September 2, 2016

“Janata Garage” (Telugu Film Review)

Koratala Siva is a director who believes in making meaningful commercial films with an underlying message. His previous films “Mirchi” and “Srimanthudu” have met with huge success even if the initial response has been slow to muted. What sets him apart from the usual mongrels directing commercial films is the unhurried pace of narration, and honesty in story-telling. Even the audio tracks of his films released have a touch of this honesty. Many times, the audience keeps guessing on the order of songs in the audio CD because the makers juggle the order of songs. But from the film “Mirchi” onwards, Koratala Siva insists the songs on the catalogue appear in the same order they appear in the film – that’s quite remarkable. It is proof of the director’s intent to never cheat you – either by meaningless side-shows or flippant comedy for the sake of it. How does Janata Garage fare? First half of the film sizzles with good romance, towering performances, great songs and impactful scenes. But the second half loses its way after a brilliant scene in a government office starring NTR Jr. and Rajiv Kanakala.

For NTR Jr. the film is one major step in the right direction – of moving away from lineage-heavy dialogues and mass-image roles – of becoming a metrosexual, uber cool actor who will pack a punch with subtlety and method acting. He excels in his dances and gives another career-best performance by staying true to the mood of his role as a nature-lover and environmental activist who tames villains. The best part of NTR is he takes a backseat in few crucial scenes to elevate the Superstar Mohanlal wherever he needs to – right from titles (where Mohanlal’s name appears) to the last scene of the film (where again Mohanlal finishes off). In a film with mighty starcast from Mohanlal to NTR to Saikumar to Sachin Khandekar to Samantha and Nitya Menen, rarely do you find the hero’s introduction delayed by 21 minutes after the film starts.

The story is not new: Mohanlal is a self-made repairman who builds a giant garage called `Janata Garage’ in Hyderabad repairing all wheeled vehicles. He also attends to the worries of people and hence the caption “All things repaired here” which brings his troop of men in direct conflict with a billionaire called Mukesh (sounds eerie, right?). NTR, on the other hand, lives in Mumbai with his uncle Suresh’s family pursuing his interests in nature conservation. Destiny and family history eventually brings NTR into the portals of Janata Garage but there are some hidden sources of conflict from within which pull the story. Even though the story is familiar, the treatment and the characters built into the story build it out for a watchable though predictable narrative  - something that is bereft of regular formula stuff.

What pulls down the film is the second half with a heavy dose of violence, an item song (that is avoidable and deplorable) and monotonous. It smacks of lazy writing and momentary lapse in clarity that pulls the graph dramatically lower than the feeling you get at interval time. A lot of ends which could have got tied up in the second half hang out loose – the character of Samantha who cutely tailgates NTR in the first half peters out, Suresh and Sitara who doted on NTR never come back in his life again, the environment activist in NTR who is so vocal in the first half goes to sleep once NTR takes up the causes of JG in the second half…It is things like these which make the 162 minute film a little less savory than a four-course meal, it is okay to skip the desert but don’t take the breads away from the table, the audience may ask. However, what redeems the film is the measured characterisation of the principal and side actors in the film – Mohanlal, NTR, Sachin Khandekar, Unni Mukundan (as Mohanlal’s son), Saikumar, Suresh, Rajiv Kanakala, Ajay and Bhargavi. 

Of all, the surprising elevation comes from unexpected characters like Rajiv Kanakala and the subtle romantic track between Ajay and Bhargavi. Rajiv’s character also elevates the crux of the message that Koratala Siva wants to spread through the film about principled and integrity-based living. Ajay’s characterisation leaves you with a heavy heart. Almost all the rest of the pack from Saikumar, Suresh and Sachin Khedekar make their moments of impact on screen. Unni Mukundan, the Malayali actor who plays Mohanlal’s son stands out with a good performance that shows calibre – there are shades of the film “Shakti” (Dilip Kumar and Amitabh Bachchan) in the way his role develops. Interestingly, Sachin gets to dub his own voice in Telugu whereas Mohanlal (who dubbed himself for “Manamanthaa”) borrows another baritone for his role. Of all the roles, Mohanlal’s role is consistent throughout the film – he stays in the zone of a comatose, good Samaritan and can fire up a lighthouse without even a twitch on his chubby cheeks, his eyes have that magical power. Even the way he takes to stunts ought to be a lesson for NTR and other macho heroes – you don’t need to bash up baddies till they crumble like nine pins, you just need a symbolic fight once, the rest is banality. That’s what makes the film a bore in the second half. After a dramatic fight by NTR showing the five elements of nature in a demonstrative fight with the baddies, he keeps using his brawn instead of brain in the second half to tame the villains which dilutes the intensity of the original character – a cardinal mistake.

On the whole, the film dazzles in technical departments – dialogues, cinematography (Thiru), music (DSP) and set design. Thiru’s cinematography is great but if greatness is all about showing “yellow” colors oozing out of every frame, then the eye clamors for more. Music by DSP is just about apt both in the BGM and songs – he uses silence more at crucial screen moments which build a subtle tension in the film. The song, set design and choreography in “Apple Beauty” make it a visual treat to watch with B&W images of fallen motifs from modern wonders of the world. The song showing a nature trek by the hero and the two heroines Nitya and Samantha can ensnare anybody into love for nature and serenity. Had the editing been sharper in the second half, this film would have got a blockbuster status but for that to happen, the excessive stunts, the item song on Kajal (what a waste!) and a few dragging scenes should have got mercilessly chopped. NTR’s twelve minute oration in the Government Municipal office will become the most famous scene in his career and that itself is a paisa vasool scene for me which can rebuild foundations of a moralistic society in a corruption-free India.

Finally, one needs to assess this film differently despite scant comedy, lack of fan-hungry entertainment, incomplete romance or a lousy climax. In the past, class directors used to get atleast a dozen films or more to establish their credentials as makers with a different idiom and style and who are here to stay. Nowadays, the directors get only two or three films to establish what they stand for and how they mould their film templates. Koratala Siva has established himself as a meangingful director in just three films – and despite flaws, deserves praise for making a film worth watching once. NTR Jr. too is directionally moving correctly towards a mass-affluent image and this film underlines that intent one more time after “Naannaku Prematho”. He may have erred on the overall finishing of the plot because he doesn’t have the benefit of a mega family where about half-dozen people hear a script before okaying it with more modifications. But that doesn’t make the film less worthy. It can be watched with family too.


Rating: 3/5

August 13, 2016

"Mohen-Jodaro" (Hindi Film Review): Neither Entertaining, nor Authentic


Asutosh Gowarikar was one of India’s finest directors when he burst on the scene with “Lagaan”. As a director who immensely enjoys the process of research preceding a piece of history, he revels in the creative churn that precedes the shooting of a film as much as the post-production part of the film. His attention to detail and sparkling clean sense of cinematic opulence have always brought out the lesser-known nuggets of Indian history which are not as widely-reported as other facets. Lagaan and Jodhaa Akbar were all about such missing chapters which not many could refute. Because he selects historical settings with under-researched anecdotes or imagined stories, his films are seen for the figments of creativity rather than as records of authenticity.

Mohen-Jodaro had therefore raised excessive hype with lilting music videos and extensive interviews about the making of the film. The civilization that predates India before the world knows us was always  interesting - it has bits and pieces remotely remembered from high-school history books: a unicorn, pieces of currency, goddess Sindhu, the great public Bath, the multi-storey housing colony with higher and lower cities and the advanced irrigation system more than few millennia ago.

What makes Asutosh’s films different is the cinematic high it gives viewers from the creative liberties he takes in re-imagining a world now forgotten and lost in translation. Coming from that background, Mohen-jodaro  had lovely music, a great-looking heroine and an angular hero who looks sturdy and stressed to represent a character that’s improbable. It also has the most menacing villain combination of Kabir Bedi and his wicked son. But the magic of Gowarikar is clearly missing. It is missing in the sweep of scenes selected to highlight the cultural aspects of a civilization. It is missing in the hopeless fare dished out in the name of a story that resembles a cross between a Bahubali, Game of Thrones and Gladiator. It is missing in the overall lack of feel-good sense except in the goodness of a song or two.

The story  has no authenticity or coherence;  it just stitches up a romantic story between an indigo farmer Salman (Hrithik Roshan) and Chaani (Pooja Hegde) blended with  a predictable fight of an under-dog out to avenge his father’s death. The only attempt to authenticate this plot is the climax of a spectacular water wave which engulfs all life. It is not proven in archaeological studies whether water which is the life-blood of the Harappan civilization has actually blown away the Indus Valley civilization to smithereens. Historians always opined that apart from building flood defences, the highest recorded rainfall was a measly 13 cms but the film showed a gigantic downpour which almost vanishes the Indus Valley population. There were other liberties also taken like showing grapes and coconuts (these may have come later and resemble today’s lot), Arabs and Mongols (who probably invaded India much later atleast two thousand years later).

To be fair, there are some highlights. Apart from showcasing jaw-dropping infrastructure like the Great Bath, the rectangular gypsum-coated bricks built with  stunning finesse, director gives a taste of action in the first half and second half with the deadly fight against the alligator or the exhausting clash of the hero with two man-eating titans. The rest of the motifs pass without an excuse and fail to prompt any emotions –it is so dead-pan unlike Asutosh Gowarikar.

Music by Rahman both in BGM and the songs stands out. The song “Tu Hai” actually could have been better edited on screen because the beauty of the melody gets lost in the elaborate buildout – which is not as taut as the promotional video song. Hritik Roshan gives a convincing performance as a jaded Indigo farmer with werewolf costumes and under-emoting. Pooja Hegde looks ravishing in her skimpy dresses with enough skin popping out of all curves in the body. But she sure doesn’t know how to kiss Hrithik in the film despite the length of the scene ( a real surprise in Asutosh films which are otherwise sober and subtle). A perennial problem with Asutosh is the elaborateness of motions before characters are established and the story moves. It looks the editor always takes a  nap in his films; this film is excruciatingly longer without the usual impact  at 167 minutes. The SFX is patchy and not segued well with the visual canvass Asutosh projects in his films. Cinematography is to blame for this gap between effects and visuals.

ON the whole, this is a film that is a botched attempt in unearthing a visual interpretation of an ancient civilization but the talent and money being wasted  for this pursuit is colossal – it could have actually gone into research of the over 1000 plus settlements that the Civilization inhabited in its march from Afghanistan to Mumbai. Instead, Asutosh gives us an unexciting adventure that you have seen in many period films. Director now has to get back his mojo by investing his time on a better narrative with a historical context. If you skip the film, a better alternative is to  catch up on some of the umpteen well-researched documentaries on Mohan-jodaro rather than go by the director’s half-baked version of history.


Rating: 2.5/5

Interview with Priyadarsi Pulikonda


My interview with "Kaushik" in Pelli Choopulu:

https://www.telugu360.com/interview-priyadarsi-pulikonda/

"Manamantha" (Telugu Film Review)


My review of Manamanthaa :

https://www.telugu360.com/manamantha-review-rating-live-updates-twitter-talk/

"Pelli Choopulu" (Telugu Movie Review)

My review of Pelli Choopulu :

https://www.telugu360.com/pelli-choopulu-movie-review-rating-talk/

"Jailor" (Telugu/Tamil) Movie Review: Electrifying!

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