Lootera Review Thread -Critic Reviews pg26 onward - Page 61

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Johnny.Balraj thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago

Excellent Read

Lootera



Do you prefer instant coffee that's easy to prepare or do you like the old fashioned method of buying freshly roasted coffee beans, grinding them to perfection and then adding the right amount of water to create a great cup of coffee with an aroma that engulfs the room with its luxurious smell? If your answer is the latter then you would in all probability enjoy Lootera.

Freshly roasted coffee beans
Lootera left me awestruck. This is a film that's as fresh as freshly roasted coffee beans. Technically the film is so brilliant that only when the actors speak Hindi do you realize that you are watching a Bollywood film. The tone of the film is not too bright; no scenes are Over the Top; Dalhousie looks breathtaking; the costumes look like they belong to an era they supposed to portray; the background score is the best I have ever heard in recent times and Amit Trivedi's music is a masterpiece that enhances the beauty of Lootera.

Grinding them to perfection
How you ground the coffee leaves a huge impact on the overall taste. Director Vikramaditya Motwane sure knows the art of good grinding. A simple story is presented in such a beautiful manner that you end up wanting more. His mastery over his craft is evident from the way even a slow film keeps you engaged. Motwane manages to create an almost magical chemistry between the two leading stars – Ranveer Singh & Sonakshi Sinha. It is by far the best performance of their careers till date. The film has some great supporting star cast led by Bengali actor Barun Chanda and Vikrant Massey.

Right amount of Water
Finally it is important to add the right amount of water to brew our coffee to perfection. The climax of the film is predictable yet it is high on emotions and such a treat to watch. Definitely one of the best shot climax scenes in a real long time. My eyes were moist and it is here that you realize the subtlety still exists and you can emote without going overboard.

My final verdict:
They say "A lot can happen over Coffee". So go ahead indulge yourself.
Binge thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
Just came back from the movie and WOW I am speechless. Vikramaditya is such a perfectionist and that shows in each and every frame. Oh how subtly he put his desire of making a masterpiece through this film.The story is kinda hinted right at the beginning but the way it is presented and unfolded is different from other films. I wonder how they managed to recreate and reproduce the cars of that era, minute detailing like the mention of invention of electricity etc. It is a rare film for handling the love-story with maturity and sensitivity, keeping that era in mind.

Again, I am afraid that the masses may not enjoy it for the lack of fluff/be patient enough or connect with the characters simply because of the tempo of the movie. The scenes flow steadily like the stream. But then thats how the 50s was I believe.

Sonakshi is definitely going to looto all the awards this year. I was always indifferent regarding this girl, couldn't like her or hate her in particular but after watching Lootera, this girl deserves every bit of accolades that's coming her way and she has won a fan in me. I do see why Vidya was the first choice for this role... but then that would have been identical to what she did in Guru to some extent so I'm glad Sonakshi was the final choice for Paakhi.

Spoilers:

Especially, the way Sona had to enact the breathlessness scenes.. you could feel for her ailment. Similarly, her innocence, her vulnerability and hatred towards Varun, her helplessness of loving him despite of all that she went through and lost in the process. Loved the way their r'ship was handled.

Ranveer was awesome too. Especially in the second half. I do think that he can improve more on his voice clarity. I am so glad that he got to be a part of this special film so early in his career. Special mention to Vikrant Massey and the actor who played Sonakshi's father-he had such a strong screen presence and what voice! My fave scene was before the intermission when they water the idol and the truth is out... what direction! 👏 The scene when she sees him for the first time at Dalhousie and he eyes the window with suspicion.. the tension in that scene was palpable and had me on the edge of my seat. His scenes with Divya Dutta😆, how he takes care of Paakhi, when he reveals his real name which was funny, plants the leaf for her sake and the way that whole scene was shot.. aah I can go on and on.

Music fitted well and I'd wonder which song would be used how and when initially with the promos but Manmarziyaan was used beautifully. So was Shikayetein and Zinda. Kudos to the whole team's efforts and sincerity with the way they managed to get every detail in place.

That said, I am still doubtful of this film doing well commercially speaking.. despite of all the positive reviews and WOM, it lacks the UNIVERSAL appeal that maybe today's generation would not enjoy or could find it difficult to hold their attention intact. It is a serious film with the lighter moments pre-interval so yeah. I do hope that Vikramaditya continues making such gems in the future. 👍🏼

That grainy pixel-y screen was kinda distracting but I guess its because it was shot in 35mm camera? Or was it to create the vibe that the old films used to have?



Edited by Binge - 12 years ago
Rockerchic thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
Well your liking/disliking towards this movie will depend solely on why you watch a movie.

The movie was beautifully crafted, no doubt. The cinematography was perhaps the best we've seen in recent times. It really did feel like the 50's. Some scenes were just beautiful . Sonakshi is gem. I really loved her in this. Ranveer and Sonaskshi really reached out to the audience in a very elegant manner in their scenes together with minimal dialogues. Full props to the acting as well. No wonder the critics gave it such high praise. It deserved every bit of it.

With that said.

O'Henry is a wonderfully witty writer with a great sense of timing, giving the audience surprising and anticlimactic twists. But Lootera as a story did not deliver twists with the zest that O'Hery's works are famous for. It was predictable and didn't really keep me guessing. Another negative point is the fact that I could barely understand what Ranveer was saying.

If you're not the one to appreciate the finer details, I guarantee Lootera will bore you.

I liked it, it was not a misfire like Ranjanaa from the critics. Genuinely good movie. Not for those looking for a movie to pass time, however.
922872 thumbnail
Posted: 12 years ago
I really don't get it, why is Barfi being discussed here? Can we please stop comparing the two films? It's a review thread on lootera so please Let's discuss things only about this movie.
923402 thumbnail
Posted: 12 years ago

Originally posted by: briahna


what next. sona can't open?
😆


Ranveer don't impress me much. 😉

[YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27UV2uzW81g[/YOUTUBE]
lentils thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago

"Lootera"… Love in the time of consumption

by brangan

The last thing I thought I'd be writing about in a Vikramaditya Motwane movie is the extraordinariness of an action sequence, but the one in Lootera is a tonic, an example that makers of bigger, flashier films should study instead of lazily resorting to sound-effects-enhanced fisticuffs. This sequence begins with the sense that things aren't right, and it's borne on a background score that sustains a steady thrum and explodes at the right moment, then subsides, and just as we think the worst has passed, there's another danger, and then tragedy. In between, we see people running, flapping their arms wildly, thinking on the move, ducking here, darting there. The cutting is first rate, and the choreography is like art in the way it utlilises the spatial geography of the region. Most potent of all is the whiff of danger. You cannot make an action sequence work if the participants appear invulnerable. A body can hurl itself on you, as if from nowhere, and stun you with its momentum. Even if you are the film's hero.

That hero is Varun (Ranveer Singh), a young archeologist who arrives at a zamindar's (Barun Chanda) mansion to request permission for a dig in the premises – but he also comes as a reminder that, as the zamindar says sadly, "Duniya badal gayi hai." It's a new world, andLootera is a story filled with transformations. The din of conches and ululations during Durga Puja, at the beginning of the film, gives way to a sterile silence. The warm glow of earthen lamps gives way to cold, wintry whites. The zamindar's daughter Pakhi (Sonakshi Sinha) transforms from a Chevrolet-driving princess in silks to a commoner who hardly leaves her house. Varun changes from a guarded presence to a lover who wears his heart on his sleeve. And in the new India – this is West Bengal in the 1950s, when electricity has made an appearance – a servile European sophistication gives way to local cool as Rossini yields to SD Burman. Where the zamindar's mansion echoed with the overture to The Thieving Magpie, a transistor now bursts forth with Tadbeer se bigdi huyi, from Baazi.

Lootera is inspired by the O Henry story The Last Leaf, but it takes its cues almost as much from Baazi. Varun's character arc is modeled on the Dev Anand persona of a sinner who redeems himself when he finds love, and his friend (Vikrant Massey) is even named Dev, after his screen idol, whom he imitates very well. (That's short for Devdas, and the latter half of the star's name is yoked to the name of a character called Atmanand.) And here too, we have a "villain" – in the sense of the man who's after the hero -- named KN Singh (Adil Hussain). That era of cinema is also recalled in Pakhi's tubercular condition; not since Leela Chitnis has an actress coughed so much on screen. Other screen memories arise from the Bengali setting, which many of us non-Bengalis have seen mainly through the eyes of Ray. If the sheltered Pakhi, with her amiable aimlessness, reminds us of Charulata (is the scene where she holds up magnifying glasses to her eyes a wink at Charulata's lorgnettes?), her father is the impractical zamindar from Jalsaghar, still unable to comprehend that his ruling-class days are over. A sly scene where he cannot bring himself to admit that he knows nothing about electricity points us, instantly, to his impending doom. (And in one of those only-in-the-movies coincidences, we are reminded of the recent Raanjhana as well, with a knocked-over cup of tea indicating the heroine's anger with the hero who's wronged her and is now attempting to make things right.)

Lootera is an easy film to like. The dialogue ("khayaali pulao") is flavourful. The performances are uniformly excellent, and every actor gets juicy showcase moments, as when Pakhi begs for Varun's company ("Kal? Parson? Tarson?"), or when her father gazes at his denuded room of treasures (the look of devastation that crosses his face is unforgettable). The filmmaking, one very showy camera move apart, is exquisitely tasteful – even the threat issued by a villain (Arif Zakaria) is muted to the point of making him sound like he's murmuring to himself, and we know Pakhi is playful not through exaggerated boisterousness but by her switching on and off a lightbulb, with a child's delight in a new toy. The detailing, like the skin-crawling rasp of pen on paper – Pakhi is a writer – is perfect. The songs are (mostly) wonderfully used. ThroughShikaayatein, for instance, we follow Varun's mental process en route to a crucial decision; we see him thinking about her, about him, about them, about that astounding tree outside, which, with its gnarly branches, belongs in the deep dark woods of a fairy-tale forest. (Only Mujhe chhod do sounds off, coming after a rapprochement.) The poetry is terrific too, not just in the lyrics but in the romance that suffuses the filmmaking in the stretches like the one where Varun and Pakhi begin to lead the life of a long-married couple, their idyll interrupted by phone calls no one cares to answer.

The false notes, up to a point, are few. I could have lived without a second Dev Anand number (Yaad kiya dil ne...) highlighting the yearning in the Pakhi-Varun relationship, and the scene that follows, with her writing and him asking questions and us wondering if that's her sindoor really smudged, is one hushed love scene too many. But the real problems arise when Looterabegins its reenactment of The Last Leaf. Till then, the story is referenced obliquely – in Varun's desire to make a "masterpiece;" in the story of the Bhil raja whose life is similarly intertwined with a distant (and green) object; in the heroine's deteriorating health; in her existential acceptance of her condition. Most of Lootera works independently of O Henry's construction. We see the story of a zamindar in his dying days. We see the story of a lonely woman who's drawn out her shell by a rakish outsider. We see the story of a man brought up one way but now wanting to turn over...well, a new leaf. What we don't see is the sappy, sentimental story of a woman who stares out of a window, at the tree outside, waiting to draw her last breath as the last leaf falls.

The O Henry story becomes, in the final stretch, the film's undoing. The author's melodramatic plots are perfect for our cinema, and Rituparno Ghosh, with Raincoat, proved that an indigenized adaptation was not out of the question. But that story of mutual sacrifice made sense when narrated in the subtle and "realistic" style of filmmakers like Ghosh and Motwane, while The Last Leaf, with its daft romanticism in the end, is better imagined than seen on screen, where the literalness of the images makes everything look foolish. Someone like Bhansali would have married the melodrama on the page to melodrama on the screen (and things that look ludicrous at a lower pitch have a way of seeming most normal when the volume is turned up) – but at this subdued pitch, the closing portions don't leave us with the high that the story does (even if that's just a Chicken Soup-y kind of high). There's a Bhansali moment towards the end, involving the biting of a shoulder and the quelling of a defiant arm, that looks like a transition point in the film's tone – it's as if we're finally seeing this twisted, tortured love for what it is – but after this near-theatrical display, Lootera slips back into restraint and "realism." With this preferred mode of operation, why pick this material in the first place? It's like building the Taj Mahal with matchsticks.

kabeeraspeaking thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
I finally saw the movie this afternoon. General review without spoilers: this movie is not for everyone and I can see how a lot may and will come out of it unimpressed, bored, or underwhelmed - very specifically because of how people's expectations and choice of entertainment vary rather than any fault of the movie itself. However, if you appreciate romanticism, symbolism, delicate and detailed treatment, you will most probably love this movie. Even if you don't, I don't think it'll be a bad watch because it's almost sort of a good watch for learning...to at least know about, if not appreciate, the kind of space this movie (and hopefully more to come of its kind!) explores.

I almost want to say...fairy tale romance? But that's so, so incorrect because Lootera has no fluff, nothing kitschy, nothing...sickly sweet or fantastical that 'fairy tale' seems to convey. I think critics have more or less lauded this so much because it's finally a treatment in commercial space (we're talking Balaji for producers!) that doesn't compromise on its integrity just to appeal to the audience's existing taste...and introduces 'art' by way of almost another genre - of romanticism, symbolism, craft - into commercial cinema. I'm really, really glad that it did get critical acclaim...because that reinforces the vision of directors at large to pursue or feel comfortable in pitching this kind of an effort, rather than be demotivated or think it won't be appreciated. That means more good movies for us! Or at least another type of 'genre' for those who do appreciate this kind of a thing (I don't want to say more 'sophisticated' or 'refined' [even though it was, ha ha ha] because that wrongly looks down on other tastes, which in their place are absolutely justified. It's honestly illogical to expect that a labour worker who wants to see some tandoori nights for stress relief and entertainment will give a shit about symbolism.)

Ranveer and Sonakshi were great, they did well in their roles. I think there's scenes which really allow them both to shine. And I think this movie is actually a good show of their potential more than anything - because I saw things both of them could improve on to really ball park and deliver unquestionably award worthy performances. At the moment, both of them are young in their careers, and they are raw...they can unload the emotional quotient brilliantly and refinement of diction, dialogue delivery, nuance will follow with experience itself. Lootera just solidifies that they are talented and given the right work, they can do work worth applauding and reckoning with. Both of them should be honoured to be a part of such a movie really in my opinion. It's one for their acting resumes, even if it may not turn out to be a tally under the 'star power' column. Second half of the movie really shows the best of both of them and I hope they do get award nominations for their performances if nothing else.

Vikrant Massey was so good in the first half 😆 I think I liked him more than Varun and Pakhi in that part of the movie just because of how his character was written. He brought the fun and spark...really good supporting role and performance. The movie had quirky, organic, sweet humour in the best...sometimes most unexpected places. I saw a bunch of reviewers saying they cried so I was waiting for 'which part is emotional enough to cry at' and it came, making me moist eyed. It's a 'pay off' kind of movie. You gotta stick around till the end to feel it all. And feel it all come together, become impactful, neatly tied up. I was also waiting for it to get preachy (which I don't mind when done well) at some point to amp up the poignancy, but it never happens. They never ever over do it and I think this is why a lot of critics and reviewers who would usually razz on stuff for being cheesy or self-entitled didn't take up such an issue with Lootera...rather only the opposite. It just shows you and sorta lets you feel it. Nothing needs to be said about the music and direction that hasn't already been - they make the movie what it is.

I'll be watching it again!
naadanmasakalli thumbnail
Posted: 12 years ago
Lootera Thoughts/tweet review no spoilers 3.5/5 for film & extra 0.5 for mr Singh

  • lootera is a visual treat it really is like a painting on the screen spellbounded
  • I'd rate it 3.5 in the whole because the plot is paper thin but an extra .5 simply for Ranveer
  • Take a bow Mr ranveer Singh you are simply fantastic you take him out of lootera and it falls flat on it's face ranveer FTW for best actor( now i am in dilemma caz i am absolutely in love with Dhanush as kundan too, Both Dhanush & Ranveer better share Best actor otherwise someone will be hurt)
  • And I think I just became a fan of Sonakshi, pakhi really is her career best she got to act finally
  • The 2nd half is damn slow and repetitive they could've easily edited a big chunk out
  • I don't know how I feel about the climax I had tears in my eyes but I have mixed feelings I expected it I knew it from day1 this'll be the end. That last scene was so beautiful the last time I had this kinda feeling was at saawariya's climax if that explains anything
  • Varun was Perfect *hai* am in love
  • the Music is another Character simply adds so much to the film & is beautifully used
  • And I wish there was a way I could erase that shitty LVRB out of ranveer's filmography Caz this is the Ranveer The actor i would love to see. he was fantastic in BBB Than he was wasted in LVRB & now he's back & even better than he was ever before. Yes he could be very annoyign offscreen sometimes but i love him for his honesty & his OTT self that's the real ranveer but when he's onscreen he doesn't miss a single cue. i kept looking for a flaw in his acting but i couldn't find any & that's how fab he is onscreen.
  • It had parineeta feeling and that's another reason why I liked it so much caz I love films with old world charm and they had amazing chemistry and I would love to see them again.
  • And Dalhousie parts are way too similar to fanaa sorry but the scenery is ahh breathtaking and kuddos to cinematographer
  • But it's a very weak film otherwise if we compare it to udaan sorry no offence
922872 thumbnail
Posted: 12 years ago
I had a dream that I disliked Lootera to the core and kept on ranting about it here had had a huge fight with rambo.😆 Going to watch the movie in another 2 hrs, hope this doesn't come true.
TheRager thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
Going to watch Lootera now.

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