~Sushant's Bollywood Debut~ #7 - Page 98

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Tanyaz thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago

Originally posted by: rash2222

i am feeling little sad... sushant movie debut is done... ankita leaving PR... now both of them will go on their shell and we will be sushita deprived... will get no news and no photo of them until they surprise us with something... 😭

I know , I am also feeling sad ... but that's how it is ..Change is inevitable .
I am very happy for Sushant . He deserves the success he is getting right now . Hope he is careful about chosing his future projects .
rash2222 thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago

Originally posted by: Tanyaz

I know , I am also feeling sad ... but that's how it is ..Change is inevitable .
I am very happy for Sushant . He deserves the success he is getting right now . Hope he is careful about chosing his future projects .

tanya di but we will meet in forum and discuss about them...
Afss_94 thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago

Originally posted by: Tanyaz

I was not into hindi TV shows but my sister recommended Pavitra Rishta strongly ( she had seen the promo ) so I started watching it from the start ..

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I watched it because of ankita as I loved Archana from the first scene itself ..Had no idea about Sushant or what work he had done earlier ..But from the second episode Manav came in the show and I liked him instantly .The character was very strong and Sushant played it to perfection ..


Very soon I was watching the show as much for Manav as for Archana ...


Then Sushant decided to leave PRand like everyone else I was also heart broken but when I saw how happy he was and the way his career was prgressing then I was glad that he left the show ...


I felt very proud when his name appeared in the opening credits of KPC as ' Introducing Sushant Singh Rajput ' . He exceeded my expectations as Ishaan . This was one of the best debut performance I have seen in a very long time..I think he has the potential to go very far but he has to be very careful in chosing the films and the script ..

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@ RED
just loved your line Tanya di. It was like a dream!
@ BLUE
Totally agree with you di.
@ GREEN
Yes that's important. But till now his choice of film is good and proved correct. Hope this success continues.
Edited by Afss - 12 years ago
Timepassss thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
frnds...i hv a small request to make...

hope all of u know sushant is a bollywood celeb 😃
i mean even in IF celeb secn hes been shifted to bolly section not a part of tele celeb secn

n hes currently on no.4...!!!!!! thats after salman, srk, n katrina...
we need to comment evryday to keep his rank up.

1 comm. is allowed smtimes if can get kind enough to allow u upto even 3 times...
now many might be thnking this petty like whats so big in an IF ranking may be...

but we r members of IF n fans of sushant so why not?

it takes a min. to write a comment that too addressed to sushant...so it does make it spl.
u can even just say a hello...or a gud mrng or a gud night ...
we can make it a habit to do this evry day we hv max. sushant fans on pr forum
so our comm. can take his rank up defo. frnds try it for fun, n for sushant...pls



n the same applies to ankita too...😃
u can go to tele celeb secn n write a comm. evryday to increase her rank.😃
sushantfan thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
Sushant Singh Rajput, you are amazing!
February 23, 2013 | Filed under: Entertainment | Posted by: Ritu Jain

Online writing course Knowledge Electronic Gadget Twilight movie review Cargo Pant
Finally! Oh finally, we have sincere new comer in Bollywood. And this is no man from some well established Bollywood family or big wig politico's son or nephew. With his debut movie Kai Po Che! he has not only ladies swooning but also men admiring the down-to-earth yet moving performance.

Kai Po Che! was a movie worth watching and after a long time a story made sense (though credit for that goes to Chetan Bhagat) and the bromanly love and affection was so magnificently showed by Director Abhishek Kapoor! Each man – Rajput, Amit Sadh and Raj Kumar Yadav really played the "brothers for life" roles to perfection, and for once, the actress did not become the friendship breaking element.



Why the special limelight on Rajput when everyone was so good?

Simply because he managed to grab the limelight! His dialogue delivery, expressions, and everything was so non-filmy. It seemed almost effortlessly done. It was also good to see the actor taking such a tough character for his debut role. In most cases it is seen that the "safe" role to be done is a of chocolate boy in some candyfloss movie where all he would have to do is flirt with ladies and act cool. But Rajput did none of that. Hell! He did not even have a lady opposite himself. He played a part that most can't – that of a real boy turned man. White jersey, cargo pants, white shoes; Nobody looked better. Perfect entry in Bollywood!

To be completely honest, I have never seen Pavitra Rishta, the tv show he became so famous for. Nor do I have any intention of doing so in future. But I will surely keep a look out for his next movie. He has already signed a film under the YRF banner paired opposite Parineeti Chopra and also one with Raj Kumar Hirani (Peekay).

Good luck Sushant Singh Rajput! You have made a lot of fans!
nikitagmc thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
I had never seen Sushant as Preet. I had boycotted Ekta's shows after Rajeev quit KTH and Ekta played petty politics.
Pavitra Rishta caught my eye from the promos itself. I felt it would be good, especially since it started with a P and not a K. (So I didn't know it was not Ekta's show.) Plus, in the title song, the credit for concept was given to Vikatan telefilms, makers of Thirumathi Selvam and not Ekta, so I was sure it was not Ekta's show.
It was the best mistake of my life.
I will be honest, at first I was attached to Manav only. I loved Manav a lot, I think it was the best sketched character of Tv when introduced- there was novelty in this role. And I absolutely loved the concept of the show,, and of course ArMan.
Started liking both Sushant and Ankita in the offscreen segments.. they were funny and really cute. But still I was more of a fun of Archana and Manav than Sushant/Ankita.
I became a Sushant fangirl when I started watching ZNKD. I loved him in that show, his smile, his behavior, his modesty, different aspects of his life that we came across in the show. We came to know about the actor behind the Manav. Around that time I started liking Ankita a lot too. It started when I read an article reading she scolded the unit members for making bad food for a sick Sushant. Whether it was love or just friendship or just plain sensivity, this act of hers touched my heart. It was then that I started following Sushita interactions seriously too.
During JDJ time, Sushant lived so much of his life on the show- his love for Ankita, his mother, his desire to learn, his easy nature, his crushes on Madhuri, his his charm, his love for dance, his creativity- that I totally fell for him very strongly- Manav or no Manav. It was as if I KNOW him now. I felt connected to him even more than I had ever been too Rajeev Khandelwal too. And ever since then I have been rooting for him very strongly, god bless him.
Today I feel so proud to see all that he has achieved.. may his kite rise higher and higher and he get every success in his personal and professional life. :)
lunza thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago

http://www.hindicine.com/2013/02/kai-po-che-review-chetan-bhagat-thank.html


Chetan Bhagat, Thank You!

Much has been written about how Kai Po Che is a brilliant adaptation of a 'mediocre' book. An absolutely avid film buff Avinash Verma differs on the latter. Read on for what is definitely one of the most insightful takes that you would read on the film and the book.


Its 1.30 am, almost three hours since I came out of the theatre but I m not able to forget Rajkumar Yadav's crying face at the sight of the debris of an upcoming mall which would have secured his and his two friend's future and Sushant Singh Rajput's smile with the sun shining behind his head giving him an angelic halo. Will come to this soon but before that, let's talk about the most defining moment of the film.

The riots are going to break out any moment. Ishan (Sushant Singh Rajput), the angriest and the gutsiest character of the gang calls up Govind (Raj Kumar Yadav), the weakest and the most fattu of the three, and asks him ' "Yaar thoda darr sa lag raha hai, tu aa sakta hai kya?", to which Govind replies, without blinking an eyelid or thinking twice, "10 minute de mujhe."

This scene sums up the movie, You DONT think when it comes to save your friend's lives. You just don't, there is no reason, no fear, no rationale. You know that you have to do it, no matter what the consequences are, no matter if it's right or wrong, no matter how much harm it would bring your way, no matter what others would think of it. You do it because you have to, every part in your body tells you not to, but you know you have to and you go ahead and do it. And that's what Friendship is, the most precious bond that one can ever share with another human being.



And these three actors (two of them making a stellar debut on the big screen) have shown this bond so authentically on screen that you never once realise that it's fiction, a film. These guys are your friends, people you know from around you. We all have such friends, a fattu archetype money minded baniya, a religious innocent easily impressionable choot who is just happy to tag along and an overzealous angry loafer with a good heart. We all have been one of these at some point in our life or other.

We have fought for a cause we believed in, we all have dreamt of a great future and we all have been manipulated into doing something we never would want to. These are ordinary people, living ordinary lives facing extraordinary challenges and that's the beauty of this film that it shows it just the way it should be.

It's like a perfectly cooked dish, with all the ingredients in the right amount. And the performances, takes it to a few notches higher just like a good seasoning. Sushant Singh Rajput, in a debut of a lifetime, steals the show with panache, while Raj Kumar Yadav is the ever so reliable actor who could turn ordinary scenes into memorable ones with a certain twitch of his facial muscle or by reacting so naturally to something said by some other character sharing screen with him. His reaction to the sperm comment or his uneasiness to the touch of his best friend's sister or his awkward dance steps, all these scenes prove that he is just plain gifted; he owns every character that he has played since his debut in Love, Sex aur Dhokha. I am desperately waiting for Shahid, which would hopefully get him the limelight he rightfully deserves.

Omi (Amit Sadh), who is probably the least likable of these three, does his job so subtly well that you don't realise how brilliantly he has managed to make you hate his character. His blood filled eyes and his breakdown at the stadium are sheer awesomeness. And the 'Pari', Amrita Puri, is one charming lass playing a super hot girl-next-door with traits exactly what Chetan Bhagat imagined she would have while writing her.

It was a very sensitive film to make because it touches upon the Godhra incident, one of the bleakest and most dreadful clot on our country's forehead, which I think has been handled quite brilliantly by Abhishek Kapoor. Some might say that he played safe but this wasn't Parzania or Firaaq and it neither needed to be. The climax, which in contrast of the book's is way less filmi and much more emotionally satisfying. The focus is on the bond of the these three friends and it never drifts away while the film touches upon myriads of topics like youth angst, politics, religion, cricket, communal discord and middle class aspirations! You have to give it to Abhishek Kapoor and his team to balance everything in a two hour long film without losing focus and being true to the milieu in which the film is set. The sporadic but perfect use of Gujarati language, the traditions, the culture and the setting is pitch perfect.

Bashing Chetan Bhagat is in vogue, a cool thing to do. He is the Himesh Reshammiya of Indian Literary scene. Just like everyone listens to Reshammiya secretly during their house parties or in their cars and go 'ewww' in public on the mention of his name, no one admits that they had some genuine laughs while reading Bhagat's books or maybe even enjoyed one of them. I personally know people who haven't read a single book of his but can go on for hours deriding his 'brand' of literature (if you may) and his 'style' of writing but I want to say Thanks to him because if it weren't for him, we wouldn't be having this wonderful film that is perhaps one of the finest buddy film to have been made ever. It's right there in the league of DCH, RDB, Satya, ZNMD.

No matter how bad his grammar is or how non-elitist the stories are, you cannot deny that he has the magical power to write stories about middle class India like no one else can and it can't be a fluke to write 5 successive super hit novels (There are innumerous 'Indian authors' that came after him who tried to copy his formula but fell flat on their faces!). Millions in our country started reading English fiction because of him, there has to be something in those books that connects. We have to give it to him. He is the literary rockstar of India. I personally enjoyed 3 of his 5 books, '3 mistakes' being one of them. It's been a long time since I read that but after watching the film I realised it was not at all a bad book. It surely wasn't a great book but Kai Po Che exists because of '3 mistakes' and that is reason enough to be grateful to Chetan Bhagat. I would go on to the extent of saying that this is a better film than 3 Idiots, not that they are comparable or anything but because '3 mistakes' was a more difficult book to adapt and this time there wasn't a genius like Hirani working on the script. This time it was Abhishek Kapoor, the one film wonder (Aryan was a dud and half of Rock-On's credit was snatched by Farhan Akhtar and Shankar Ehsan Loy) who people wanted to succeed but had their doubts. This film is his salvation. A stamp on his artistic capabilities.

This film works in every department and it would be a crime not to mention the fabulous camerawork of Anay Goswami, superb editing by Deepa Bhatia and absolutely mind blowing music by Amit Trivedi. These guys are the real heroes of the film and its because of them that the film works on so many levels. Its flawless cinema, don't give it a miss! It will be a mistake, of epic proportions.

P.S. - Aur jaate jaate, Sushant Singh Rajput, You are a f**king rockstar! I should have come and say Hello to you the day I saw you at the Nike Store near Shivranjini in Ahmadabad. I ignored you thinking ' "Ohh, he is just a small time TV actor who has landed a big film role by accident. He isn't worth my adulation." How f**king wrong I was! I wish I could have met and hugged you because now I know how difficult it would be to find you all alone in a public place. Well, it surely was one big mistake of my life.
Edited by lunza - 12 years ago
Swati_ thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago

Originally posted by: sushkita10

i m so unfortunate that i cant watch KPC bc in bangladesh no hindi film in hall😭but i m really proud to b sush fan👍🏼


Awww...here is a hug for you... 🤗
Dont worry these days they will soon show it on TV...
Also they will release DVDs...
Tanyaz thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
wow, what a review ...Loved the last para ..
I also agree that this film is better than 3 Idiots .I didn't like the end of 3 Idiots at all when all that commotion with the vaccume delivery of Mona Singh happened ...
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Posted: 12 years ago

Film review: Kai Po Che - No mistakes, our life

SUDHISH KAMATH




You can make a half decent, subtle Dil Chahta Hai-esque film, especially if Farhan Akhtar is your co-writer. So when Rock On happened, debutant director Abhishek Kapoor's contribution was probably underestimated. Rock On went on to get great reviews.

You can also make a mass-based masala entertainer, if Rajkumar Hirani is co-writing it. So when 3 Idiots happened, novelist Chetan Bhagat's contribution was probably underestimated too. 3 Idiots became the highest grossing Bollywood film that year.

But to make a film that outclasses and outshines both Rock On and 3 Idiots, without having an Akhtar or a Hirani, without having an Arjun Rampal or an Aamir Khan... Wow! Sheer vindication of talent for director Abhishek Kapoor. And writer Chetan Bhagat who has constantly been the butt of all jokes for the dumbing down of Indian literature.

Even after Kai Po Che, the hubris of Bhagat critics will insist that if the film is as classy and sublime as it is, it's not BECAUSE of Bhagat but IN SPITE of him. (The film is based on his bestseller The 3 Mistakes of My Life.)

That would be unfair.

While he might not be the greatest writer alive, Bhagat certainly knows middle class India better. He knows to capture and pack many facets of young India into simple characters that truly represent the complex realities of the country.

Kai Po Che reminds us of another mostly fantastic approximation of India — Mani Ratnam's Bombay, a melting pot of culture and boiling communal tensions. A film that resorted to a Utopian ending after neatly facing off one community against another, through strategic character types in a microcosm of India.

Kai Po Che that's set in Gujarat, another volatile melting pot (known for both Sabarmati Ashram and Sabarmati Express) does what Bombay does more realistically, minus the Utopia, and goes beyond the type.

Three friends in Kai Po Che, each represent one side of India — the capitalist (Rajkumar Yadav as Govind Patel), the political (Amit Sadh as Omkar Shastri) and the emotional (Sushant Singh Rajput as Ishaan Bhatt).

Govind lives by math, probability and profit, Omi by his loyalties, allegiances and conveniences, while Ishaan is all heart, selfless and easily angered. Yet, they all have echoes of each other and end up shaping each other to do exactly the opposite of who they are, by the time the film winds up.

Abhishek Kapoor and Chetan Bhagat pull this off with refreshing restraint and sublime subtlety and continuously keep us at the edge of the seat with a compelling, unpredictable narrative that's brewing with the tension and volatility of an India torn between capitalists, politicians and dreamers.

This is us. The real middle class India. Real people, not stars. Real houses, not sets. Real clothes not fancy pants. You'll fall in love with everything about India. And Gujarat.

Kai Po Che is everything that Rock On and 3 Idiots were, put together — dreams and aspirations, friendship standing test of time, the pursuit of excellence, a commentary of our education system and a coming-of-age film with not a single moment of dishonesty. We haven't seen stronger characterisation, economy in words, visuals or time, in recent mainstream films.

The three leads are a revelation. Rajkumar Yadav, Amit Sadh and Sushant Singh Rajput are the best things to happen to Hindi cinema in a while — intense performers with an electric presence. Amrita Puri, employed as the compassionate personification of love here, will steal your heart once again, after Aisha.

The screenplay of this flawless film is credited to Pubali Choudhari, Supratik Sen, Abhishek Kapoor and Chetan Bhagat and the technical team of Anay Goswami's cinematography, Amit Trivedi's music and Deepa Bhatia's editing couldn't have tuned this ensemble better, visually and aurally.

The true triumph of a film is how it makes you feel, when you leave, when you look back at it and when it refuses to leave you long after you've seen it.

Kai Po Che will leave you choked and feeling good. It will leave you bittersweet. And breathless.

Go watch it. Again and again.

Keywords: Kai Po Che review

http://www.thehindu.com/features/cinema/film-review-kai-po-che-no-mistakes-our-life/article4446273.ece


Review: KAI PO CHE Sets The Bar High For India In 2013

J Hurtado, Contributing Writer



It's been a great couple of years for directing debutantes in India. Last year saw the first narrative work from Ashim Ahluwali, Miss Lovely, travel the world gaining praise on the festival circuit, and this year we have Abhishek Kapoor's first feature, Kai Po Che, hitting international screens after an auspicious debut at the Berlinale.

Unlike some of its Indian predecessors in Berlin, *ahemDon2ahem,* Kai Po Che is actually a film that can stand up to international scrutiny without the need for handicapping. Kapoor's film is not particularly ecstatic visually, but it is a story told with unusual grace, something sorely lacking in most mainstream Indian fare. Therein lies Kai Po Che's ticket to the big time: the ability to tell a gripping, at times melodramatic story without undue embellishment, and it's a refreshing thing.

Three young men, Omi, Govind, and Ishaan, are the best of friends. These men live and die for one another, they pin their hopes for the future on one another, and those who love like brothers also fight like devils. They open a sports shop in a temple complex in Ahmedabad, a city divided by religion, but brought together as most Indian cities are, by cricket. When Ishaan finds a preternaturally talented batsman on the local pitch, Ali, it sparks concern when his Muslim father turns out to be the leader of a local opposition party. Tensions run high and all of the goodwill built by the shop comes crashing down in the wake of the Ahmedabad earthquake of 2001 and religious riots of 2002. The tension not only permeates the very air they breathe, but is punctures the bonds that have held fast for so many years.

Several of the reviews I've read of Kai Po Che take special care to explain that it is a movie about cricket, and if that is all that the reviewers can take from it, they are sorely out of touch with their own emotions. This is a love story, not as typical as the ones we usually see from India, and not a romantic love (though a subplot does exist), it is the love of brothers, a very special, at times volatile kind of love. Even as Govind holds tight to the purse strings, frustrating his brothers looking for a good time; even as Ishaan holds tight to his dream of making Ali into the greatest cricketer in India often to the detriment of his friendships and pocketbook; and even as Omi becomes sucked into that wretched cesspool that is Indian local politics, the brothers stick together, although they hold on more loosely.

At first, Kai Po Che looks like it may be begging for crossover success. The lack of song and dance numbers along with the relatively somber tone seems to signal sellout in the West, however, there is a great deal to be gleaned by Indian audiences that will likely sail right over the heads of the masses elsewhere.

One of the major pieces of the film that will be hardest to digest is the overt corruption and inherent volatility of Indian politics, especially at the local level. The idea of political riots, or political parties based solely upon religion is foreign to us here in the west, but the tribal affiliations in India are hundreds of years old, and the communities more steadfast because of it. Gujarat, the state in which the film takes place, is still relatively close to the border with Pakistan, and Hindi-Muslim tensions run high all along that area on the Indian side of the border. Even though all of our leads are Hindu characters, it is Ishaan's fondness for the Muslim boy, Ali, that ends up bringing the hammer down.

Abhishek Kapoor's first film is a success, certainly, but I can't help thinking that there was wasted potential. Kai Po Che is a very good film, there's no doubting that, but the second half lacked the punch to turn it into a great film. Perhaps it is the number of overstuffed male bonding sequences. It could be the overwrought agony of the final steps in Omi's story arc which brings him face to face with his best friends. Or maybe it's simply the fact that in spite of all efforts to the contrary, the film descends into melodrama even as the city of Ahmedabad burns.

Kapoor should be proud of his film, there's no denying that, but I think there is also a teachable moment in here somewhere. This film was a little bit too slick, the emotions at play were too raw to be covered up so cleanly. I'll certainly enjoy seeing Kai Po Che again, but the temptation to label it as India's next great film (I'm already predicting this to be the Oscar submission for 2013) may be a bit premature. The director has greatness in him; let's hope he finds it soon.

In the meantime, Kai Po Che is a wonderful film that exemplifies what can be accomplished within the confines of Hindi popular film. See it.

http://twitchfilm.com/2013/02/review-kai-po-che-sets-the-bar-high-for-india-in-2013.html

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