Mr Perfect - is a light-hearted family entertainer starring Prabhas, Kajal Agarwal and Tapsi from the makers of "Bommarillu". Director Dasarath gives a delicately-poised and cute love story on today's love dilemmas of the young on what is compatibility and all that. It reminds you of the earlier film - "Santosham" and the plot carries you to the end in a breezy fashion. Dil Raju ensures that Prabhas - the action hero - plays second fiddle to Prabhas - the romantic, do-gooder, endearing hero loved by masses and classes. Kajal gets better scope for performance and stands out. Dialogues by Abburi Ravi are effective and classy - and go straight to the heart. Music by Devi Sri Prasad is average but not outstanding. Great film to watch with family.
April 23, 2011
"Dum Maaro Dum" Movie Review
The beauty with Ramesh Sippy Entertainment - who gave us hits like "Sholay" and "Bluffmaster" is they turn in quite an effort from storyline to dialogues to immaculate execution which lights up the screen. Screenplay to action scenes, characterisation to BGM score, "Dum Maaro Dum" deserves hurray for Rohan Sippy whose passion for everything filmy outmatches that of his father. He ropes in Shridhar Raghavan for a plausible Goa-drug-mafia story and crispy dialogues, Preetam for music, whoever for brilliant camerawork and a brilliant starcast - Abhishek Bachan, Aditya Pancholi, Bipasha, Prateik Babbar, and Rana Daggubati. All of them sizzle except item girl Deepika Padukone- you can catch her better in Kingfisher calendar. And just when you think this Adults movie ends where it should end - there's a twist. Rana D gets meaty role and can eke out more roles in Bollywood while Prateik is the soul of the film. Watchable.
"Teen Maar" Movie Review
A film by Remake Guru - Jayant Paranjape to resurrect another hit for Pawan Kalyan after "Jalsa". This time he remakes "Love Aaj Kal" gets in the peppy Trisha and makes Pawan give a wow performance in dual role - one as Michael Velayudham and Arjun Palai. Pawan gives a blistering performance and gets a chance to showcase his individualistic acting which may sound blasphemous to Acting Coaches. Mani Sharma scores good music while it is Trivikram who steals the thunder with some of the most touching and beautiful lines written in Telugu Cinema for long - he may have broken his own record in having most memorable lines in one movie. Watchable for Pawan maybe many times.
"Shakti" Movie Review
"Sakti" is a complicated storyline from an ambitious director Meher Ramesh and an extravagant producer Aswini Dutt - who believe that blockbusters need to have killer app special effects, monstrous settings amidst exotic locations. Its about a prodical warrior who has a calling to protect the ancient Hindu shrines and a royal family heiress from some weird Pharoah-like Atavistic herds from Egypt who are seeking a talismanic gem that's in possession of Saktimaan NTR. Some story that!
The movie is already convoluted with complicated subplots liberally borrowed from Hindu Mythology, Mummy fables, and half a dozen socio-fantasty thrillers pre-released like "Anaga Anaga Oka Dheerudu", :"Mahesh Khaleja", "MagaDheera" and so on. What's bizarre is that the movie lacks entertainment and fails to grip you to seats - not even the parade of locations from Kashmir to Haridwar, Cairo to Columbo and Rajasthan to Rayalaseema will redeem this misdirected movie which is already bearing the weight of colossal budgets, bizarre storyline and bad casting. A song or two gives the relief. But broadly, the movie doesn't connect with the audience. NTR Jr. is too talented star to bank on bad storied-directors, he can carry a film on his shoulders but there should be a story to do that - which is missing in the movie.
The movie is already convoluted with complicated subplots liberally borrowed from Hindu Mythology, Mummy fables, and half a dozen socio-fantasty thrillers pre-released like "Anaga Anaga Oka Dheerudu", :"Mahesh Khaleja", "MagaDheera" and so on. What's bizarre is that the movie lacks entertainment and fails to grip you to seats - not even the parade of locations from Kashmir to Haridwar, Cairo to Columbo and Rajasthan to Rayalaseema will redeem this misdirected movie which is already bearing the weight of colossal budgets, bizarre storyline and bad casting. A song or two gives the relief. But broadly, the movie doesn't connect with the audience. NTR Jr. is too talented star to bank on bad storied-directors, he can carry a film on his shoulders but there should be a story to do that - which is missing in the movie.
April 3, 2011
World Cup 2011 victory for Incredible India!
India 2.0 finally gets to see India 2.0 lift the World Cup in 2011 after 28 years of wait...It was the best of times - when India already holds centrestage to the game of cricket straddling the best of Advertising Monies, Cash-rich cricketing body, eyeball for popping out eyeball attention, passions for a whole nation...Now it will the rule the world as a Benign superpower, already known for sportsmanship, non-controversial play, and spectacular passion. Now, I can tell that I have watched India's greatest cricketing victory in color and HDTV screens befitting the new resurgent India - not on Dyanora B&W TV. Its a sign of how a nation of 1.21 Billion people are taking on the world - and this world cup win is going to make India shift the earth's axis by a few more degrees - and that will stay for many more decades to come.
March 22, 2011
Warrren Buffett in India Today
Warren Buffett may not be second-richest man on the planet but he has enough Ekalavya followers in India from RaamDeo Agarwal to Rakesh Jhunjhunwala and from Nilesh Shah to Prashant Jain. Not surprising his visit beginning today is generating blitzkreig publicity. Whatever he says - markets will gyrate in India interpreting madly like Wall Street. I hear people are getting re-born again to get themselves insured with Berkshire Insurance, some are buying hatchbacks to get new cars insured by Berkshire Insurance to grab a seat to hear the Sage of Omaha speak.
The demand for Buffett's books has always been good in India and I hear that sales of "The Collected Essays of Warren Buffett" has hit a four-year high in the last one month from publishers - a sign that Billionaires in India invited by the CII are ready to hear them so they can cut loose with their cheque books. But I guess many of them may be unfamiliar with Warren Buffett's methods of rewarding shareholders and transparency. Now, Buffett is going to talk about Charity (which already began at home for him and Gates) to Indian Billionaires. But I guess this is going to be a signature event - Indian Billionaires have made it big only in the last two decades after unshackling of the license Raj system. Its only now they are smelling the coffee - so to talk about pledging billions is not going to appeal to many. They will say they are generating employment already which has lifted many out of poverty. Besides, we have Tatas and Birlas used to doing philanthrophy in their own way - unassumingly and consistently. We must remember that Gates and Buffett have been icons of American capitalism who started pledging their billions only in the late nineties after decades of unbridled expansion and ambition. Indian businessesmen, on the other hand, do charity when they are growing as well - so this talk about cajoling them to pledge their millions is not impressive. At the end of Buffett's visit, I will not be surprised if a few more billion dollar deals are announced.
What is important, however, is that Buffett may be pleasantly surprised by the verve and vibrancy in the corridors of Indian Business, Polity and Parliament - if they keep their best foot forward as always happen. Buffett is himself a rank opportunist and he may not give anything away before he takes away more from India. In his annual letter to shareholders in 2011, I read that he was hopeful there will be no major catastrophe that will eat into his Reinsurance profits - and bingo, you had Japan catgastrophe which will nibble away some of the profits in Munich Re and other companies. He has never taken any exposure to India so far in underwriting of risk - so he and Ajit Jain, colleague are meeting IRDA chief J Harinarayan to assess whether Risk in India is profitable. Ask Indian businessmen on Risk, they can talk to Buffett on profiting from Risks here till the cows come home.
The demand for Buffett's books has always been good in India and I hear that sales of "The Collected Essays of Warren Buffett" has hit a four-year high in the last one month from publishers - a sign that Billionaires in India invited by the CII are ready to hear them so they can cut loose with their cheque books. But I guess many of them may be unfamiliar with Warren Buffett's methods of rewarding shareholders and transparency. Now, Buffett is going to talk about Charity (which already began at home for him and Gates) to Indian Billionaires. But I guess this is going to be a signature event - Indian Billionaires have made it big only in the last two decades after unshackling of the license Raj system. Its only now they are smelling the coffee - so to talk about pledging billions is not going to appeal to many. They will say they are generating employment already which has lifted many out of poverty. Besides, we have Tatas and Birlas used to doing philanthrophy in their own way - unassumingly and consistently. We must remember that Gates and Buffett have been icons of American capitalism who started pledging their billions only in the late nineties after decades of unbridled expansion and ambition. Indian businessesmen, on the other hand, do charity when they are growing as well - so this talk about cajoling them to pledge their millions is not impressive. At the end of Buffett's visit, I will not be surprised if a few more billion dollar deals are announced.
What is important, however, is that Buffett may be pleasantly surprised by the verve and vibrancy in the corridors of Indian Business, Polity and Parliament - if they keep their best foot forward as always happen. Buffett is himself a rank opportunist and he may not give anything away before he takes away more from India. In his annual letter to shareholders in 2011, I read that he was hopeful there will be no major catastrophe that will eat into his Reinsurance profits - and bingo, you had Japan catgastrophe which will nibble away some of the profits in Munich Re and other companies. He has never taken any exposure to India so far in underwriting of risk - so he and Ajit Jain, colleague are meeting IRDA chief J Harinarayan to assess whether Risk in India is profitable. Ask Indian businessmen on Risk, they can talk to Buffett on profiting from Risks here till the cows come home.
March 6, 2011
"Inside Job": Award-winning documentary on how Wall Street brought the world down to the Road
Now that the sub-prime crisis is well behind us, and we are not really looking forward to the next one sooner, public memory is as short-sighted as ever. In order to jog the public memory about the crisis that rattled governments, public and societies equally the world over, you have choices - of reading about the books that brought the worst crisis since '30s. In no pecking order of importance, you can read the books like "13 Bankers", "Too Big to Fail", "Two Trillion Dollar Meltdown", "Sub-prime Solution", "Fool's Gold", "The End of WalStreet as we know it", "Faultlines", "BlackSwan", "Crisis Economics", "A Colossal Failure of Common sense" or any other Wiley classics or Penguin books coming still by dime a dozen. I suggest a more time-saving choice - grab a seat to watch Charles Ferguson's "INSIDE JOB" which won the Oscar for the best documentary. The man has written, directed and produced a pulsatingly educative documentary which will break the glass ceiling of understanding the real issues that brought the world economies to a grinding halt during those years of 2007-2010 from US to Iceland to Greece to UK. Charles Ferguson gives in one hour forty eight minutes all the dope and lowdown that has led to the crisis of 2008 and gives a crisp background of the years leading to the fat years before greed, chicanery, and blatant selfishness of a few "bad" men of Wall Street colluding with Washington led to blood on the streets. The documentary is as gripping any movie because it uses narration and interview technique to give an overview of the nexus between few big banks and Government, between Academic Economists and their linkages with Hedge Funds, between Rating Agencies and the Ratees, between Fed and Other Bankers. Truth is tougher to tell and even tougher to swallow and they say pride goes before the fall - but watching this documentary brought out the hard truth that Wall Street and some of the biggest names riding on its masthead do not have the grace to accept what price the world has paid for their follies - in the testimony, in their brazen pursuit of profits and the shameless lack of guilt for taking compensation even when investor's monies have vaporised. The documentary shows during the narration that the following people have declined to give interviews for the film (which should tell all) - Goldman Sach's Henry Paulson, Alan Greenspan, Lawrence Summers, Robert Rubin, Timothy Geitner, Glenn Hubbard and Ben Bernanke. Don't miss the film - INSIDE JOB - its more than a documentary.
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