Gangubai Kathiawadi review and box office- released on Netflix - Page 3

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altgr thumbnail
Posted: 2 years ago

Surprised to see the replies under this tweet. I thought opening will be 5 Cr+ but most people are saying 2-4 Cr.

https://twitter.com/HimeshMankad/status/1494572850006884352?t=VhoKEa1rt--FumThMarcRg&s=19

Mugda thumbnail
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Posted: 2 years ago

Film has no hit song. Even flop Guzaarish had a hit song Udi. 

Gangubai is going to tank big time.. Alia is miscast. This prostitute role is for Kangana Ranaut. She suits better. 

This film was first titled Heera Mandi starring Priyanka Chopra as Gangubai but later Kangana Ranaut was finalized. I even read Kangana's interview that she will do a SLB film soon. This was before SLB announced Inshallah film. When that film was shelved due to Salman Khan then SLB went ahead with Gangubai with Kangana but Karan Johar insisted SLB to cast Alia Bhatt in it because Alia wanted to be SLB heroine badly. Infact Karan Johar wanted to see Alia in SLB movies so badly that he copied SLB styles in Kalank where Alia Bhatt did some dance moves totally copied from HDDCS' Aishwarya's entry song.

When Salman fiasco happened Karan Johar got dissapointed so much. SLB then changed his mind of casting Kangana and moved with Alia to please Karan Johar. 

TheMinion thumbnail
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Posted: 2 years ago

Originally posted by: Mugda

Film has no hit song. Even flop Guzaarish had a hit song Udi. 

Gangubai is going to tank big time.. Alia is miscast. This prostitute role is for Kangana Ranaut. She suits better. 

This film was first titled Heera Mandi starring Priyanka Chopra as Gangubai but later Kangana Ranaut was finalized. I even read Kangana's interview that she will do a SLB film soon. This was before SLB announced Inshallah film. When that film was shelved due to Salman Khan then SLB went ahead with Gangubai with Kangana but Karan Johar insisted SLB to cast Alia Bhatt in it because Alia wanted to be SLB heroine badly. Infact Karan Johar wanted to see Alia in SLB movies so badly that he copied SLB styles in Kalank where Alia Bhatt did some dance moves totally copied from HDDCS' Aishwarya's entry song.

When Salman fiasco happened Karan Johar got dissapointed so much. SLB then changed his mind of casting Kangana and moved with Alia to please Karan Johar. 

Do you agree Aishwarya would’ve been the best choice?

Mugda thumbnail
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Posted: 2 years ago

Originally posted by: TheMinion

Do you agree Aishwarya would’ve been the best choice?


Aishwarya is 48. This age is not for playing heroine roles. This age is for mature elderly roles. She will only do SLB film if role suits her.

Prostitute roles don't suit her. She did one in Umrao Jaan but the courtesan doesn't look Maharani. She suits in larger than life roles like Jodhaa Bai, Nandhini Devi etc. Prostitute roles don't suit her at all.

Kangana suits better. Alia looks like a school girl doing dress competition. 

briahna thumbnail
Posted: 2 years ago



Edited by briahna - 2 years ago
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Posted: 2 years ago

Paid reviews have started 🤣

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Posted: 2 years ago

Originally posted by: Shaitan-Haiwan

Paid reviews have started 🤣

Friday ko dekh ke apna non paid review de dena 

briahna thumbnail
Posted: 2 years ago

Making feminism fun

Updated on: 20 February,2022 07:17 AM IST  |  Mumbai 
Meenakshi Shedde


The film bravely takes multiple risks, by having a heroine-led film in conservative Bollywood, and by releasing theatrically worldwide at this time, rather than OTT

Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Gangubai Kathiawadi is a feisty, feminist biopic of the real-life Gangubai, a sex worker who ruled Kamathipura, Bombay’s red light district, in the 1950s and ’60s. Starring Alia Bhatt, it had its world premiere in the Berlin Film Festival’s Berlinale Special Gala last week. It is Bhansali’s second film at the Berlinale, after Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam in 2000. And it is Alia Bhatt’s third film in the Berlinale, after Highway (2014) and Gully Boy (2019). The film opens in cinemas worldwide on February 25. The film bravely takes multiple risks, by having a heroine-led film in conservative Bollywood, and by releasing theatrically worldwide at this time, rather than OTT. 

Bhansali has had strong women characters earlier, including in Devdas, Black, Ram Leela, Bajirao Mastani, Padmaavat, and now Gangubai Kathiawadi. Gangubai elopes from Kathiawar with her husband, to become a film star in Bombay, but he sells her to a brothel in Kamathipura. She fights back, becomes a brothel madam, and transforms into the matriarch of Kamathipura, who fights for sex workers’ rights. The film is based on the non-fiction book Mafia Queens of Mumbai, by S Hussain Zaidi and Jane Borges of mid-day. Bhansali told me he grew up one lane away from Kamathipura and lived there for 30 years.


The heroine’s name, Ganga, the holy river, immediately harks back to Ram Teri Ganga Maili, of a woman sullied. But Bhansali’s film pushes all the right buttons, totally rooting for a feminist character, while remaining greatly entertaining. Certainly a film to be relished on the big screen. The film celebrates a colourful character with financial, mafia and political clout. She made a famous speech in Azad Maidan, Mumbai, demanding the legalisation of prostitution, and even met the prime minister Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, and successfully stayed the sex workers’ eviction. She also fought for girls’ education, and single womens’ rights.


Bhansali’s direction and craftsmanship are assured. He is the director, screenwriter (with Utkarshini Vashishtha), editor, producer and music composer—a rare distinction. He makes feminism fun, with songs and dances and seeti-bajaoing dialoguebaazi. Alia Bhatt ably carries the film on her shoulders. Though young and slightly built, she absorbs macho traits to suggest power through body language and voice; she loves alcohol and beedis, slaps and kicks people, and swaggers around in a Bentley. She also draws from deep emotional reserves.

The screenplay, by Bhansali and Vashishtha (her debut screenplay), is packed with moments. While Gangubai rises to power—her rise is shown as relatively easy in the film—it is careful not to paint her as a saint. Her turning point came after she was brutally raped, and asked real life mafia don Karim Lala (Rahim Lala) for protection, and he publicly declared her his ‘rakhi brother.’ After that, clout with the mafia, police, mantri-ministers follows swiftly. She betrays someone close, deviously turning it into political capital during the local elections; she too exploits the girls as a brothel madam, as she once was. 


Courageously, in today’s right-wing atmosphere, Bhansali underlines a secular ethos he celebrated earlier in Bajirao Mastani: not only does a Muslim don (a dignified Ajay Devgn in a generous guest appearance) give a Hindu woman protection (it’s in the book), but he also celebrates a Hindu-Muslim romance, and includes a feminist journalist Fezi (Jim Sarbh; Muslim? Parsi?). The film honours the marginalised; not only a sex worker, but also a transgender (Vijay Raaz, superb) stand for elections, suggesting a robust local democracy. There are delicious dialogues, written by Prakash Kapadia and Vashishtha. When a school principal demands the father’s name for admission for the girls, Gangubai retorts, “Maa ka naam kafi nahin hai?” (Isn’t the mother’s name good enough?”) adding, “Chalo, baap ka naam Dev Anand.” (Okay, write Dev Anand). Shantanu Maheshwari as her diffident lover Afsan, Indira Tiwari as the sex worker Kamli and Seema Pahwa as the brothel madam, do well.

Bhansali’s songs are evocative (with Sanchit Balhara and Ankit Balhara’s background score), and include the lovely qawwali Shikayat—qawwalis, once the staple of mainstream cinema and Muslim socials, are now nearly erased from Bollywood—and there are catchy dances like Dholida. Sudeep Chatterjee’s cinematography is compelling, as usual. The editing is brisk for a 152 min film. The sound and production design are meticulous: more sombre than Bhansali’s usually extravagant worlds, the sets deliciously also tribute old cinemas like Alfred and New Roshan Talkies. Key women talent include co-producer Prerna Singh, and screenplay and dialogues by Utkarshini Vashishtha. Produced by Bhansali Productions and Jayantilal Gada’s Pen Movies, the film is distributed internationally by Viacom18 Studios and Paramount Pictures International. Kisise darneka nahin (Never fear anyone), as Gangubai says. Like, totally.

https://www.mid-day.com/news/opinion/article/making-feminism-fun-23215067

briahna thumbnail
Posted: 2 years ago



A lot has happened in Indian popular cinema since the great Bollywood hype of the noughties. One Protagonist we Alia Bhatt's GANGUBAI KATHIAWADI would still be in this time, which itself was already shaped from efforts to open up to more controversial ones, more permissive content, completely unthinkable. Gangubai is a fighter, cynic, feminist, she curses, sucks, seduces, breaks all the rules of the assigned to her Role in the system of sex work and does all this completely unapologetic. Bhansali's film also deprives her of the Bollywood-typical constraints of redemption and Forgiveness, repentance and repentance and confess with all Consistency and harshness of the bigoted, patriarchal, Mafia society demanded respect unconditionally. (A small tear in the buttonhole occurs at most to the countless openly spilled ones, because the unfortunate flood of dreary color filters now also in Bollywood and in the exuberantly magnificent Sanjay Leela Bhansali Cinema has arrived.)