DRISHYAM reviews - Page 7

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Posted: 10 years ago
#61

Originally posted by: sparkle2985

ajay and shriya dont suite for the roles it wld hav been better if it was anil kapoor and juhi/raveena
tabu will b perfect i thought she will b in telugu version but no 😭
she is everyready to work in telugu films and yaha directors ko voh dikhti hi nahi 😡
i wish tabu will bring tears in viewers eye and make audience feel bad for her ...which the other all 3 lang actors cld not make it


what i feel is akshay is most suited for this role more than ajay...anil cant be conventional in serious roles IMO..
Edited by fivestars - 10 years ago
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Posted: 10 years ago
#62

Originally posted by: fivestars


what i feel is akshay is most suited for this role more than ajay...anil cant be conventional in serious roles IMO..

anil in virasat he rockedd it
but compare to ajay yes akshay wld have been better but will he suite for the role of teenage father ,he looks young for that
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Posted: 10 years ago
#63

Originally posted by: sparkle2985

anil in virasat he rockedd it
but compare to ajay yes akshay wld have been better but will he suite for the role of teenage father ,he looks young for that


u r right and even shreya is not suitable as a mother for teenager! they would have put some BW actress to attract bolly audience...

IMO the movie would get a semi hit tag !just gut feeling😆
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Posted: 10 years ago
#64
For the first time in my life watched a movie before the official release date and Drishyam it was.
Had wached the Malyalam original and thought Bollywood might not do justice to the movie but the cast and the movie were fabulous.
Ajay Devgan and his eye talks his expressions loved them all.
Shriya was kind of OK I mean anybody else in that place would also be ok.
Tabu & Rajat Kapoor were too good as well.
It has all the thrill and first time watchers so much of suspense involved that you will surely enjoy.
The family even though middle class looked rich compared to their counterparts in south Indian movies.
But that does not matter as long as the movie has so much thrill.
A different Ajay and not the Singham type at all.
Love Ajay Devgan more <3
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Posted: 10 years ago
#65

Originally posted by: sparkle2985

i loved the original malyalam one and remakes telugu and tamil were also superb

will watch in hindi for tabu and ajay's acting
i wish tabu will bring tears in viewers eye and make audience feel bad for her ...which the other all 3 lang actors cld not make it

The Kannada remake is superb as well. You must watch it too 😊
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Posted: 10 years ago
#66
so Ajay is basically out of best actor race (critic or popular) with this mixed performance 😉
Edited by KhanSinghTomar - 10 years ago
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Posted: 10 years ago
#67
Review: Drishyam is a depressingly ordinary film
July 31, 2015 11:14 IST



Several parts of Drishyam work but the film is more tackiness than craft, says Raja Sen.

Some movies appear on our viewing doorstep carrying far too much baggage.

Drishyam, for instance, is a Hindi remake of a Malayalam film of the same name made into several languages with leading men of exceptional pedigree, and which has also, I believe, stolen its set-up from a Japanese mystery thriller, The Devotion Of Suspect X.

That's an awful lot of suitcases all right.

As with too-eager houseguests, there are ways for filmgoers (and critics) to deal with such visitors, and in this particular case I decided against homework, invited the film in and asked it to leave its luggage out by the door.

I'm glad I did, because while I haven't watched any of the other Drishyams or read Suspect X, this Hindi version is an utterly unremarkable thriller, one that could have been potentially cool and wily, but one that falls well short of being memorable.

It's a depressingly ordinary film, and the allegedly stolen plot -- about a crime being covered-up -- is something we've seen many, many times before.

Heck, if you want to see a genuinely great thriller about a movie-inspired protagonist buying tickets and meeting people to construct a watertight alibi, go watch Sriram Raghavan's fantastic Johnny Gaddar instead of reading the rest of this review.

Ordinariness aside, Nishikant Kamat's Drishyam is watchable and even builds tension effectively from time to time.

But it ends up an overlong, overbaked drudge, largely because of Ajay Devgn in the lead, trying to look cerebral and calm while assuming solid-coloured shirts will absolve him of the artlessness he has flaunted in recent movies.

It would be unfair to compare most leading men to masters Mohanlal and Kamal Haasan, but Devgn -- who used to be a striking brooder, a man who appeared to know how to simmer on the inside -- is now just talking softly while essentially swaggering along regardless.

Vulnerability? Perish the thought.

The idea of subtle internalisation has led this man to sheer cardboard.

The way the film sees him doesn't help.

Even while playing an everyman who loves his family, a song montage in Drishyam has Devgn standing away from his wife and daughters, wearing sunglasses and striking a hero pose till the family comes and coos over him.

(Later in the same sequence his wife tries on heels and slips; Devgn sits back and laughs, making no effort to help her.)

Devgn's Vijay is a cable-operator who lives in a giant villa with a fawning family, and one day things go quite bizarrely awry.

Something must be done to save his world, and Vijay -- a film-lovin' orphan who prefers spending most nights with a tiny TV in his office instead of his moronically indulgent wife -- takes inspiration from the movies.

Except, and here is one fundamental problem with this meta film-within-film setup, he doesn't really do or learn anything of actual brilliance, with films having apparently taught him the mere value of being stubborn.

There are times he gets a lump in his throat watching Bachchan ham it up hard or one in his trousers watching Sunny Leone do the same, but it all appears too forced.

Save for a couple of scenes, the cinema-beats-life trope doesn't really pay off.


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What does pay off, as always, is casting Tabu in a meaty role.

Despite first showing up in a bewilderingly tight police shirt -- which then leads to her striding through a corridor in slow-motion, almost a la Baywatch -- the actress is characteristically impressive in her role of a no-nonsense cop.

There's a case, she has a stake in it, and she knows what she's doing -- something Tabu expresses with brilliant weariness as she rolls her eyes at her husband who objects to her brutal methods.

She's a badass superstar who looks like she means it when she munches over dialogue about visual memory' et al, but her epiphanies are too conveniently arrived at, while her methods are too thickheaded.

Drishyam starts far too snoozily.

The narrative intent is clear -- to normalise the world (and Devgn) before shifting into thriller-mode -- but the film is clumsily written, with dialogue that sounds wooden; the first hour of the film sounds like an amateurishly dubbed film instead of one we're watching natively.

There are a few smart flourishes, but the filmmakers linger on the one or two good twists for so long that they render them tedious. (There is even a cheeky reference to Suspect X, I believe, in the throwaway mention of a "retired professor" who lives nearby.)

But mostly there is more tackiness than craft, demonstrated best by the ill-produced recreations of the movies Vijay watches and in the way fake newspapers are visibly made up of computer printouts with Times New Roman taken too literally.

Don't get me wrong, several parts of the film work and, for the most part, Drishyam motors along far more efficiently than most Hindi films -- but isn't that too low a bar?

Is it too much to ask for a ingenious, tight thriller?

At one point in the film Tabu makes the link about Vijay and the movies, and this is where I rubbed my hands together and thought we were (finally) in for some intriguing traps that subvert or mock cinematic clich, a truly brilliant cat and mouse game.

Alas, nothing comes of it and we never get a battle between equals.

Perhaps because she'd have eaten him alive, lug, luggage and all.

Rediff Rating: 2.5
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Posted: 10 years ago
#68
Drishyam review: A promising murder mystery weakened by Ajay Devgn
by Deepanjana Pal Jul 31, 2015 11:02 IST
Drishyam review: A promising murder mystery weakened by Ajay Devgn
111 18 0 AA
A crime has been committed, but for those who know what's happened, it doesn't really feel criminal. For those trying to prove it, there just isn't enough evidence. This is true for the story in as well as the story of Drishyam.
Drishyam, a Hindi remake of Jeethu Joseph's Malayalam film, opens with a declaration that it is based on an original story by Joseph. This is clearly designed to make Ekta Kapoor and anyone who has read Keigo Higashino's The Devotion of Suspect X choke on their popcorn.
Kapoor bought the rights to remake Higashino's fantastic murder mystery in Hindi. Meanwhile, far away from Kapoor's Andheri office, Joseph adapted the novel's plot for a Malayalam film starring Mohanlal, and set it in an Indian village. Kapoor sent a legal notice, Joseph claimed it was his story. And because his is a smart adaptation, Joseph is the one who gets to do the slow-mo stride while Kapoor's legal notices lie defeated by the wayside. Everyone knows the story of Drishyam isn't really original, and yet no one can prove it because Joseph's version is just original enough.
In the Hindi film directed by Nishikant Kamat, Ajay Devgn gets the onscreen hero's walk. He gets it because his character in the film, Vijay Salgaonkar - like Joseph - tells a good story. This really is meta.
Vijay is a cable operator in Pondolim, a fictitious village in Goa. He has two daughters, a pretty wife, an eatery where the owner gives him credit, and a two-wheeler that lets Vijay vroom through the picturesque Konkan countryside. It's a pleasantly dull life. When Vijay's elder daughter Anju (Ishita Dutta) is contacted by a boy she met while on a school trip, the first tear appears in this picture-perfect world. He has a video of her showering and he's more than happy to blackmail her with it.
You may wonder why this obnoxious chap isn't afraid of being exposed for threatening Anju. After all, her father is Ajay Devgn, sorry, Vijay Salgaonkar. There's a very good reason - Little Mister Blackmail is the son of the Inspector General of police. Take that, Daddy Dearest.
This premise is actually Joseph's greatest triumph and the reason that the plagiarism claims don't stick legally. There may be unmistakable similarities between Higashino's story and Joseph's - in both, a man convinces the police that he's committed a crime that he hasn't actually committed; takes the blame for a crime someone else has committed; and the mystery hinges upon an elaborate sequence of fake alibis that the police struggle to dismantle.
However, the big difference between The Devotion of Suspect X and Drishyam is that there's a social commentary that's identifiably Indian in the latter - the cable operator's daughter has no chance of getting protection from the IG's son. No one under these circumstances would think there's any point being honest because the entire police establishment will come crashing down upon the Salgaonkars if they point fingers at the IG's son.
As it turns out, this is exactly what happens when Anju's blackmailer disappears and IG Meera Deshmukh (Tabu) becomes convinced that the Salgaonkars have something to do with her son going missing. Unlike Higashino's professor, she has no logical reason for her hypothesis, but she's the IG and a gut instinct is all the reason needed to unleash hell upon Vijay and his family.
This is the point at which one should feel scared for the Salgaonkars, but when you look at the screen and see Devgn, thoroughly expressionless and convinced of his awesomeness, you never really fear for him. He's the hero. It's no surprise that he's able to outwit everyone around him. The only way Devgn isn't true to type is that Vijay gets beaten up instead of being the one who throws people and punches around.
Joseph may be a gifted in the art of adaptation, but his original elements weaken the original story. Throwing all realism and logic to the winds, Drishyam presents police cruelty that's not just brutal, but also stupid. People are beaten up in what appears to be the IG's living room (helpfully cleared of furniture. Or maybe she's gone for the Spartan look because she regularly interrogates suspects in there?). A policeman thinks nothing of hitting a child and leaving visible bruising upon the teenaged Anju who is, incidentally, still a minor. That's serious abuse of power. Even though there are witnesses - including journalists with cameras - to the Salgaonkars emerging from police interrogation with bleeding faces, the police are unconcerned about the consequences of custodial violence.
There's also Joseph's attempt to pander to the stereotype of Mother India. It says nothing good about contemporary society that in 1957, being Mother India meant having the courage and integrity to shoot your law-breaking son, while in the 2000s it means using your power to victimise someone you think may have hurt the sleazeball fruit of your loins.
This brings us to one of Drishyam's greatest strengths and critical flaws: IG Meera Deshmukh. You can almost feel the relief that surges through the audience when Tabu as Meera makes her entry. By this time, we've spent about an hour watching Devgn trying to act, Shriya Saran trying to look old and a host of minor characters trying to be convincing. With the singular exception of Kamlesh Sawant, who plays the villainous Inspector Gaitonde with wonderful panache, everyone fails.
Devgn has never been known for his acting skills and he is thoroughly miscast as Vijay, who is meant to be a nondescript everyman. It's because this character is so unremarkable that no one imagines he'd come up with the brilliant and elaborate charade that he does. In the Malayalam original, Mohanlal manages this ably. He plays a bumbling simpleton initially, keeping the audience entertained with silly comic scenes that endear us to him. This makes the later scenes that slowly reveal his calculating genius truly engaging. Devgn, in contrast, hulks around and saves the victimised right from the very beginning, because he and the director are intent upon reminding us that Devgn is the star. Drishyam will make everyone look at Rohit Shetty with respect because Kamat's inability to get a performance out of Devgn makes you realise how well Shetty has used the actor in the Singham series.
Devgn is bland but just about tolerable when he bums around as Vijay, doing his version of working for a living (reading the newspaper, chatting with random people and watching TV). However, there are few sights more stomach churning than the scene in which, inspired by Sunny Leone, Devgn's Vijay looks romantically into his wife's eyes. Saran looks traumatised, Devgn seems to be either short-sighted or drunk, and the audience is left wishing they had a fast forward button.
The only thing worse than Devgn's acting is Drishyam's background score, which tries to reflect various moods, but ends up sounding like a tacky medley of supposedly comic and suspenseful sound effects.
Between bad acting and a slow pace, the first half of Drishyam is one of those rare situations where you may actually find yourself wishing there was an item number. At least that would wake us up. So when Tabu, beautiful and charismatic as ever, finally enters the frame, we're all ready to dance on the aisles.
Unfortunately, Tabu can't save her character from falling into the pit that Joseph has dug for it with his script. Meera is the top cop that no one ever wants to encounter. Her missing son takes top priority over all other cases. She doesn't care about rules, has no qualms about ignoring the law, is pro-torture and looks absolutely gorgeous while ordering her minions to beat the crap out of entirely innocent people (including a little girl). This character has the makings of an amazing villain, but of course we can't have such a thing in a woman.
And so, to ensure our heart bleeds for Meera, after every scene of police brutality that she orders and watches (without a flicker of remorse), she weeps into her husband's shirtfront because she's a mother, looking for her son. (Cue in Mother India theme.) More disturbingly, her civilian husband is not only there to witness all the interrogations and every official meeting Meera has with her colleagues, he actually tells her off - in front of her juniors - when he thinks she's going overboard. So on one hand, we have Vijay, standing tall as the alpha protector, confronting Meera, the beta momma. There's never any doubt about who's the stronger contender and it's only because Tabu really can do magic with her eyes that Meera feels formidable in a few rare moments.
If Kamat had the gumption (and the freedom) to focus on story instead of possible box office returns, Drishyam could have been a good film. If Kamat had cast an actor instead of a star, then Vijay could have been a fantastic role. Had the director been faithful to what the story demanded - instead of trying to predict what the audience won't accept - then Vijay's wife could have been characterised by her maturity rather than her eyeliner and the saris that Saran is obviously uncomfortable wearing. Meera could have been a worthy adversary to Vijay, instead of being a senior police officer who seems to be a little crazed and gets her knuckles rapped by her husband while at work.
In a murder mystery, it isn't a bad thing if the best scene comes right at the end, with the big reveal. However, if the audience doesn't really care for any of the characters and if the only reaction the scene elicits is delighted relief because the film is finally over, then the storytelling has failed. Handicapped by its stars, Kamat ends up making a decent film that doesn't live up to its potential, lacks wow moments and seems too long at 163 minutes. And that's a shame, because there's a good story and an intelligent adaptation hidden out of sight in Drishyam.
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Posted: 10 years ago
#69
I remember Reading an Article...where Ajay mentioned that People were asking him why is he not doing movies like Zakham , Bhagat singh...etc and Ajay said He did not got any such kind of Script , but with Drishyam He found that.
I hope Its Turns out good , Been yrs since I watched THE Ajay Devgan Movie.
I am fan of Ajay Devgan THE ACTOR...


All The Best to The Team...!!
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Posted: 10 years ago
#70
I thought it was a scene to scene remake
Must take a lot of talent to not even copy paste properly 😆

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