-
18th July 2011, 02:59 PM
#1531
Senior Member
Senior Hubber

Originally Posted by
kid-glove
Good to know. Havent seen it yet. Aamir took Amol's credits away. Acc. to AG, TZP's flaws are down to rewrites & changes brought about by Aamir.
i thought so that there should've been issues between them, when there were thanks to all and sundry including 'Heartfelt thanks for Karan Johar
' in the title card of SKD, but no mention of Aamir!
INDIAN...WORLD CHAMPION
!!!
-
18th July 2011 02:59 PM
# ADS
Circuit advertisement
-
18th July 2011, 09:18 PM
#1532
Senior Member
Devoted Hubber

Originally Posted by
kid-glove
Good to know. Havent seen it yet. Aamir took Amol's credits away. Acc. to AG, TZP's flaws are down to rewrites & changes brought about by Aamir.
Thanks Jinju. let me d/l SKD
Didnt AG shot the movie atleast for a week or two? I read somewhere that Aamir is not happy at AG way execution/taking.
-
21st July 2011, 12:11 AM
#1533
Senior Member
Veteran Hubber

Originally Posted by
ajaybaskar
Will watch Ragini MMS today..
It's not a good movie !! There were only 2 hair raising scenes and that too only 1 among them was fit enough to send the adrenaline pumping !! Waiting for your review !! I suggest Haunted 3D !! A mix of little horror + sentiments !!
-
21st July 2011, 12:22 AM
#1534
Senior Member
Veteran Hubber

Originally Posted by
jinju
yes vinod, many people left halfway into the second half...15 mins each of each adventure sport (deep sea diving, skydiving, Spain's traditional bullrun) for each of the protagonist to overcome their respective fears; Hrithik character overcomes his phobia of deep by seadiving, Farhan character overcomes his fear of heights by skydiving, and Abhay overcomes fear of death after participating in the bullrun, and thus become liberated men

...idhukke 45 mins aayidchu. appuram 4-5 songs another half an hour gone. micham 1 hr 10 mins thaan padam, athulayum neraya thevaillaatha scenes...some serious editing required. Critics will love to call this as 'it is not just a film, it is an experience' estra estra

.
They could have done the same acrobatics in some reality show !! Why to waste in a movie ??
Well, already i remember one from a popular site calling it a scintillating experience !! Will give it a watch later !! Of late Hrithick's movies aren't up to the mark !! Neither the songs of ZNMD make a mark in my music store nor the plot impresses me !
-
21st July 2011, 02:11 PM
#1535
Senior Member
Veteran Hubber
Laaga Chunri main Daag- Absolutely loved it
-
21st July 2011, 02:40 PM
#1536
Senior Member
Diamond Hubber

Originally Posted by
Balaji.r
Thanks Jinju. let me d/l SKD
Didnt AG shot the movie atleast for a week or two? I read somewhere that Aamir is not happy at AG way execution/taking.
Yeah. AG wasn't happy about AK's creative ideas. AK wasn't happy about AG's execution & the way project was headed (if you believe him). The marriage didn't work.
...an artist without an art.
-
24th July 2011, 04:33 AM
#1537
Senior Member
Diamond Hubber
Pyaar ka punchnama - Terrible. Downright silly and ugly chicks too
-
30th July 2011, 09:59 AM
#1538
Senior Member
Senior Hubber
as usual, BRangan nails it
!
http://www.thehindu.com/life-and-sty...cle2305050.ece
Armchair Epiphanies
Baradwaj Rangan
Do multiples audiences want their stories of redemption shorn of rough edges?
I did not review Zoya Akhtar's multiplex hit “Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara” for this paper – and I didn't have to. I'd already reviewed “Wake Up Sid” in 2009, where I wrote, “It has all the weight of a television commercial showing sad people transforming into happy people in the course of thirty seconds, which is to say that nothing ever seems to be at stake.” And of “Rock On,” in 2008, I wrote, “But that's a practical way of looking at life, and [this] is, above all, a story of dreams and dreamers.”
The point in recalling these older reviews is that with “Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara” we're recalling these older films – and the film that birthed it all, “Dil Chahta Hai,” which, ten years later, is still the most affecting, most bracing, most honest coming-of-age film from modern-day Bollywood. Its descendants are happy to inherit its vibe, its coolness, its Indo-Western hipness, but elsewhere they are content to settle for easy epiphanies. The eponymous rich brat of “Wake Up Sid” resolves to leave home, but he instantly moves in with a girl-friend, the kind of friend who can afford to redecorate her house before she lands a job, and his existential crises thereon unfold at the level of his learning to fry an egg.
And in “Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara,” the Abhay Deol character, Kabir, struggles to come to terms with his hasty engagement to Natasha, a girl he likes but does not love. Like Preity Zinta's easily caricatured one-note boyfriend in “Dil Chahta Hai,” Natasha is fleshed out as an emotional manipulator, a suspicious nag, a clinger – and you have to wonder why so obvious a talent as Zoya Akhtar has to make it so easy to identify with this girl being dumped. We experience not a twinge when she is let go. She deserves it, we tell ourselves. Kabir deserves better.
The affluent characters in these films experience life-altering revelations with as much effort as sinking into a warm bubble bath. Or at least, the audience isn't allowed to “see” too much of their discomfort; we're simply asked to enjoy, vicariously, this angst-free acquisition of emotional truth, amidst plush production values that make us feel that we should all have these problems, these eye-catching problems, and their greeting-card solutions. (“Smell the roses, and perhaps a couple of peonies too!”)
“Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara” and “Rock On” and “Wake Up Sid” are well-crafted films, glutted with good writing and acting and startling moments of discovery, and that's why it's baffling that they excuse themselves from genuine emotion. What if Natasha were a really nice girl, really in love with Kabir, and has waited for him a long time, and then he — for whatever reasons (maybe he fell for someone else) — faces the unpleasant but manful task of telling her he wants out.
There is a superb moment in James L Brooks' “As Good As It Gets,” an often rewarding and often frustrating drama, where Helen Hunt's character is mother to an asthmatic son, and her date finds himself unable to handle the child's spasmodic coughing. He leaves her home somewhat abashed, with the excuse that it's too much reality for a Friday night. Could that be the thought driving these multiplex filmmakers, who want their audiences to experience, on their Friday nights, something borderline-real without rubbing their noses in reality?
These films, therefore, are enjoyable on a superficial level, at an easy level, with real-life wrinkles airbrushed away with the skill of a “Playboy”-centrefold designer. And who will deny Zoya her success? She has learnt from the failure of her first feature, the commendable “Luck By Chance,” which laid bare the sweaty and dishonourable struggles behind professional success. It showed us what people can be like with their blinkers on and when they want something badly, and it made us squirm at the recognition of our own ethical compromises, which it reflected in an uncompromising glare – in other words, it was a little too much reality for a Friday night.
INDIAN...WORLD CHAMPION
!!!
-
31st July 2011, 06:02 PM
#1539
Senior Member
Devoted Hubber
Shaitan: Pretty good . Liked it very much. Impressive debut by bejoy "shaitan" nambiar
-
1st August 2011, 07:04 AM
#1540
Senior Member
Diamond Hubber
Dhan Dhana Dhan Goal.
Yeah, I am outdated, it was on Zee TV, so I caught it.
Sports movie template, with some sort of patriotism thrown in (though it later became South Asia-ish, rather than Indian-ish), with all the cliches.
But performance made it worthwhile. I thought I would never say this but John Abraham was good. Then, the other guys, whatsisname, Arshad Warsi and Bhoman Irani, and the rest. Good script. Really keeps you at the edge of your seat except for those song moments. The first match was hillarious. Ruined my Sunday nap time, but worth it.
" நல்ல படம் , சுமாரான படம் என்பதையெல்லாம் தாண்டியவர் நடிகர் திலகம் . சிவாஜி படம் தோற்கலாம் ..சிவாஜி தோற்பதில்லை." - Joe Milton.
Bookmarks