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Faridoon Shahryar
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.#October lingers on long after it's over.Its a film that says a lot and yet a lot is left unsaid n that's where the beauty lies.Juhi Chaturvedi has outclassed herself as a writer n so has Shoojit.Truly a SPECIAL collaboration.Varun's honesty is Intense.Banita is a revelation!!
RAJ BANSAL
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#October in April ... changing seasons. The @Varun_dvn @ShoojitSircar s film is carrying super reports. Cant wait to see this film. @OctoberFilm2018
Sumit kadel
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#October to have a limited release across India. Main focus on major cities multiplexes. Film will have a decent opening providing @Varun_dvn stardom & @ShoojitSircar da brand of cinema.
Amitabh Bachchan
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T 2772 - "OCTOBER" film, '' ( harshringaar ) , gentle, soft, Krishn called it 'Paarijaat', in Bengal 'Shiuli'
unique tree, does not wait flowers to give fruits or seeds... blooms in moonlight... sheds the flowers before sunrise, like a weeping shower...
(Image credit: October/Twitter)
Living a carefree life as a hotel intern, Dan's (Varun Dhawan) life revolves around his friends. Sudden turn of events weave together another intern, Shiuli (Banita Sandhu) and Dan's lives in a bond that changes his life forever. The makers had said, 'October' is not a love story but rather a story about love and you wait to find out.
Varun Dhawan is one of the most bankable actors in Bollywood, with his last film Judwaa 2 delivering overwhelming business. And he is trying something entirely different in 'October'. But does it work for him?
Dan is a simpleton without any aim or ambition in life but finds a direction after an unfortunate incident. The emotions are just right on the big screen when Varun is in the hospital and is curious about how things are moving.
Just like Badlapur, he takes us on a ride through an array of emotions and his honesty comes across on the screen.
With movies like Pink, Piku to his credit, expectations are high on Shoojit Sircar on delivering yet another blockbuster. And he handles the script by Juhi Chaturvedi to the point.
It is daring of Banita to take a role of suffering patient in her debut film, knowing there wasn't much for her to perform. She gets some scenes in the first half of the movie but you do empathise with her character and want to know what will happen with her.
The movie was predictable but you still want to know how the climax shapes up.
The movie hall was divided when it came to liking the film. And so were the people who accompanied us to the movie.
For me, the movie has its heart in the right place and the perfect emotional quotient.
October@OctoberFilm2018Dan & Shiuli at their filmy best! Dubai is ready to witness this unique story of love today at the October World Premiere.@Varun_dvn @BanitaSandhu @ShoojitSircar @ronnielahiri @writeonj @Kinoworksllp @filmsrisingsun @ZeeMusicCompany #October
May be the movie is not for everybody. But it is a Varun Dhawan- Shoojit Sircar you shouldn't miss.
Movie: October
Starring: Varun Dhawan Banita Sandhu and Gitanjali Rao
Directed by Shoojit Sircar
Now playing at theatres in the UAE
Rating: 3/5
http://gulfnews.com/leisure/movies/reviews/october-review-varun-dhawan-film-will-try-your-patience-1.2204167
Despite stellar performances by the lead stars, the movie crawls at a mind-numbing pace



It's best to rip the band-aid off about October, featuring Varun Dhawan and Banita Sandhu as two colleagues who are united by a freak accident: this film was as exciting as getting my blood drawn from a nurse for visa renewal purposes. Even a gloomy celluloid version of an anaesthetic, if you will.
Barring riveting performances from its principal actors and nuggets of wry humour, this drama with tragic undertones crawls at a mind-numbing pace. It's one of those films that takes pride in being pretentious, arty and hyperbolic. October may have worked wonderfully as a short story, but it made for a laborious watch when translated on the big screen.
Directed by Indian National Award-winning Shoojit Sircar, October is a tale about Dan, 21, in the throes of a grim quarter-life crisis. He's a hotel management trainee who's constantly doing graveyard shifts in a star hotel in Delhi, but finds his monotonous existence rocked when his colleague (Sandhu) plummets to the floor. He finds an innocuous connection with this sprightly young woman who is now strapped to a hospital bed fighting for her life, and his misplaced empathy as he feverishly follows her progress is what October is all about.
Your heart goes out to Dan, played impeccably by Dhawan, who's stripped off all the trademark Bollywood macho hero stamps. He's a happily miserable bloke and his eccentricities make for slivers of hope in this otherwise sleep-inducing drama.
Sandhu, who makes an impressive Hindi film debut in her role as Shuili Iyer, uses her large limpid eyes as an effective tool for communication. Her distraught mother, played by a well-balanced Gitanjali Rao, is another revelation in this film. But collective good performances and gorgeous cinematography don't always make for life-altering films. But what comes as a relief is that, just like the hospital environs, October is intoxicatingly melodrama-free a rarity in Bollywood features but doesn't ever turn sterile.
The survivors' guilt experienced by Dan and Shuili's family is subtly brought out. The way they grapple with the tragedy of watching their loved one being struck down in her prime is emotionally potent. While the circumstances are grim in this well-cast film, Sircar and writer Juhi Chaturvedi still manage to insert dollops of humour. The verbal sparring between Dan and a nurse is absolute gold. Sircar also does a splendid job of bringing alive the brass tacks of the perennially demanding and taxing hotel industry. It's a ringside view of all their drudgery and it isn't all pretty.
But the biggest let-down is that none of the characters leave a lasting impression or stir your soul. Everyone seems to be in slow-motion in this film and it's often exhausting to wait for that elusive emotional punch. Don't beat yourself up if you find yourself stoically unaffected by the ordeal that Dan and Shiuli are subjected to.
While it's impressive that October thwarts the foundation of a Bollywood film with its song and melodrama-free stand, this film will try your patience. Watch this at your own risk.
Prashant NDTV INDIA
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#October is simple but superb, credit goes to shoojit, @Varun_dvn proves himself once again, lovable performance by him, Shantanu's Music plays an important role and all praises for Banita.
Sudhish Kamath
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October: A rare beautiful film about caring, selflessness, empathy and love like you have seen before in our movies. Varun Dhawan is terrific but it's the writer Juhi Chaturvedi who wins ours hearts again. Thank you Shoojit for this brave and understated sublime poem.
Danesh Walia (Varun) is a bratty but lovable intern at a five-star hotel in Delhi. Shiuli Iyer (Banita) is his colleague. A life-altering incident changes the way they look at each other. And, also how Dan begins to view life.
Some films are a breeze, others are a balm. October belongs to the latter category. It talks of a life situation none of us ever want to be in, but you never know what cards you get dealt with.
The film begins on a routine note dealing with the mundane lives of young hotel interns, who have to strive hard. On another note, it is a window to the tougher face of the hospitality industry and it compels you to rethink your tipping habits. However, that's not what October is about.
After introducing us to the two lead characters and their group of friends, the film subtly hints at a camaraderie between the quiet, diligent Shiuli (named after a flower) and the precocious Dan. Nothing is pronounced, yet there is a hint of love between the two who are diametrically opposite by nature.
Without really giving out the plot, one can only reveal that when Shiuli meets with an accident, Dan metamorphosises. His devil-may-care attitude gives way for a responsible, caring one; a friend who is determined to see to it that Shiuli gets a chance at life again.
Shoojit (of Vicky Donor, Madras Cafe and Piku fame) is a sensitive and masterful storyteller who manages to get his audience to invest completely in his cinema. Even this time around, it is no different. Before you know it, you are fully engrossed in the world of the lead pair and though the pace is too indulgent (even 1 hr, 56 minutes seems way too long), you wait patiently for the next turn to unfold because your faith in Shoojit's cinema is unshakeable. His favourite writer Juhi Chaturvedi (Vicky Donor and Piku) is also a great motivating force. She keeps her lines real and at the same time, delivers enough punches to make you ponder and laugh.
Avik Mukhopadhyay's camera work is A-grade. Whether it's the Delhi fog, pollution or the autumn greenery, he allows his lens to capture each detail with so much love.
In the performance department, Varun is a revelation. The actor, who is often spoken of as the ideal successor for Salman Khan's Judwaa-type movies, shows you how capable he is of delivering a nuanced performance. He did that earlier in Badlapur, he does it again here. He makes you laugh, cry and love him unconditionally. And by the end of the film, you want to take Dan home to meet your mom.
Banita shows spark and with some nurturing, she could be poised for big things in Bollywood. The supporting cast deserves praise too, especially Shiuli's mother, Professor Vidya Iyer (Gitanjali).
If you're the sort who doesn't give up on life easily, you should watch October. It's got passion and more importantly, it's got soul
BY MASALA.COM REPORTER Thursday, 12 April 2018
Starring- Varun Dhawan, Banita Sandhu
Director- Shoojit Sircar
Writer- Juhi Chaturvedi
Rating - 3.5
October is one of the most beautiful tragedies to come out from Hindi Cinema. It challenges all rules of a conventional tragedy and presents life as is. October then ceases to become a movie but an experience. You feel like a fly on that hotel/hospital wall as the tragedy of a young girl spools out in front of you.
Let me elaborate on how unconventional a tragedy October is. Evoking emotions in viewers is a tricky job. Most pieces of art, be it books or movies, first presents happy characters in happy spaces and situations, shooting some happy breeze. Once the reader or the viewer is involved in their happy world, falling in love with these charismatic characters, is when makers decide to bring in a tragic moment, a technique used for maximum impact. This is the lowest hanging fruit, a manipulative tool we have seen in so many movies - an accident, a mishap, a rape followed by gory details that leave you mostly disgusted than emotionally moved. (Only a few films keep it subtle like Konkana's character being raped in 15 Park Avenue or Rajat Kapoor's death in Kapoor and Sons.)
Hindi films also drill a sense of loss using jarring background score that makes you cry mainly because of a headache than feeling any feelings for the characters. October is such a refreshing and an effective change to that.
The characters are regular people like you and me. They are not too happy, or too animated or too sad. In fact Dan is mostly frustrated and grumpy (something that's not explained in the movie.). He deals with a colleague's tragedy who is not his best friend or girlfriend or even a close friend for that matter, yet he chooses to selflessly look after her at the cost of his personal life and career. And it is then that the film becomes so universally human. There is a quotable quote in Dan's room that reads - 'Are you there as a solution or are you there as a part of the problem?' That pretty much sums up his role in the movie.
Even the moment of tragedy is shot matter of factly. There is no impending danger looming large, no run up. It's so sudden that it hits you the hardest. A young hotel intern Shiuli falls from the third floor of her hotel on a new year's party and the party music continues in the background as it does in real life. So bloody real! No sitars or violins start playing in the background as the scene shifts to the hospital's ICU. Instead you hear patients' heavy, assisted ventilated breathing mixed with machines and monitors constantly beeping, medical jargon thrown across the room as the girl is examined by doctors. This will make you uncomfortable and cry incessantly if you have ever experienced the horror of hospital corridors and waiting rooms.
The film, like Waiting, humanises the hospital scenes beautifully. The struggles of a nurse, her lack of a personal life or giving medical advice to fellow patients (because you have spent enough time in the hospital) is shown effectively.
Some might complain it's a slow film. Of course it is slow paced. Recovery of a young girl who has fallen from 30 feet won't happen in a collage of scenes against a happy song where the patient is given flowers by her boyfriend and fed noodles in the hospital room as she hangs her fractured leg in air in colorful plaster cast. This is a Shoojit Sircar-Juhi Chaturvedi (Vicky Donor, Piku) film that presents life as is, without filtering it in anyway.
The film does get a bit repetitive though and disconnected. A scene where Dan's colleague says she wants to have a word with him is suddenly juxtaposed with Dan sleeping in the laundry in the next scene. That seemed too jerky. Also Dan's arguments, with the hospital's watchman and supervisor and a couple of other such sequences lengthen the film, especially when his character of a concerned colleague is established well.
However a few shots are done so beautifully that you feel a knot in your stomach. For instance. the shot when Dan curls up on bed helplessly and the camera captures only his back is gorgeous. It shows how a lot can be conveyed with just body language. Reminded me of a scene in Jaane Tu Ya Jaane Na when Imran Khan hugs Ratna Pathak Shah in a vulnerable moment.
Varun Dhawan is such an earnest performer it breaks my heart. He does sometimes underline an emotion by doing the obvious but he is consistently melancholic throughout the film packing one of his best performances. Banita Sandhu conveys so much with her button eyes. The girl has no dialogues, expressions or movements to use, yet she beautifully portrays Shiuli's helplessness. I can only imagine how daunting and exhausting it must have been for Banita.
In the supporting cast, Gitanjali Rao as Shuili's mother is controlled. She shows a range of being doubtful and hopeful.
October is not a usual film. We might even question what bonded the two lead characters. Some of the scenes are extremely sluggish. Yet the film moved me to tears multiple times. I am happy filmmakers are taking a chance, not sticking to a format and experimenting bravely.
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