Padmaavat BO & Review Thread 2 - 50 DAYS # 300 CR ad counting - Page 2

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jibber-jabber thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago
#11

Originally posted by: LegolasGondolin



Thankyou.. Congrats to all of us..😃

China Dont know.

Maybe later. They had plans of releasing BM too I wonder what happnd to that.


I wish they had released it in China as well. Its doing so well all over the world. Would have smashed records there.
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Posted: 7 years ago
#12
For JimVeer fans😆
Ranveer's Cafe
@ranveercafe69
1h
He [Malik Kafur] is a deliciously, wicked, sultry big black panther kind of a character and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Alauddin #Khilji is a huge tiger, a lion and Malik Kafur is like a panther who slicks around by the side. - @jimSarbh #Padmaavat

Ranveer's Cafe
@ranveercafe69
I felt like Malik Kafur is the only one who understands #Khilji. Like it is said that only a snake can understand the love of another snake. - Jim Sarbh #Padmaavat
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Posted: 7 years ago
#13
Jim Sarbh on collaborating with Veer
Ranveer's Cafe
@ranveercafe69
2h
I had auditioned the part without having read the script and then they told me that Ranveer had suggested me for the part. I got really excited and eager to read the script and then when I finally read it, I was very excited to play this character. - Jim Sarbh #Padmaavat

Ranveer's Cafe
@ranveercafe69
I really enjoyed working with Ranveer Singh. I think he is, as he puts it, an absolute delight to work with. As a co-actor, he is extremely reactive and responsive. - @jimSarbh #Padmaavat

Ranveer's Cafe
@ranveercafe69
2h
Replying to @ranveercafe69
He (Ranveer) always brings energy and ideas and new ways to do a scene and often I would leave the sets after a gruelling long day, after having waited for a long time and many retakes but I would still leave the sets feeling alive... - Jim Sarbh #JimVeer


Ranveer's Cafe
@ranveercafe69
2h
...which can only be felt when two actors (you and your co-actor) are in perfect symbiosis and are striving to reach a kind of peak that you know the scene has potential for. - Jim Sarbh on working with Ranveer Singh #Padmaavat


Ranveer's Cafe
@ranveercafe69
1h
Ranveer Singh gave me that opportunity and I don't think a miracle always strikes but with Ranveer Singh as your co-actor, I always thought we were creating a hospitable environment for a miracle to come and stay with us. - Jim Sarbh #JimVeer #Padmaavat

Ranveer's Cafe
@ranveercafe69
1h
That to me is rare and beautiful quality in a co-actor and if you get it, you should hold on to it. He is a superb, superb guy. - @jimSarbh we love you! #JimVeer
jibber-jabber thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago
#14

Originally posted by: Eggon_Snow

For JimVeer fans😆

Ranveer's Cafe
@ranveercafe69
1h
He [Malik Kafur] is a deliciously, wicked, sultry big black panther kind of a character and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Alauddin #Khilji is a huge tiger, a lion and Malik Kafur is like a panther who slicks around by the side. - @jimSarbh #Padmaavat

Ranveer's Cafe
@ranveercafe69
I felt like Malik Kafur is the only one who understands #Khilji. Like it is said that only a snake can understand the love of another snake. - Jim Sarbh #Padmaavat


I stan and approve loved Malik Kafur so much 😆
His entry was greeted by whistles. Only thing that prevented me from whistling was the fact that I can't whistle. 😆
LegolasGondolin thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago
#15

Originally posted by: jibber-jabber


I wish they had released it in China as well. Its doing so well all over the world. Would have smashed records there.


Well it can release a little late too.

Dangal was released in china.. much later even secret superstar.. Lets see Viacom may try that
LegolasGondolin thumbnail
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Posted: 7 years ago
#16

Originally posted by: jibber-jabber


I stan and approve loved Malik Kafur so much 😆
His entry was greeted by whistles. Only thing that prevented me from whistling was the fact that I can't whistle. 😆


Me too that was a killer entry.. with that shawl and stuff.

He proved his worth to khilji .. what a guy and he loved his master..


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Posted: 7 years ago
#17

Padmaavat Overseas Box Office Update: Loved Worldwide!

Sanjay Leela Bhansali's magnum opus touched the 100 crore mark in just 4 days at the Indian box office.

Even after facing several protests and controversies, Padmaavat is standing strong as bull at the box office. Not only at the Indian box office but also at the overseas box office.

Sanjay Leela Bhansali's magnum opus touched the 100 crore mark in just 4 days at the Indian box office.

Talking about the overseas collections, Padmaavat has successfully managed to mark its outstanding presence over there too. The film has collected a whopping amount of USD $ 12 million (76.24 crore) in its opening weekend. Now, that's a huge number!


With such overwhelming numbers, Padmaavat might get enter in the list of top 10 overseas films soon. To enter this list, this Deepika Padukone, Ranveer Singh and Shahid Kapoor starrer film will have to cross the USD $ 20 million and surpass Salman Khan's Tiger Zinda Hai (USD $ 20 million) total collection.


Out of many benchmarks that Padmaavat has crossed, it has also become Shahid Kapoor's top grosser film of all time. Speaking about his happiness, Shahid recently said, "You know everyone is talking about the top grosser only, but it is a great film. The first feeling that I have is that we have come a long way, it's a year & a half of a journey and there was a time that we were wondering if the film will release or no. So, it's been a very turbulent journey and emotionally very draining, tiring. We were just waiting to showcase a film and share it with everybody. The first thing that I feel is that validated with the fact that the film has come out and people have said so many beautiful things about the film. You feel good about the fact that the intent, with which the film was made, has been seen and people have loved it.

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Posted: 7 years ago
#18
Padmaavat Movie Review

Padmaavat

| Simon Abrams

January 29, 2018 |

The three-star rating that I've given to the equally thrilling and upsetting Indian period spectacular "Padmaavat" does not reflect my personal disagreement with the film's politics. A review's star rating is usually supposed to be a holistic approximation of a critic's response. But "Padmaavat," a controversial adaptation of Malik Muhammad Jayasi's 16th century epic poem, is a different kind of film, and it needs a different sort of review/rating.

"Padmaavat" is, after a certain point, propaganda for a pseudo-traditional and highly romanticized fundamentalist attitude. It is possible to enjoy most of the film without asking yourself why this 11th-century-set drama was made, particularly during scenes where the mild-mannered King Ratan Singh (Shahid Kapoor) and his head-strong queen Padmavati (Deepika Padukone), the rulers of the small kingdom Chittor, try to stop greedy Sultan Alauddin (Ranveer Singh) from abducting Padmavati. But the real trouble starts in the film's final stretch: "Padmaavat" hinges on a dramatic act of of "jauhar," the Hindu ritual where women threatened by rape and/or enslavement set themselves on fire.

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When considering how to review and rate "Padmaavat," I thought of other milestone period dramas that were this ideologically extreme, like "The Birth of a Nation" and "The Passion of the Christ." Those earlier films also seemed designed to appeal to a hypothetical like-minded choir who already shared the filmmaker's point-of-view on the subject. "Padmaavat" is likewise a passion project. Its main appeal stems from its seductive rhetoric. It tries to draw you in and make you see the world through the eyes of its main characters, to better understand the appeal of values that many consider outdated. The movie is a powerful explosive with a very long fuse. "Padmaavat" is, in that sense, exactly the kind of movie that writer/producer/director Sanjay Leela Bhansali ("Black," "Saawariya") set out to make, so I want to try to judge how successfully he and his collaborators convey the story's ideas, apart from the blatant provocation of its ending.

Bhansali implicitly extols questionable concepts of femininity, loyalty, and spirituality, even if "Padmaavat" is more concerned with secular traditions than religious beliefs. Still, try telling that to the right-wing Hindu rioters who, according to Reuters, took to the streets of New Delhi last week to protest the film's depiction of a Muslim Sultan trying to seduce a Hindu queen who has come to symbolize purity, and inner strength. It's hard to imagine being able to talk about this film, or its characters' symbolic importance without getting into a fight about its inherently retrogressive nature. The Huffington Post India's Betwa Sharma notes that the film exposes a raw nerve during her conversation with Indian school-teacher Rakhi, who says that she cannot begin to talk to her family about why she dislikes treating Padmavati as a positive role model: "[My family] said that 'you are anti-national, anti-Hindu and a disgrace to your caste ... "

Still, "Padmaavat" seems to exist to show the beauty of Jayasi's archetypal love story. Through several key scenes, we watch as Bhansali emphasizes Alauddin's secular greed and obsessive character. Singh's intensely committed performance makes you believe in his character's Iago-like malevolence, even when Singh himself goes so far over the proverbial top that he flies into the stratosphere. Singh's charisma makes you believe him when he snarls, grimaces, and even dances out Alauddin's character-defining aggression. Singh's dancing is especially impressive, as in the scene where Alauddin gathers his men and boasts that he's "aloof before heaven." This setpiece is so rousing that it stands out as the best musical number in a film full of strong vocal performances and well-conceived choreography.

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Bhansali also makes Padamavati and Rhatan Singh's relationship look strong enough to be attractive. She does inevitably ask him for permission to kill herself. But that choice feels like a decision that her character would make based on her previous actions. Bhansali convincingly sells Padamavati's perspective in scenes like the one where she defiantly tells Rhatan Singh's treacherous Brahmin adviser what she believes: that "happiness" in a relationship depends on mutual trust, and personal "sacrifice" is only possible when you believe that your physical body is a fleeting expression of your self. Bhansali uses similarly fraught but relatively innocuous scenes to make inflexible characters seem affable and attractive. Consider the scene where Rhatan Singh and Padamavati celebrate the spring festival of Holi by dying each other's faces and ankles with brightly colored powders. It's a genuinely sexy and tender sequence, and it makes you believe that the couple's uneven power dynamic is more level than it really is.

Still: even if you admire the film's craft, what can be said to a viewer incensed at the idea of a woman using self-immolation as a means of standing up for herself? Nothing. I sympathize and share the feelings of actress Swara Bhasker when she asserts, in an open letter to Bhansali, that "Women have the right to live, despite the death of their husbands, male 'protectors', 'owners', 'controllers of their sexuality'... whatever you understand the men to be. Women have the right to liveindependent of whether men are living or not." I also confess that Bhansali momentarily convinced me that, within the context of his drama, Padmavati's representative actions reflected her inner strength. "Padmaavat" is a rare work of pop art that is both powerful and repugnant.


https://www.google.co.in/amp/s/www.rogerebert.com/reviews/amp/padmaavat-2018

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Posted: 7 years ago
#19

Originally posted by: jibber-jabber


I stan and approve loved Malik Kafur so much 😆
His entry was greeted by whistles. Only thing that prevented me from whistling was the fact that I can't whistle. 😆

Let's take an oath to learn it before simba 😉

I'll learn it too
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Posted: 7 years ago
#20

The Films of Sanjay Leela Bhansali: Padmaavat (2018)

Indian auteur Sanjay Leela Bhansali has a new film coming out, the period drama Padmavati. Manish takes a look back at Bhansali's career, spanning two decades and nine films.

After a long production, a controversial promotional tour, and a title change, Sanjay Leela Bhansali's Padmaavat has finally reached theaters. Originally titled Padmavati, the period epic reunites the director with his current favorite actors Deepika Padukone and Ranveer Singh. The actors appeared in Bhansali's previous two films: Goliyon ki Raasleela Ram Leela and Bajirao Mastani. Based on Malik Muhammad Jayasi's poem, this film depicts the Rajput kingdom in the Mewar region of Rajasthan, India, and their efforts to defend themselves against Turkish-Afghani conqueror Alauddin Khilji. After all this anticipation, is Padmaavat actually a good film?

Alauddin Khilji (Singh) is the impulsive, ambitious nephew of the first Sultan of Delhi in the Khilji dynasty. He plots to take the crown from his uncle after marrying the Sultan's daughter Mehrunisa (Aditi Rao Hydari). Meanwhile, Rajput king Ratan Singh (Shahid Kapur) travels to the forests of Senghal to find rare pearls for his first wife Nagmati (Anupriya Goenika). He is wounded by accident by the princess Padmavati (Padukone) and marries her after a brief flirtation. He takes her to his fort in Chittor. When Alauddin hears of Padmavati's enchanting beauty, he becomes obsessed with conquering Chittor and capturing its new queen.

The legend of Padmavati is famous in the state of Rajasthan. Her sacrifice for her kingdom is powerful and she is worshipped as a Goddess Queen. Padmavati and the other Rajput women commit jauhar, ritual suicide in the face of imminent capture. These women chose to set themselves on fire rather than be killed, enslaved or raped. The practice is illegal now, and depictions are considered problematic for its patriarchal implications and possible glorification of honor suicide. In my opinion, the film respects Padmavati's courage, pride, and poise through its direction and framing, without exalting the jauhar act itself.

Even before the intense climax, Padmaavat is a sight to behold. The film looks stunning frame by frame. Bhansali brings back Bajirao Mastani cinematographer Sudeep Chatterjee, whose compositions, lighting, and camerawork are superb. Whether it's a swordfight shot almost entirely in a long take or the contrasts between the Rajput fort in the desert and the blues and silvers of the Delhi palace, Chatterjee's work is to be admired. Naturally, the costumes and art direction are detailed and gorgeous. The musical numbers are filmed with precision and energy, especially the traditional Ghoomar dance and Alauddin's celebratory track.

Deepika Padukone is commanding and graceful in the title role. Her regal stature and confident delivery is inspiring, but Padukone reveals a fire behind the queen's eyes. Her relationship with the Rajput women is one of solidarity; they rally behind her as their leader for her wisdom and composure in the face of terror. The unity between the women makes the climax haunting and compelling. Padmavati even forms a brief but important bond with Alauddin's wife, Mehrunisa. The Delhi queen acknowledges Alauddin's obsession as a vicious crime, and puts her morals above loyalty to her husband to help the Rajputs.

Ranveer Singh's Alauddin is wild, ferocious, impulsive, and unpredictable. He makes the villain deliciously irredeemable and crackling. Historians claim this portrayal is inaccurate, especially the queer implications between he and his loyal eunuch-slave Malik Kafur (Jim Sarbh). Bhansali and his frequent co-writer Prakash Kapadia picked and chose historical elements to craft an unrelenting and unique characterization. Shahid Kapur by contrast is virtuous and righteous, the picture of moral fortitude and strength. His performance highlights his immense respect for integrity and valor, though with some humor and heart. Ratan's romance with Padmavati is pure but lively; alternately Alauddin is lustful and unquenchable.

Padmaavat flirts with Rajput pride leading to their downfall. I don't think Padmaavat goes so far as to criticize the Rajputs, but I also don't think the film leaves their decisions unquestioned. I've only seen the film once, and I'll need some more viewings to catch all of Bhansali's symbolic imagery. Sanjay Leela Bhansali's films require time to unearth their meaning, and I am sure Padmaavat is the same. The film is doing well both in India and abroad, making the top ten at the U.S. box office on opening weekend. After such a long journey to the screen, Padmaavat is a fascinating, striking film


http://www.talkfilmsociety.com/articles/the-films-of-sanjay-leela-bhansali-padmaavat-2018

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