July 25, 2016

"Soggade Chinni Nayana" (Telugu Film Review)

My Review:

https://www.telugu360.com/soggade-chinni-nayana-movie-review-rating-live-updates/

"Dictator" (Telugu Film Review)

My Review of "Dictator" Review

https://www.telugu360.com/dictator-movie-review-rating-live-updates/

"Express Raja" (Telugu Film Review)

Review of the film at this link:

https://www.telugu360.com/express-raja-movie-review-rating-live-updates/

"Naanaku Prematho" (Telugu Film Review)

Review of the film at this link:

https://www.telugu360.com/nannaku-prematho-movie-review-rating-live-updates/

Sankranti fare 2016

My article on Sankranti Fare of movies

https://www.telugu360.com/a-rich-4-course-film-menu-awaits-fans/


July 23, 2016

"Kabali" (Telugu/Tamil Film Review): A Hyperbole of Radioactive Waste



"Kabali" is a film Rajnikanth agreed to in order  to satisfy his creative impulses, not to pander to the fan's clamor for entertainment. That's what you realise once the titles pass and a bearded prisoner walks out of his cell as he gets released after serving a 25 year sentence. The story is all about Kabaleeswaran,  a rival gangster who was anointed by Sitarama Raju (Nazar) when he was a nobody in Malaysia. The rival gang led by Tony Lee (Winston Chao) and Vijay Singh (Kishore) is the scourge of Kuala Lumpur known by a prime number 43. Much of the story is about the inter-necine rivalry between Gang 43 and Kabali as they clash with each other eliminating most seniors and juniors. The story must be the thinnest one ever endorsed by  Superstar Rajni and does nothing much to cheer the family audiences who make it an annual jamboree to watch his films or diehard fans who whistle at his antics and swagger and style.

In 150 minutes, director PA Ranjith gives a clichéd presentation of gang-wars in Malaysia while giving a sketchy overview of life of Tamils in Malaysia. Both the themes inter-mixed in the story fail to enthuse the audience. In the name of stylish and slick overlay, Ranjith gives us a docu-drama with some of the most exquisite cruelties and slaying of innocents and not-so-innocents. How the Malaysian police gets hoodwinked most of the times, we don't know. And most of the shooting sequences where people fall like nine pins are shot in popular streets and temple corners of Malaysia which look ludicrous to folks who find the country  to be law-abiding and orderly. The story has no twists, no nuances and no theatrical thrills except soundbytes from sophisticated weaponry. Instead we get to see a motley of unfamiliar faces posing as gangster crew who can only be trigger-happy and move their arms and legs acrobatically.

There is no room for pure emotions or surcharged dialogues or entertainment in songs, it is all about serious, mean business of the rival gangs and the worlds they live in. There were opportunities for the director when an ensemble of victims rehabilitated by Kabali under "Free Life Foundation" celebrate their annual day with their chief sponsor but the director fritters it away in boring banter. There were opportunities in flashback too when Radhika Apte lights up the screen more than once but the magic never gets ignited because there is no interplay of romance between the two except as montage shots. Another great opportunity lost was the way veteran actor Nazar was restricted to few minutes but the emotions of passing on the baton from him to Rajni were never dramatic or inspired.

It appears this is more a film made for Rajni's desire to see him as a new age Don in tweedy suits and exuberant stills without the bothers of a regular fare of formula entertainment. To a large extent, Rajni is smashing and stunning in his looks and dressing. Even without makeup, his persona and screen presence is towering. The only person who matches him in screen presence is Dhaniska, who plays the suave and unsmiling assassin girl. Radhika Apte is unremarkable and looked like she was going to drop dead any moment on screen. Despite Ranjith's efforts to make her look good with plastic smiles, Radhika Apt should realize that it is Tollywood alone which showed her in better glamour and aura  despite her vitriolic attacks on Tollywood. Cinematography is a saving grace of the film and the fact that additional cinematography team is roped in embellishes the shots to give the tautness of a Hollywood classic in visual splendor. Malaysian skyscape never looked better and the aerial shots just make you long for more as the only visual relief in the film besides showing one-upmanship of rival gangsters. The climax sequence on top of a skyscraper is the only thing that haunts you visually once you wake up tired to the synthetic charms of an over-used plot.

Music by Santosh Narayan fails to register except in occasional BGM scores. There is originality in the way he uses death-knell-sounding sirens as BGM whenever Rajni scores a goal against rivals but beyond that the songs and the scores hardly impress. Because the film doesn't fit to the regular Rajni formula film, you can afford to take few breaks when a song appears in the film. In fact you can  afford to miss the many violent scenes which surprisingly  missed the attention of the censors. There is a sequence of Dinesh (part of Rajni's gang) getting pulverized with soda bottle after soda bottle and then gets his shoulder sawed out with a giant hack by the main villain Winston Chao. Scenes like this make you wonder why legends like Rajni chose such massive doses of violence in his films. This is not recommended for kids at all and adults also will eventually feel impatient and walk out of the film because of insipid content and iterative plot of gangwars which has come umpteen times. The dubbing quality is not that bad as critics pointed out - it could have got better if Kishore used his own regular voice but dubbing per se is not materially impacting the film's lack of substance. As for director Ranjith, he is good at visual imagery but doesn't mix storytelling with entertainment. The film is the most boring, collinear narrative ever on celluloid and that exposes the director's gaps in understanding a popular medium of entertainment. You can make a film about Tamils in Antarctica also but the emotions should surcharge the atmosphere you project on screen -  the director fails in that litmus test.

That leaves you to  wonder whether the hype of "Kabali" is justified. The film got released in 30 countries and must be the marketing hoax of the decade. More people have watched the trailer than those who voted for BRexit in UK. For Rajni and his fans, this film should be a tipping point in deciding where to go next. After working with  skilled directors like Shankar, Ravi Kumar and Suresh Krissna, Rajni is  wallowing in box-office disasters for the last three films even if the hype is not fading. He may be the most-watched Asian after Jackie Chan in films but like all star-studded phenomena, films like "Kabali" will only accelerate his fall from grace because of an unintelligent nexus between his marketing machinery and the feedback loop from well-wisher fans. Hubris and Debris are two sides of the same coin which greeted every legend in film industry, and Rajni cannot be exception to this rule despite an army of Bhakts. If you don't reinvent yourself or take precaution in story selection and content, even Spielberg and Cameron cannot lift your fortunes. Yes, you can continue to have self-congratulatory jokes that defy the laws of physics but unless everybody in the supply chain makes money on your movie, you will lose the ability as a bankable star. The cycle of Hubris and Debris has spared nobody from Dev Anand to Shammi Kapoor to Rajesh Khanna to Amitabh Bacchan to Mithun Chakraborty to Superstar Krishna to  Chiranjeevi. "Kabali" is a disappointment of the decade for Rajni fans but it can be a great opportunity for the aging Superstar to regroup his charisma for a better legacy and impressive retirement. But only if he introspects on why this movie sucks. You can rate the film sheerly on technicalities as average but since the overall content leaves you dazed and tired, you got to rate it down so as to raise the bar for Superstar.

Rating: 2.25/5

June 18, 2016

The Fake News About Horror Films

I find it amusing to read this report in Times of India about a 65 year old man who died in a theatre in Thiruvannamalai while watching the horror film "The Conjuring-2". The report adds that the old man was pronounced dead in an "old government hospital" after he complained of chest pains. The last line takes the cake: "His friend allegedly disappeared with his body." This is what is called cooking up a story that cannot be nailed. The operative words are: Man died while watching film, Old Govt Hospital and friend disappeared. But the memes that entered your mind as you read this trending newsfeed on Facebook is that the movie gotta be deadly scary if an old man died while watching in a theatre. But did he really die? Then how did the body disappear? It could be the subject matter of "The Conjuring-3"! But jokes apart, the first part of "The Conjuring" collected almost Rs.120 crores in the year it got released in all languages in India. That is indeed a blockbuster but the initial response to the sequel now has been mixed: every time you cannot scare the skin out of people's brains and publicity stunts like this once again proves how gullible we are to paid news. Let me see whether the tags I used here show up in the trending news about "The Conjuring-2".

On a completely different note, I have been watching most of the horror films since my childhood - from Ramsay brothers' gory films to multi-starrer films like "Jaani Dushman" to RGV series on ghostly series to English films like "Evil Dead" and "Paranormal Activity" and "The Omen" series besides our own Telugu films like "Arundhati". There is a set pattern in these films which hasn't crossed the line of either Christian faith or Hindu culture. Most American films are shot in haunted houses set deep in the woods but why are they so god forsaken? Why do families invite trouble over settling in uninhabited homes? How do they eke our their living? Why do each one of them sleep in solitude in king-sized bedrooms which are worlds apart from each other?  Over time, the filmmakers there have become more liberal - you now see the crosses seem to be having no effect on the spirits. Back home, in Indian films, the ghosts cut loose  most times but just get reined in with timely collusion between the temple priest, the bearded Fakir and the occasional psycho-therapist. But our deities are more powerful than the show of crosses to the evil spirits. One snare or a sprinkling of holy ash and the spirits get packed off to their final destination. Writers like Ruskin Bond and Satyajit Ray who never believed in God also wrote best-sellers about eerie encounters with spirts. A few years back, a kid in Hyderabad confronted Ruskin Bond at Vidyaranya School  why his ghosts hardly scared him. Bond replied because "My ghosts are gentle." This is a gentle reminder to all those who make ghost films in the West: take a leaf out of Telugu films which have shifted into comedy gear a few years back after the audiences tired of tense horror thrillers. If you can't see them, at least make us laugh.

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

        "Jailer" is an electrifying entertainer in commercial format by Nelson who always builds a complex web of crime and police...