All Movie Reviews: Delhi 6

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Posted: 16 years ago
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Please post all Movie reviews, Box office updates and discussion here.

Delhi-6: Good follow-up to Rang De Basanti

Arthur J Pais | February 19, 2009 17:54 IST

Thousands of people in Chandni Chowk watch with intensity as the Ramayana [Images] unfolds on stage when their attention is suddenly jarred by the appearance of a local politician in saffron clothes, who makes a spirited speech and disappears. The sequence, shot by director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra [Images] in his consistently inventive, funny, entertaining and life-affirming cautionary tale Delhi-6 [Images], is highly comical.

But like most of the funny scenes in the film -- including the frantic search for the kala bandar (black monkey), who is reportedly harassing the citizens of Delhi -- the Ramayana scene is also linked to the darker situations that unfold in the film's last quarter.

Delhi-6, which had its world premiere in New York on Sunday, was greeted well by the audience. Word-of-mouth is crucial in letting the word spread when the film opens on February 20, that it rewards those who are not seeking instant gratification. All the episodes, which may seem isolated in the beginning, are seamlessly brought together in the second half.

Mehra says he wanted to show the film without an intermission but the distributors cautioned him that theatre owners would decide to have a break on their own.

The new film does not offer many complicated stories as those found in Mehra's previous hit, Rang De Basanti [Images], but this film is a worthy follow up to its predecessor.

It may look like the film centres around Roshan (a thoroughly engaging Abhishek Bachchan [Images]), born and raised in America, who returns to Delhi to leave behind his ailing grandmother (Waheeda Rehman [Images]). He falls for a free-spirited but conflicted woman (Sonam Kapoor [Images]), who is preparing to become next Indian Idol [Images].

But the film is not just about two young people. It seeks to capture the bigger picture of a neighbourhood. Its episodes capture a raft of conflicts involving families, politicians and two religious communities, Hindus and Muslims. The film creates a wonderful world of a vast neighborhood in old Delhi. But its concerns -- including how the fear of the black monkey is manipulated by one community to punish the minority community -- have wider implications.

As Mehra says of his episodical film (written with lyricist Prasoon Joshi [Images]) that while it is firmly centered in old Delhi and is filled with local colour, its concerns are universal.

Despite Abhishek and Sonam's romantic entanglement being a major part of the film, its appeal is enhanced by half a dozen glorious performances. Mehra deftly exploits the comic talent of Vijay Raaz [Images], who is far more amusing here than in Monsoon Wedding [Images], as the pompous, corrupt and opinionated police officer. And then there is Rishi Kapoor's [Images] character, who cannot forgive himself for not having had the courage to declare his love years ago and who will now make sure that Roshan won't make the same mistake.

There is hardly a character in the film who is not anchored to the film, and Mehra ensures that even a small gesture adds to the film's proceeding.

Sonam Kapoor, who showed ample promise in her debut film Saawariya [Images], not only looks alluring but has also grown into an actress of subtle power. Whether she is doing a comic scene, or dancing to the feisty Masakali song or executing an act of rebellion against her family's plans for an arranged marriage, she hits the right notes. It is indeed not an easy thing to hold your own in a film filled with an admirable ensemble cast.

Among the many amusing scenes that are also illuminating is the one that begins with dadi (Waheeda Rehman) suddenly taking ill. She is being rushed to a hospital in a cycle rickshaw much to the frustration of her grandson Roshan who is perhaps thinking the care she would have gotten in America. The rickshaw is stalled as hundreds of people have gathered to see a cow in labour in the middle of a road. The event has religious significance. But Roshan is petrified; he wants to get his grandmother to the hospital the soonest. He sets out to disperse the crowd and by the time he manages to do it -- you have guessed -- the grandmother has disappeared. We then see her gingerly walking towards the cow. She has more than recovered, and her heart is full of piety.

Mehra and Joshi do not ridicule her faith. But the sequence also serves as a powerful reminder of generational and faith gap between two people who love each other, and who can indeed tolerate each other's opinion.

The climax, which also involves the black monkey, has been imaginatively devised but nevertheless, it is a bit labored. However, it also serves as a good moral ending and could send viewers home in a happy mood.

4/5

http://www.rediff.com/movies/2009/feb/19arthur-delhi6-review.htm

Edited by Zareena - 16 years ago

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Zareena thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#2
Delhi 6

19 Feb 2009, 2055 hrs IST, Nikhat Kazmi, TNN

Critic's rating: 3/5

We're like this only. We may not have much to boast about in our hand-to-mouth existence, but we're happy, contented, carefree. We're like this only. We fight, squabble, break bones and sometimes, heads too, but we're bhai-bhai, despite differences in caste and community. Of course, we're like this only: a great extended family that has its differences but ends up united in the end. So what if in between, some ugly 'isms' -- like communalism, casteism -- do create a few schisms. After all the quintessential Indian experience manifests itself only in the slummy chawls of Mumbai and the grubby alleys of Delhi-6, better known as Chandni Chowk, where humanity overrules everything else.

After Rang De Basanti, which raised a toast to the young rebel, filmmaker Rakeysh Mehra chooses to become a flag bearer for the good-at-heart Indian in Delhi 6. Roshan (Abhishek Bachchan), the archetype for the NRI babalog, arrives in Delhi-6 on a short trip to leave his ailing grandmother (Waheeda Rehman) home. Now Dadi, a doughty old woman, doesn't want to die in the distant shores of New York and forces her son to send her back to her old, moth-balled haveli in Chandni Chowk. The son hates India, a communal cauldron which forced him to flee with his Muslim wife, so grandson agrees. After all, it's just a short trip, with a bit of sight-seeing thrown in, he tells himself. But hey, hasn't he heard about roots and the theory of relativity (read umpteen overzealous relatives)!

Dadi shakes off the cobwebs, swoons over a banarsi paan, snuggles up to all her biradari and bustee wallahs (friends and relatives) and picks up the strings of a life she'd never wanted to give up. Roshan however begins on a predictable yuppie-yankee note and smiles indulgently at the teeming chaos: the cows in the street, the kitschy Ramleela shows, the kite and pigeon flying soirees on the terraces, the polo session with Uncle Beg (Rishi Kapoor) and the jalebi sessions with the boys next door. And before he knows, he's gently sucked into the chaos himself. Specially when he can't understand why firebrand Imarti (Divya Dutta) is an untouchable; why the unfriendly neighbourhood cop (Vijay Raaz) has a Hitler fetish; why his uncles (Om Puri, Pavan Malhotra) have built a wall in their house, while their wives gossip relentlessly through a loose brick. Or else, why the beautiful Bittu (Sonam Kapoor) chooses to have her wings clipped, like the white dove, Masakali, when she too can fly and fulfil her dreams.

And if that isn't dramatic enough to hold our boy back to where he belongs, there's the infamous Monkey Man and his escapades that became an urban legend in saddi Dilli, not so long ago. The filmmaker interestingly uses the metaphor of the Monkey Man (Kala Bandar) to symbolise the beast within and blends different vignettes of contemporary India to create a composite picture. One that holds up the mirror to the modern Indian and shows him up as both heroic and beastly; communal and comrade-like. Ironically, it is this metaphor which becomes stretched and almost funny in the climax, drawing away from the appeal of the film. The shoddy climax, replete with a scene from heaven, and the sluggish pace of the film do detract from the delicious flavour of Delhi 6, which, all said and done, is a delectable paapdi-chaat of big, bustling, bulging India. The director creates a whole gallery of mesmeric characters, though one wishes he had focussed a bit more on bubbly Bittu, specially since Sonam has such a pleasant screen presence.

Unfortunately, she's left as a mere sketch on this colourful canvas, where, once again, Abhishek Bachchan proves he's in crackling, quicksilver form as the 'burger-chaap' Amrikan who tells his bustee wallahs to 'get real'. Rahman's Masakali music has already become a chartbuster, even as veterans like Waheeda and Rishi reiterate the truism about old being absolute gold. Watch it for the message of Delhi 6 and the ekdum desi India-feel.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/moviereview/4154202.cms

Zareena thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#3
REVIEW: Delhi-6 is disappointing

Abhishek Bachchan's latest fails to strike a chord, yet again

For all those of you who have come out with pitchforks against a certain Mr Danny Boyle, Delhi 6 is a must-watch.
Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra's latest flick is set in what is now popularly perceived as 'real India'.

Unlike Jamal Malik however, Roshan (Abhishek Bachchan) is no Slumdog. He is an NRI who accompanies his grandmother (Waheeda Rehman) whose last wish is to spend the remaining days of her life in Delhi 6, a locality she was married into.

Born and brought up in America, Roshan is fascinated with everything that happens around him. Traffic jams, Ram Leela, sweetmeat shops, bylanes, lack of water in loos – all of it to him is 'kewl'.

What mesmerises Roshan the most however are the human relationships in Old Delhi. "You don't know who is family and who isn't," he says to himself in one of the scenes where all the neighbours are present with his grandmother in the hospital.

Along the way, we are introduced to everyone from this neighbourhood – a sweetmeat shop owner, two warring brothers, an evil moneylender, his much-younger wife, a lecherous photographer, a local buffoon, a goat, a pregnant cow, an ancestral radio and god knows who and what else!

Delhi 6, we are told, is full of such characters – poor perhaps but with hearts of gold. And like in every story there is a pretty girl – Bittu (Sonam Kapoor) in this case – who catches the attention of our hero.

Roshan posits an interesting case. He is born of a Hindu father and a Muslim mother – the two prominent communities in the Old Delhi area. Before you know it, Roshan becomes part of this milieu and gets embroiled in the politics of hate.

Whether he manages to break out of this and show people the light is pretty much what the movie is all about.

Perhaps the biggest problem with Delhi-6 the film is that it is like Delhi 6, the locality. There's so much happening you don't know where to look.

There is no single story – in fact there are times you ask yourself if there is a story at all. You have so many minor characters popping in and out of the screen you begin to wonder whose film is it anyway. Actually the first time you properly hear Sonam speak you are about 40 minutes into the movie already.

Abhishek Bachchan too has very few lines to speak of (no pun intended). Whatever he does say however, he botches up with his fake American accent which keeps appearing and disappearing.

Delhi 6 brings together some of the best-known actors in Hindi cinema – Raghubir Yadav, Pavan Malhotra, Supriya Pathak Shah, Deepak Dobriyal, Divya Dutta, Vijay Raaz, Tanvi Azmi and Atul Kulkarni among others play prominent roles in it.

Yet none of the characters they play stay with you because all of them just flit across the screen and before you can say 'Delhi 6', they are gone!

Waheeda Rehman who also played the protagonist's mother in Rang De Basanti does her bit. Rishi Kapoor, playing Abhishek's father figure in India, stands out. His little back story is the most interesting of all, and yet is not developed enough to pull at your heartstrings.

The poor characterisation extends even to the lead couple. You never know what Bittu does other than prepare for Indian Idol and dance around in the Delhi metro. Roshan's dithering about going back to America also finds little justification.

There is never a good reason for anything anyone does in the film.

Not surprisingly, all of this affects the performances too.

Each of the brilliant character actors mentioned above is totally wasted. My heart bleeds for Raghubir Yadav who makes a brief appearance in a poorly lit frame, while his singing makes a better impact.

A special mention must be made of Aditi Rao, Sonam's unwed aunt, whose silent suffering makes a better impact than a lot of things that are said or shown on the screen

Abhishek Bachchan seems to have sleepwalked through this ordeal – it's probably the only way he might have emerged sane.

Sonam Kapoor manages to look pretty but does little else. And her pigeon Masakali seems to be nothing but a wasted metaphor.

The metaphors – from the kala bandar, to Roshan's parentage and the never ending Ram Leela – also get lost in the locality called Delhi 6.

Indeed, the film itself is lost out on you. It supposedly aims to give a moral but ends up being preachy.

The dialogues are so clichd, it's unbelievable. "India works! The people here make it work," Abhishek Bachchan tells Rishi Kapoor in his American twang.

What's worse is the way the film is picturised. Many of the sequences are shot against a croma background and digitally put together. Others are simply shot in a studio.

The entire essence of Old Delhi is simply missing. Delhi-6 even fails to be a touristy programme of the Nat Geo kind. There are some breathtaking shots of Jama Masjid but it pretty much ends there.

Even the parts at the Taj Mahal – some of the few scenes shot on-location – fail to evoke anything other than the 'move on, Rakeysh' sentiment.

Songs, like characters, simply make an appearance here or there never once justifying their presence in the narrative. Mohit Chauhan's Masakali, which became a talking point, is also randomly introduced. Ditto for the background score that never manages to gel with what's happening on screen. For instance, there is a riot unfolding before Roshan's eyes and all you can hear is some peppy track playing in the backdrop.

Delhi-6 fails in all departments – acting, direction, dialogues, characterisation and cinematography and even in its use of the songs.

Verdict: Don't bother wasting your money on this one. Mehra has got it all wrong.

Rating: 1/5

http://buzz18.in.com/reviews/movies/review-delhi6-is-disappointing/117032/2
Zareena thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#4
Synopsis :The central theme of the film revolves around Abhishek Bachchan who plays Roshan. Born in the US, Roshan comes back to India to Chandni Chowk in Delhi, along with ailing More

Delhi-6 is the story of Abhishek Bachchan who brings his grandmother Waheeda Rehman who has been diagnosed as being terminally ill back to India to die "at home". However, having been born and brought up in America, Roshan has no clue what has hit him when he comes to Delhi and his granny's locality.

Set in the galis of old Delhi, Bachchan's immediate neighbours are Om Puri and his family. Om Puri is fighting with his brother Pavan Malhotra and therefore each one of them is busy trying to supersede the other. Sonam is Puri's daughter. He wants her to get married and settle down. She however is too busy auditioning for Indian Idol and hopes to go from being a middle class nobody to a somebody. Also in the famous family chowk is a Muslim mithaiwala who is much a devout Muslim as he is a follower of Hanuman. And that truly is what director Rakeysh Omprakasha Mehra has tried to show in that small Delhi-6 locality where everyone knows each other.

The area is one day attacked by a kala bandar (monkey) which is believed to have been attacking all of Delhi. This alleged monkey then becomes the excuse for the two religions who up to now have been living in harmony to start attacking each other. Each religion believes that it's the other who is behind all these attacks. In one such attack by the kala bandar the Muslim mithaiwalas shop is attacked. Since his shop is located opposite a masjid, one of the Hindu pandits brought in to deal with the monkey business, says the attack is because hundreds of years back there stood a temple here and not a masjid. This leads to friction and fights between the two communities. Each is out to kill the other.

Abhishek who was just coming to terms with the chaos and madness that is India, finds it difficult to comprehend why friends can turn foes over night. He tries to explain and stop the fights but it gets him nowhere. At the same time he sees Om Puri finalise Sonam's wedding. This makes our lover boy realize how much he actually loves her – and interestingly India – too! The day Sonam decides to run away from Delhi, is when Bachchan decides to tell her how he feels. But on that very night the fight between the Hindus and the Muslims reaches its peak. In an attempt to divert their attention from each other, he dons the costume of that infamous monkey and runs all through the chowk.

He also manages to catch up with Sonam and just when he tells her how much he loves her, he also gets caught by the mob who beat him to death. Will he survive the anger of the mob that are all wired up?

Delhi-6 seems to be an extension of Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra's Rang De Basanti. It has a similar nationalistic preachy feel to it. Does he pull it off as successful as he did with RDB? I don't think so. This film would have sounded much better on paper then it does on screen. The whole notion of a kala bandar resulting in religious intolerance is something that is difficult to handle. I wish he had used a stronger aspect to bring that forth.

On the other hand the buzz of Delhi has been captured well in every frame. Those living outside of India will find that connect with that feeling of wanting to be in both places. The song in the second half which juxtaposes Abhishek's life in the US with the people and life in India is beautifully done. Hat's off to the director and technical team there.

Coming to the acting, Abhishek has delivered one of his better performances. In fact it could be called one of his best till date. Sonam Kapoor is a bystander for most of the movie but her act in the climax lets you know that the girl can act. Waheeda Rehman, Om Puri and Rishi Kapoor let you know why they are considered the stalwarts of this industry with their understated performances. Divya Dutta and Atul Kulkarni are good in their small parts as well.

All in all Delhi-6 is a film that most will find difficult to slot in one genre. It's not just a romantic film. Nor is it a drama only. And that's what is going to trouble Delhi-6 the most. It has a little of many things but not enough of everything!

http://www.starboxoffice.com/movie/reviews.aspx?m=Delhi-6&bid=2008/December/reviews_20081219_11
Zareena thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#5
Revenue sharing imbroglio continues; Delhi 6 latest victim

Story By: ROHINI BHANDARI updated on: 19/02/09

MUMBAI: There seems to be no respite on the squabble between the national multiplex chains and film producers / distributors on revenue sharing terms for movies. Prior to every big movie release, there are rounds of negotiations on terms. This week too as UTV Motion Pictures' Delhi 6 is gearing up to release tomorrow (20 February), the two parties are going back and forth negotiating the terms until the nth hour.

According to information available with Businessofcinema.com, while UTV and national multiplex chains have settled terms for Bombay territory, Delhi City and Gujarat, the rest of India was a point of debate till early Thursday evening.

Since an agreement has not been arrived at between the two parties until now, the film will not hit any national multiplex cinema screen on Friday morning, even though the terms for Bombay Delhi and Gujarat have been settled. "As of now we will only release Delhi 6 in single screens and independent multiplex screens, which total upto 750 screens, the prints for which have already been dispatched. We are very sure that we will not budge from what terms we have asked for," informs UTV vice president distribution Suniel Wadhwa.

While Bombay and Delhi has been settled for a revenue share of 48:52 and 38:62; Gujarat's terms are 45:55 and 35: 65 (UTV:multiplexes) for the first two weeks, whereas the rest of India is being negotiated for 50:50 and 40:60 revenue share by UTV and 48:52 and 38:62 by the multiplexes.

This year's other big releases Chandni Chowk To China and Billu were settled for a revenue share of 48:52 and 38:62 (distributor:multiplexes) for the first two weeks for all India.

Pertinent to note here is that after the release of Delhi 6 there is no commercial and masala film release till May end until Kambakkth Ishq.

It may also be recalled that prior to the release of UTV Spotboy's Dev D, the same issue had taken place. However, national multiplex chains agreed to the producer's revenue sharing terms on the eve of the film's release.

Stay tuned to this space for updates.

http://www.businessofcinema.com/news.php?newsid=12098

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