RANN - MOVIE + MEMBER Reviews - POST HERE

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Posted: 16 years ago
#1
Looking good....
By Taran Adarsh, January 27, 2010 - 12:34 IST


Ramgopal Varma is itching to tell a new story in his movies. You may garland him for his efforts or loathe him if you feel letdown, but you need to hand it to him for picking up stories that defy stereotype.

This time, in RANN, the maverick film-maker does an expose on the games the heavyweights in the media play to further their interests. RGV goes into the newsrooms and also behind it and throws light on the politician-industrialist-media nexus. Also, it's an insider's account of how news channels that are greedy for ratings sensationalize stories to grab eyeballs.

Write your own movie review of Rann
On surface, you don't want to know what goes behind the scenes and how, at times, news are 'created' by vested interests. But RANN scratches the surface and opens a can of worms. RANN also mirrors the fact that just like there are good and bad people in every field, there're some rotten ones in the media too who succumb to temptations and create news to climb the ladder of success.

RANN is a serious film and RGV knows what he's talking this time. It wouldn't be erroneous to state that you recall RGV's SARKAR while watching RANN, even though the two films are as diverse as chalk and cheese. You recall SARKAR because RANN is an equally powerful film that shows a world we've only seen from the exterior.

RANN is for those who enjoy serious cinema. It's more for the intelligentsia, for the thinking viewer. Definitely not for those who seek refuge in frivolous masala capers.

Vijay Harshvardhan Malik [Amitabh Bachchan] is the founder of a private news channel, India 24/7. A hardcore upholder of journalistic ethics, his channel is battling for survival. Jay [Sudeep], his son, looks at his father's news channel purely as a business enterprise that must make profits to justify its existence. He hates that his competition [Mohnish Bahl] is doing better than him.

The story takes a turn when a corrupt politician, Mohan Pandey [Paresh Rawal], decides to use the channel to his advantage by using Vijay's son-in-law Navin [Rajat Kapoor]. Pandey aspires to be the Prime Minister and indulges in a vicious campaign against his political opponent.

Navin is the most insecure man on earth and won't rest till he becomes the number one industrialist in the country. He, in turn, involves his brother-in-law Jay in Pandey's game plan.

A film like RANN would fall into the pit if [i] its writing wouldn't be razor-sharp and [ii] the choice of actors would be incompetent. RGV's movies, generally, are embellished with competent actors who deliver super performances. In this film, every member of the cast shines in his/her role, the length of the role notwithstanding.

The writing is watertight and convincing. Besides, the subject matter has been presented in the most simplistic manner, which makes it easy to decipher. However, the episode showing Riteish's investigation tends to get confusing at one point, but the climax compensates for the minor hiccups here and there.

Amit Roy's cinematography is eye-catching. Dialogues are power-packed. In fact, one can identify with the well-penned dialogues. The background score plays a crucial role. It heightens the impact of various scenes.

Amitabh Bachchan is spectacular yet again, especially towards the finale. His speech and the way he delivers it are remarkable. Sudeep is terrific. To stand up to giants like Bachchan and Paresh Rawal is no mean achievement. Riteish is only getting better and better with every film. In fact, he surprises you constantly.

Paresh Rawal, seen in an RGV film after a long, long time, is at his vicious best. Rajat Kapoor is incredible. Mohnish Bahl gets the role of a lifetime and he sinks his teeth into it. This film should open new vistas for him. Gul Panag is natural and so easy on the eyes. Neetu Chandra does her part well. Suchitra Krishnamoorthy is too good. Rajpal Yadav contributes to some funny moments. Neena Kulkarni and Simone Singh are perfect for their parts.

On the whole, RANN is truly a well-made film. No two opinions on that. The film should be patronised by viewers of serious, sensible cinema. Recommended!


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Posted: 16 years ago
#2
Review : Rann
(Social/Drama)
Anupama Chopra, Consulting Editor, Films, NDTV
Friday, January 29, 2010

Rann is director Ram Gopal Varma's expose of electronic media. The film looks at the corruption of television news. How the maddening race for TRPs forces news channels to compromise journalistic ethics, resort to sensationalism, and convert news into the worst kind of masala entertainment.

These are urgent and relevant issues but Varma's film is the cinematic equivalent of the type of television he is castigating here. Raan is poorly written, badly researched, and deafeningly sensationalist.

The film pits the old-school, upright channel head, Vijay Harshvardhan Malik, played by Amitabh Bachchan against his own more ambitious and morally-suspect son Jai, played by Sudeep.

When a channel headed by an erstwhile colleague, Amrish, played by Monish Bhel, beats the Maliks in the TRP race, Jai enters into a Faustian bargain with a wicked politician, Mohan Pandey played by Paresh Rawal. He fakes a sting operation and cons his father into airing it.

The ensuing uproar forces the country's prime minister to resign, which of course paves the way for Pandey. But Jai and Pandey's incredibly inefficient scheming is unraveled quickly by Purab Shastri, an idealistic rookie journalist, played by Ritesh Deshmukh. Eventually Purab and Malik senior unveil the criminals both behind and in front of the camera.

Rann had the potential to be powerful drama but Varma and his writer Rohit G.

Banawlikar fritter away the opportunity with cardboard characters and feeble plotting. There aren't any flesh and blood people here, just types with one defining trait. So Malik senior and Purab are good, Pandey and the oily businessman Naveen played by Rajat Kapoor are bad.

Jai, who inhabits an interesting in-between zone, is undone by an irritating habit of flicking his lighter open and shut and twitching about like a recovering crack addict. These men, shot with the strangest camera angles imaginable, have no discernable arcs.

The narrative is equally flat and full of football-size loopholes.

The first lesson every journalist learns is: check out the source of information. But Malik senior, supposedly India's most respected journalist, agrees to air an anonymously done-sting operation which implicates the prime minister in orchestrating a communal riot, without once checking its origins.

The chief operating officer of his channel, who is actually a mole for his rival Amrish, meets Amrish openly in a bar to exchange information. And this was my personal favorite-Purab who has just joined the organisation gets to sit in high-powered editorial meetings and pontificate the channel's programming. How I wish we had such clout.

The shrill dialogue doesn't help matters much. Subtlety is not this film's forte.

So characters mouth lines like: "Computer ke zamane mein typewriter nahin chalta and duniya mein do tarah ke log hote hain, sher ya bakri". And in case you still don't get the point, the helpfully blaring background music and lyrics underline what you are seeing. A sample: when Malik senior finds out that he has been part of a con, the song goes: "Kaanch ke jaise saaf usool, kaanch ke jaise tooth gaye".

If you get past the lyrics, Malik's shattering discovery is one of the few moments when the film gets it right. Bachchan's superman veneer cracks movingly as he delivers a speech on media and responsibility.

But Varma can't leave well enough alone. He allows the bhashan to go on and on until you are beyond caring.

Bachchan, Ritesh Deshmukh and Suchitra Krishnamoorthy, playing the mole, bring some restraint and dignity to this cacophonous tale. Otherwise it's sound and fury signifying little.

http://movies.ndtv.com/movie_review.aspx?id=474&albumname=Rann
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Posted: 16 years ago
#3
another one praising it....

http://www.idlebrain.com/mumbai/reviews/rann.html

Review

Story
Vijay Malik (Amitabh Bachchan) heads the TV channel India24X7 which is known for its trustworthiness. Vijay Malik is a man of great ideals and he strictly follows them. His son Jay Malik (Sudeep) is a hot-blooded youngster who thinks that media is like any other business. Purab (Ritesh Deshmukh) is a disciple of Vijay Malik and he emulates the ethics and principles of Vijay Malik in his work. Mohan Pandey (Paresh Rawal) is the opposition leader who wants to become the PM at any cost. Pandey uses Jai to mudsling against the PM through Inda24X7 TV channel. The rest of the story is all about what happens when Vijay Malik comes to know about the truth.

Actors:
Amitabh Bachchan comes up with his finest work as an idealistic media man. He adds value to the character he played. He is superb in the climax episode. Sundeep is excellent as the corrupted son. Ritesh Deshmukh is very good as disciple of Amitabh. Paresh Rawal is perfect as the bad politician. Mohnish Behl is apt. Gul Panag is adequate. Rajpal Yadav adds entertaining in this otherwise serious movie. Rajat Kapoor and Neetu Chandra are fine. Suchitra Krishna Murthy is extremely natural.

Technical departments:

Story - screenplay – direction: Story idea of the movie is good. It shows how media manipulates the minds of viewers and programs the viewers to do what media is intended to achieve. It is a challenge to attempt such a niche subject. One such movie of this genre I saw in the recent past was 'Corporate' (Mathur Bandarkar). Ram Gopal Varma comes up with nice screenplay and directs the movie well. He has taken some liberty and simplified the story in order to get his point across. Ram Gopal Varma also used the age-old formula of noble father (Amitabh) – corrupt son (Sudeep) – idealistic protg (Ritesh) to create some familiar yet effective drama. I also like the way Ram Gopal Varma focuses on actors expressions instead of showing the content of tapes when they get hold of evidence tapes.

Other technical departments: Background music is nice. Cinematography is good and watch out for camera angles and camera movements in vital scenes of the movie. Editing is perfect. Dialogues are of top notch (especially the dialogue that says that the target of TV channels should be news and the medium is money – but TV channels target has become the money and the medium is news).

Analysis: Rann is a niche movie made on the nexus of media and politicians. It shows us how media which supposed to guard truth is becoming a medium for politicians to doctor the minds of viewers/voters. The movie belongs to Amitab Bachchan in the first half and in the last 20 minutes. Most of the second half belongs to Ritesh. Only flaw in the movie is about how Amitabh blindly trusts his son. Rann might not be a film for everybody, but it is RGV's best movie since Company. Watch Rann for the performances and the intensity.

Jeevi rating: 3.5/5
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Posted: 16 years ago
#4

Masand Movie Review: Rann, embarrassingly ill-researched

Rajeev Masand / CNN-IBN

Cast: Amitabh Bachchan, Ritesh Deshmukh, Mohnish Behl, Paresh Rawal

Director: Ram Gopal Verma

In the climax of Ramgopal Varma's Rann, Amitabh Bachchan's character, a senior respected journalist Vijay Harshvardhan Malik delivers an eight-minute impassioned monologue explaining the relevance and the responsibility of the media. Earlier on in the same film, this pillar of journalistic integrity agrees to air an anonymously received sting-operation that implicates the country's Prime Minister for his involvement in a communal riot, without so much as verifying the source of the footage or investigating its authenticity.

As it turns out, the sting is fake. So much for his bhashan on the media's responsibility!

For a film set within the world of television news, Rann is embarrassingly ill-researched and contains plot holes the size of craters. Varma threatens to expose the politics of television news, but with his simplistic, misguided approach his film ends up just as sensational as the very channels he points fingers at.

Bachchan's character Malik is an ethical, principled channel head who's losing the TRP battle to a former colleague Amrish (played by Mohnish Behl) whose channel believes in packaging news entertainingly. Advised by his industrialist brother-in-law, Malik's son Jai (played by Phoonk's Sudeep) makes a discreet deal with a corrupt politician to air a fake sting framing the Prime Minister in exchange for enough money to save his failing channel and to set up a few more.

The sting, once aired on the channel by an unsuspecting Malik Sr, takes down the PM and helps the corrupt neta (played by Paresh Rawal) get the top job instead. But before long an earnest reporter at Malik's channel (played by Ritesh Deshmukh) smells a rat and unearths the truth. He approaches the boss with the information, and Malik Sr eventually exposes everyone involved in the scandal.

Rann is not so much a bad film as it is a boring, predictable one. Varma and his writers borrow the Madhur Bhandarkar-blueprint and give us uni-dimensional characters who are either black or white, seldom grey. Although the film's portrayal of a certain kind of Hindi news journalism may not be far from the truth, it is the film's lazy stereotyping that is tiresome here.

Varma uses crazy camera moves, tight close ups and a booming background score to create the drama that his simplistic script fails to.

What ultimately comes in the way of Rann achieving the potential of its premise is the over-use of clich in the absence of original writing. As a result, Amitabh Bachchan is wasted in a part that requires little else but for him to look dismayed throughout the film.

I'm going with two of five for Ramgopal Varma's Rann; it's not even average stuff from a filmmaker who's given us so much more. Can we have the old Ramgopal Varma back please?

Rating: 2/5

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Posted: 16 years ago
#5
Saw Rann today. We were going to watch Ishqiya but then decided on Rann. I'm glad too for the decision. It's a very well made movie. One of RGV's best. Good to see him back in form.
It has a few loopholes, but overall, it's a very good movie. Ritesh was brilliant. Amitabh has done well for a change. Monish Behl was really good. I have come to really like Rajat Kapoor as an actor. With each passing movie of his, my admiration for him goes up. Paresh Rawal as a corrupt politician was superb.

I would definitely recommend it.

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