoured by the censor board) to build a toilet for his newly married wife.

A warm earthiness and a nimble wisdom pervade the storytelling. The plot is a pyramid of high-pitched drama captured in the basic colours of nature's components by cinematographer Anshuman Mahaley (he had shot the first "Jolly LLB" film using an equally gritty palate). That the director is also the editor, helps him to remain on top of the commodious material. But the film could have been shortened post-interval where some of the toilet-building drama gets repetitive and shrill.

Though the high-pitched propagandist tenor and tone of the narration become overpowering after a point -- as does Akshay Kumar's exaggerated humanism -- the film keeps us absolutely close to its heart as Madhav and Jaya's love story acquires a universality by dint of their intimate affinity to the grassroot level of existence.

Akshay Kumar and Bhumi Pednekar play against one another in sparring spasms, their age difference notwithstanding. They look like a couple. The real performing sparks fly when the supporting cast Sudhir Pande, Divyendu Sharma, Anupam Kher are around to lend heft to the socio-political argument on how women in rural India need dignity before empowerment.

This is essentially a cause-without-pause melodrama set at an opulent octave. Happily, director Shree Narayan Singh counterbalances those shrill notes of self-righteousness and propaganda with just the right doses of warmth, humour and irony.

Don't look for subtlety in the storytelling in "Toilet: Ek Prem Katha" and you will come away a happy viewer with some relevant thoughts on how non-metropolitan India exists without caving into a depression.

Edited by Niks77 - 8 years ago
bips thumbnail
20th Anniversary Thumbnail Visit Streak 500 Thumbnail + 8
Posted: 8 years ago

Originally posted by: RightWingTroll

I predict NDtv and indian express review will be negative

As they hate modi government

Masand review might be average as this might not be upto his taste


I don't watch ndtv... But indian express is a very good newspaper... They don't hate modi govt... They are doing their job as media to critique any step by the govt... ...


If you ever read indian express during Congress time, you would know ki kitni zyaada dhulaai karte theyy yeh log congress and unke scams ki... They never spared congress at all


Being critical of the govt is the job of a newspaper


On topic - fingers crossed.. I like bhumi and i hope the movie is hit so she can get more roles

Related Topics

Bollywood Thumbnail

Posted by: oyebollywood

6 months ago

Jaya Bachchan Takes A Dig At Toilet Ek Prem Katha

https://www.indiaforums.com/article/jaya-bachchan-takes-a-dig-at-akshay-kumars-film-toilet-ek-prem-katha-ye-koi-naam-hai-ye-flop-hai_219484

https://www.indiaforums.com/article/jaya-bachchan-takes-a-dig-at-akshay-kumars-film-toilet-ek-prem-katha-ye-koi-naam-hai-ye-flop-hai_219484
Expand ▼
Bollywood Thumbnail

Posted by: oyebollywood

2 months ago

The Bengal Files - Reviews And Box Office

https://x.com/vivekagnihotri/status/1946940660067803443...

https://x.com/vivekagnihotri/status/1946940660067803443
Expand ▼
Bollywood Thumbnail

Posted by: oyebollywood

17 days ago

Baaghi 4 - Reviews And Box Office

https://x.com/UmairSandu/status/1962932305451716881

https://x.com/UmairSandu/status/1962932305451716881
Expand ▼
Bollywood Thumbnail

Posted by: oyebollywood

17 days ago

Lokah Chapter 1 Chandra - Reviews Box Office

Has any one seen this movie...

Expand ▼
Bollywood Thumbnail

Posted by: Maroonporsche

1 months ago

War 2 -Movie Reviews & BO Discussion

https://x.com/umairsandu/status/1954950592771895651?s=46 Tis is review thread ?

https://x.com/umairsandu/status/1954950592771895651?s=46
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".