Page 52 of 400 FirstFirst ... 242505152535462102152 ... LastLast
Results 511 to 520 of 3992

Thread: Film / Documentary - Recently watched & worthy of some discussion

  1. #511
    Senior Member Diamond Hubber groucho070's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Malaysia
    Posts
    5,390
    Post Thanks / Like
    yeah, that explains the anti-superstition stand. But Velu Prabakaran is too amateurish.
    " நல்ல படம் , சுமாரான படம் என்பதையெல்லாம் தாண்டியவர் நடிகர் திலகம் . சிவாஜி படம் தோற்கலாம் ..சிவாஜி தோற்பதில்லை." - Joe Milton.

  2. # ADS
    Circuit advertisement
    Join Date
    Always
    Location
    Advertising world
    Posts
    Many
     

  3. #512
    Administrator Platinum Hubber NOV's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Malaysia
    Posts
    27,381
    Post Thanks / Like
    you were an active participant.... http://www.mayyam.com/talk/showthrea...ayadevi-movies
    Never argue with a fool or he will drag you down to his level and beat you at it through sheer experience!

  4. #513
    Senior Member Diamond Hubber groucho070's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Malaysia
    Posts
    5,390
    Post Thanks / Like
    Poor ilekani, probably still waiting for some mega write-ups for me. Not worth it. I bought Puratchikaran for Sathyaraj. Very disappointing.
    " நல்ல படம் , சுமாரான படம் என்பதையெல்லாம் தாண்டியவர் நடிகர் திலகம் . சிவாஜி படம் தோற்கலாம் ..சிவாஜி தோற்பதில்லை." - Joe Milton.

  5. #514
    Senior Member Diamond Hubber ajaybaskar's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Dubai
    Posts
    8,105
    Post Thanks / Like
    Unakkum Enakkum

    Though I have my own reservations on PD's film making skills, this film (the telugu original to be precise) is very much watchable.

  6. #515
    Administrator Platinum Hubber NOV's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Malaysia
    Posts
    27,381
    Post Thanks / Like
    and I watched vengaayam in spite of satyaraj
    only after someone told me he comes and goes in a split of moment..
    Never argue with a fool or he will drag you down to his level and beat you at it through sheer experience!

  7. #516
    Senior Member Diamond Hubber groucho070's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Malaysia
    Posts
    5,390
    Post Thanks / Like
    Well, no longer interested in what he's doing (no, not because of the kisu kisu), also why after decades of being himself with bald head, suddenly he's wearing wig during public functions. Why man, why?
    " நல்ல படம் , சுமாரான படம் என்பதையெல்லாம் தாண்டியவர் நடிகர் திலகம் . சிவாஜி படம் தோற்கலாம் ..சிவாஜி தோற்பதில்லை." - Joe Milton.

  8. #517
    Moderator Diamond Hubber littlemaster1982's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Chennai
    Posts
    9,880
    Post Thanks / Like
    Quote Originally Posted by NOV View Post
    looks and feels like an amateur production... but strong message...


    (former assistant to Velu Prabhakaran)
    And almost all the actors are director's family members. The "koothu kalaignar" is his dad. There was a detailed interview of them in Ananda Vikatan last year.

  9. #518
    Administrator Platinum Hubber NOV's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Malaysia
    Posts
    27,381
    Post Thanks / Like
    wow... thats nice
    the kooththu family story was the most emotional.... well done dad
    Never argue with a fool or he will drag you down to his level and beat you at it through sheer experience!

  10. #519
    Moderator Diamond Hubber littlemaster1982's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Chennai
    Posts
    9,880
    Post Thanks / Like
    Sankagiri Rajkumar's debut film ‘Vengayam', made with the help of people from his village, strikes a blow against superstition



    Some of the cast of “Vengayam”. Out of a total of 105 actors in the movie, 96 are the director's relatives from his native village.

    OVER 100 years have rolled by since the nationalist revolutionary poet Subramanya Bharathi wrote this famous poem The Present Condition of the Indians. Bharathi expressed his anguish at the plight of his countrymen who were stuck in the quagmire of superstitious beliefs that came in the way of liberation from the colonial yoke.

    But irrational beliefs are so deep-rooted in society that despite the relentless battle launched by Bharathi and several rationalists, including the doyen of the communist movement in South India, M. Singaravelu, and the Dravidar Kazhagam founder, ‘Periyar' E.V. Ramasamy, a large majority of the population in Tamil Nadu continues to be under the spell of fake godmen, black magic practitioners, deceitful soothsayers and fallacious astrologers. The multi-pronged battle against this social scourge has not died down. Right from the 1930s, when the first Tamil talkie was released, a good section of writers, artists and film personalities have used the powerful mass medium of cinema to promote rationalist and scientific ideas.

    Repackaging the onion

    The young debutant director Sankagiri Rajkumar's Vengayam, which lashes out at forces unleashing superstitious beliefs, reinforces the belief that Tamil cinema's fight against irrationality will not end so easily.

    Though the film was originally released in September 2011, it did not do well for various reasons. However, when it was re-released on March 23 with a slightly modified title – ‘ven' Gayam – by the actor-director Cheran, it started making considerable impact. Describing the movie as one produced by common people in a village, Cheran said that if such excellent initiatives were allowed to flop, a time would come when no good movie would be made in the State.

    The film, made on a shoestring budget, is unique in many ways. It depicts the collective might of the people, particularly youngsters, who take on fake godmen, astrologers, tantriks and soothsayers who play havoc with the lives of individuals.

    Rajkumar's passion to enter the celluloid world as a director wielding his camera against superstitions was fired by the tragic death of his uncle, a victim of a reckless astrologer's predictions.



    S.M. MANICKAM, THE director's father, in a scene from the film.


    In not relying much on professional actors, the director seems to have adopted Shyam Benegal's experiment of involving a large number of villagers in making the Hindi movie Manthan (The Churning, 1976), which is based on rural empowerment.

    Rajkumar has inspired many residents of his native village, Chettipatti in Salem district, to don the roles in Vengayam. Almost all these “stars” have performed with utmost dedication, breathing life into the characters.

    Vengayam (onion), the title of the film, has great significance. The term was often used by ‘Periyar' Ramasamy to emphasise that the hollowness of superstitions is a fact just like the emptiness of an onion, which gets revealed when all its layers are peeled away, and people should understand this to enable themselves to reject them. The story is absorbing not because of the techniques adopted but owing to its honesty and the realism shown in dealing with the ticklish issue. The movie opens with the note of caution: “All the events and characters depicted in the movie are not fictitious but real!”

    Set in a rural milieu, the film traces the travails of the illiterate and poor villagers at the hands of tricksters in the garb of godmen, astrologers and soothsayers who exploit them. Rajkumar weaves the story using certain real-life incidents and his imagination as warp and weft. As the victims are driven to despair and end their lives or succumb to the tricksters' gimmicks, the villagers' resolve to flay the evil practice gets reinforced.

    Power to children

    The film has not failed to mirror the agony and courage of a small group of children who in some way or the other lost their kin to superstitions. These residents of a children's home, drawing inspiration from an actor who visits them, decide to bring the tricksters in and around their village to book. With the title song invoking the local deity at a religious congregation held under the supervision of some ‘godmen' in the village, the film gives a glimpse of the social life of the local people and their beliefs and religious customs. The story makes steady headway though it shuttles between the present and trips to the recent past through flashbacks. Even the romance of the local sub-inspector and the daughter of a farmer finely fits into the main plot.

    There are scenes of great emotional depth: a little boy pleading with his father to save him after a tantrik, in an attempted human sacrifice, inflicts grievous injuries on him; the father, a folk artist, running from pillar to post to collect money for buying drugs to save his son from death; fellow artists sharing his agony; a powerloom worker ending his life as all his dreams to launch a self-employment venture are shattered by a soothsayer; and his grandmother becoming insane on hearing the news.

    Besides handling direction, story, screenplay and dialogue, the 28-year-old Rajkumar donned the role of the young powerloom worker. His father, S.M. Manickam, and grandmother, Vellaiammal, are also among the actors. Actor Sathyaraj played a guest role.

  11. #520
    Administrator Platinum Hubber NOV's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Malaysia
    Posts
    27,381
    Post Thanks / Like
    excellent LM... but I guess the film didnt do well, even during its 2nd innings?
    Never argue with a fool or he will drag you down to his level and beat you at it through sheer experience!

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •