Khoya Khoya Chand movie reviews

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Posted: 17 years ago
#1
From Rediff:


Nice one, Sudhirbhai Mishra

Raja Sen | December 07, 2007 12:57 IST







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It is just so goddamned refreshing to see a period film made with such affection, such glorious reverence.

Khoya Khoya Chand does its best to transport you to the golden era of Bollywood, among archaic lights, melodramatic sets, divas and classic automobiles.

The visual treatment is stunning, and thanks to that and a superbly chosen cast, we get to smell the vintage greasepaint.

And while I profess, increasingly as I think about the film, indulgent affection towards it, I must admit to being clueless as to how the audience unconnected professionally with cinema will perceive it.

Perhaps the in-jokes, at almost every step of the film, will be lost on them. This is an unhesitatingly insider film, Bollywood reflecting on Bollywood, not marked by raw impressions or cynicism. Then again, the audiences might also, in their potentially awestruck viewings of old-school filmmaking in a lovely film, gloss over the movie's flaws. I'm curious.

This isn't Sudhir Mishra's 8 1/2 or his Day For Night, this is his Aviator. It is a glossy, neatly crafted romance set against an era of cinema the director himself is clearly overwhelmed by. The tale is of a pretty young starlet -- who has been more couched than cast, right from an abominably early age -- and her compromise to break into the limelight by giving in to the reigning star. Enter, then, the nascent screenwriter who tells it like it is, and who she ends up falling for.

It is a fine tale of compulsions and choices, of free will and helplessness, of Filmfare Awards and fat financiers. This is one of the filmmaker's most simplistic films, however, where the characters are clearly-delineated but utterly lack subtext. It is a neat love story, conflicted yet obvious, dramatic and basic -- not that there's anything wrong with that.

The basic problem lies in the telling. While not claiming intimate knowledge with the world of the times, I doubt any of us have ever encountered taxiwallahs who spoke like Guru Dutt in Mr & Mrs 55. The films of the 50s are -- as of any era -- not a depiction of the life and times, but a thematic indicator of the ideas, the romance and the box office of the age.

There is a classic scene in Aviator where Katharine Hepburn takes Howard Hughes to lunch with her family, and while there is much wit and repartee, the conversation is still casual enough to be markedly different from the times they are on the set. Khoya, however, is peopled by the stagy set, by men who raise sinister eyebrows and women who delight in the soliloquy. Even though their conflicts and concerns may be real, they behave filmi.

Soha Ali Khan has the meatiest role, an author-backed character that requires her to emote and over-emote, to go from merry to melancholy in a heartbeat, and she manages this rather strongly. Sure, she is given unreal lines, but there is a fiery-eyed conviction as she toils on them, visibly straining to stay in character. It is a solid performance, and -- called on to act for probably the first time in her yet-budding filmography -- she delivers. The film rests on her shoulders, yet she manages to look like a pin-up.

More than that (but with much less to do) is Sonia Jehan, a ravishing beauty brilliantly cast as a diva, and in the film's finest scene outdoes herself when she asks, equal parts coy and manipulative, why she should sign a certain film. Classic.

Rajat Kapoor [Images] is super as a star, first debauched then desperate, and Saurabh Shukla's chubby financier gets all the one-liners. Shiney Ahuja [Images] is occasionally all right with the intensity, but whenever he has to break the glare, when he has to grin and throw stones at a producer's house, the acting effort shows.

It is a tastily put together film -- much credit to cinematographer Sachin K Krishn -- but is bogged down by a self-pitying protagonist. While I could still be persuaded to not wince through the shot of the director weeping and forgetting to say 'Cut!,' Ahuja's writer-director seems too pouty and kerchief-needy -- even as everything falls into his lap. Um, more or less.

Darn the inconsistency. The film starts off unreal but is being narrated by Vinay Pathak as an assistant director, so you sit back and imagine these are romanticised flashbacks as told by a warmly nostalgic chum, and that imparts an air of Bollywoodity to the proceedings. Yet this character loses his omniscient voice, and we are now left on our own -- but the staginess continues.

I'm fine with the film, outside of Shiney Ahuja and the third act. There is much to smile at and much to applaud fondly, and many a cameo. It is a lyrical film, and -- that title song is magnificent -- the music holds together perfectly. I just wish we didn't have the title cards at the end.

Do go watch it. It is a sincere effort, a work born out of sheer love for the medium, and I earnestly wish we would see more films like this.

Rediff Rating:

http://ia.rediff.com/movies/2007/dec/07khoya.htm


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anonmember thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#2

Review: Khoya Khoya Chand is a brave effort


Rajeev Masand / CNN-IBN



Cast: Soha Ali Khan, Shiney Ahuja, Rajat Kapoor

Direction: Sudhir Mishra

Set against the backdrop of 50s and 60s Bollywood, director Sudhir Mishra's Khoya Khoya Chand is about the journey of young hopeful Nikhat Bano, played by Soha Ali Khan, from showbiz starlet to celebrated leading lady of her times.

A character inspired by no one single heroine, Nikhat Bano is in fact, a character derived from so many legendary heroines - you'll find parallels to Nargis, Madhubala, Meena Kumari and Waheeda Rehman.

Exploited since she was 14, thrust under the nose of sleazy producers by an over-ambitious mother, Nikhat gets her big break when the industry's leading male star, played by Rajat Kapoor, takes a fancy to her.

Her personal and professional tryst with him does bring her success, but not happiness. The superstar gets married to a suitable, non-filmi bride, and Nikhat finds herself falling for the aspiring writer-director Zafar, played by Shiney Ahuja, who's been hired to polish a few scripts and to help Nikhat get her dialogue delivery right.

From this point, the film tracks the rocky romance between Nikhat and Zafar whose love is put to test many times as egos clash and ambitions soar.

Few films succeed in transporting you to another place another time, the way Khoya Khoya Chand does. Sitting in that darkened hall you can literally smell the paint on those studio walls because the director makes time, spaces and people come alive with his striking visual treatment.

For the most part, you are happy to play voyeur and peep into the lives of these emotionally tortured souls, but by the time the film crosses the half-way mark, the upheaval in their lives begins to weigh just as heavily on yours.

Sincere and noble and almost reverentially filmed, Khoya Khoya Chand ends up too long, and alas, too boring. The flaw is not in the tale, it's in the telling - long silences, stream-of-consciousness soliloquies, conversations going nowhere, and dare I say it, self-indulgent shot-taking.

Despite its many strengths - a soul-stirring music score, eye-watering cinematography, and remarkable production design - Khoya Khoya Chand is not what you'd call riveting storytelling because it struggles to pack in so much at the same time.

Mishra is full of little stories and interesting anecdotes from those golden years, and he tries to put them all in. Take those references to Guru Dutt - first in that scene in which Zafar finds himself weeping while directing a poignant scene and forgetting to say cut, and then in that other scene in which the director sits silently in the cinema watching the audience reject his labour of love. They're tender moments all, but indulgent to say the least.

And there lies the real problem - director Sudhir Mishra falls so hopelessly in love with the era he's recreating that he can't seem to distance himself from the world he's created.

It doesn't help that leading lady Soha Ali Khan seems ill-equipped to tackle such a layered role, failing in the end to arouse sympathy for such an anguished soul, and Shiney Ahuja shines, but only when he's brooding.

The film then, belongs to the supporting cast - Saurabh Shukla is first-rate as the producer with all the best lines, and Vinay Pathak hits all the right notes playing the assistant director who goes on to become Nikhat's possessive manager.

Three cheers also to Sushmita Mukherjee, superbly cast as Nikhat's surrogate mom in this big, bad filmi world, and a loud round of applause for Sonia Jehan, who simply dazzles as the reigning diva of the silver screen.

There's so much to admire about Khoya Khoya Chand, not least the director's heartfelt homage to those glorious years of black-and-white movie-making. If only someone told him when to stop.

I'm going with two out of five for director Sudhir Mishra's Khoya Khoya Chand , it's an experiment, yes, from a filmmaker who'd found his groove with his previous film, but still dares to dream. Even if it's not his best work, it's a brave effort.

Rating: 2 / 5 (Average)


http://www.ibnlive.com/news/review-khoya-khoya-chand-is-a-br ave-effort/53824-8.html
tashu92 thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#3
Its a fairly good movie with an excellent story and excellent performances. The surprise package is Soha.A special welldone to her for carrying such a difficult role on her shoulders so wonderfully. She looks lovely, alot like Sharmilla. Shiney was as usual wonderful, a great actor he is.Rajat Kapoor and Vinay Pathak were equally good.
Job welldone by the director, lovely era, beautifully shown.
sweety39 thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#4
wow thanx yaar.......cant wait to watch this movie....
samir_soni thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#5
I haven't seen the movie yet. To Soha Ali's fans I recommend go see Antarmahal. The movie sucks but Soha was amazing in it. It has Jackie Shroff and Abhishek and it subtitled.
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Posted: 17 years ago
#6
one word boring............waste of time
samir_soni thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#7
I was dying to see this movie for the following reasons:

Soha: She did not disappoint me. She was the best thing in the movie

The 50's film industry: They had some shootings and some interactions between producers, directors and actors...but so boring!

Music: Though the music is good...the choreography kills it. "Yeh Nigahen" is catchy but others are best viewed in remix versions.

Overall, the movie has a story which drags. Some good dialogues like the one when Soha asks, "how could you blame me?" Shiney replies, "you let them do it to you"..etc

Shiney was not suitable for this role. Rajat Kapoor was a pain to watch. He is such a good actor...don't know what happened to him. Sonia Jehan is strictly alright.

Rating: 2.5/5
Chippeshwini thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#8
I LOVED this movie. A little pacy, but very nice story, and great direction. Soha was amazing.. and I really liked Shiney. It's nice to see Vinay Pathak getting more and better roles... and Rajat Kapoor did his role very nicely
Hasmiracle thumbnail
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Posted: 17 years ago
#9
i have nt seen the movie but the trailer tells me dat its boring... 😭

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