Showing posts with label Vinay Varma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vinay Varma. Show all posts

May 5, 2014

"Anamika" (Telugu Film Review) /"Nee Enge En Anbe" (Tamil Film Review)



In times of male-chauvinist cinema plots in Telugu and Tamil film industries with kinky moustaches and thigh-slapping bravado, "Anamika" is Viacom's (Network 18) proud entry into the South bastions with a rivetting story based on "Kahaani" that shows Vidya Balan in totally different light after "The Dirty Picture". They picked Sekhar Kammula who has evolved cinematic sensibilities to direct the film and a bankable female star Nayanataara to play the title role of "Anamika". Despite the story's original contours being intact, some axis-shifting changes have been made to nativise the original story.

The original story is of a woman, in her late-pregnancy visiting Kolkata in search of her missing husband. The plot thickens with a stunning, unthinkable climax. It was too sophisticated but the film did phenomenally well bringing laurels to both Vidya, Viacom and Sujoy Ghosh; it particularly did well in markets like China and Hong Kong as these markets welcome unconventional subjects. Given this background, Viacom's choice of Nayanataara in a normal role sucks out the sympathetic chord that enhanced the emotional quotient of the original for reasons best known to the director, the producer and the star heroine. It seems Sekhar wanted bigger challenges for the film. So, the story is straightened a bit, dumbed down for the South audiences with impressive twists and a unique ending that is still unconventional for a vernacular film. Don't want to break the suspense over this thriller of 139 minutes - a unique feat for Sekhar Kammula with a starcast that did a consistently good job throughout except Naresh.

It is Sekhar's luck that such an immaculate team of technicians and crew got roped in for this bi-lingual project and he does a reasonably good job of turning in a watchable thriller with a finish that breaks the female stereotypes. His choice of the Old city of Hyderabad in a cute setting of the microcosm of life amidst rhythmic pandemonium is evocative. Despite a tight script that leaves little room for indulging in Sekhar's famously subtle potshots on current paradigms about life through common people's portrayal, Sekhar registers one or two signature scenes - especially the one in the police station where she is at the receiving end of a callous constable along with others who are used to it. And then, at the kitchen of the hotel where she is staying - where the people are out to help her unlike government servants who are paid to help but won't. Sekhar's strength lies in telling a good story without a rush to impress or embellish - to that extent this is a fine film even if you have or haven't seen the original film. He is also terrific at characterisation, each role is essayed with a precision and nuanced acting that makes the duration of the character's screentime irrelevant. This is Sekhar's greatest under-stated strength which few directors can match.

Vaibhav Reddy, son of director A.Kodandarami Reddy gets a meaty role as the helper policeman who escorts Anamkia in her search for truth. The irreverent hotel manager, the callous constable, and the curious minister Naresh  - all of them are utilised well except that the role of Naresh lacked killer instinct and the justification it needed in the end. Too many questions about his role in the plot were left unanswered. Among the roles that stand out in the film  - the role of renowned theatre actor Vinay Varma as the lusting SI who makes an indecent proposal to find Anamika's husband is intense but short-lived. It is difficult to finess a stage actor to the nuanced performance  packed in by Vinay buyt Sekhar pulls it off. Vinay gives the film's most dramatic "villain" moment and makes an oh-so-soon exit before interval. After him, Pasupathi as Mr Khan gives a standout performance with a variation that may be a few notches below what Nawazuddin Siddiqi achieved in the original. You cannot compare Pasupathi's role with Nawazuddin but he carried the role with all seriousness and intensity that captures the essence of a righteous officer with shades of grey that finally deliver justice. Nayanataara as the silent sufferer who takes on a system steeped in disempowering  the womenfolk is the perfect character played by her in a long time since "SriRama Rajyam". By choosing a role that shows her  deglamourised yet unapologetic for smoking out what she wants in her quest for her husband, she proved her talent goes beyond cherubic smiles and curvaceous dressing.

A word about the technical talents in the film before a word or two about Sekhar. Good to see MM Keeravani haunt you with one helluva song "Kshana Kshanam" that grooves in and out throughout the film's narration. He also composed an arresting BGM for the film with a contemporary appeal that is uncharcteristic of him. This is one of the rare films where his musical arrangements in RR kept pace with his inimitable talent for song-and-dance melodies. Having composed for quite a few films in Bollywood in the past like "Criminal", "Sur" and "Jism",  MM Keeravani  is one of the most under-rated composers in the country, who sadly announced his retirement after "Bahubali" in December 2015. The film's other hero is Marthand K Venkatesh, the editor who shortened the film in Sekhar's format to fit the bill in 138 minutes or so. If the film has defects despite Marthand Venkatesh's editing, they must sit on Sekhar's report card. And these are: Why Sekhar left a few gaps in the plot? Like, who was the guy with a devilish smile and a shooting revolver and why was he killed? What was Naresh's role in the killings? Who was Milan Damji really? Why is Anamika made to look like Bengali houswife in the backdrop of a Dussehra pandal erected by Bangalee Samithi rather than our own "Ammoru"? Questions that were better answered in the original. But if you pass these up as minor flaws in a genre that Sekhar Kammula is not used to handling regularly, then "Anamika" is quite an engrossing thriller to watch. It takes Tollywood to a new high in standards of film-making and investment by studios of repute. "Anamika" deserves to be more widely watched for the effort and class it exudes.
My rating: 3.5/5

December 31, 2012

"Ko Ante Koti" Telugu Movie Review

“Ko Ante Koti” is Sarvanand’s latest film directed by Anish Yohan Kuruvlla. It’s the story of a serial robber (Srihari) whose speciality is in opening any bank locker in the world. He can open these locks whether they have number combination or heavy-metal combination with multi-inch thickness. He ropes in two other characters - one a glutton who can also mash people with his obese body and two, an abettor with a broken eye and cylindrical glasses who signals to the gang in between “heist and run”. This talented trio ropes in Sarvanand during one of Srihari’s sojourns in jail. The reason? Srihari is planning the grandmother of all robberies so far. Before you wonder whether it is the Swiss Bank locker or the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (because these are the two most grandmotherly of all lockers in the world, one houses more cash than the politicians in India and Indonesia and the other stores most gold held by most central banks in the world), you are told there is one place where all the black money is kept in India itself and that is the next target after which the loot will be trifurcated, no quadrafurcated and they will all happily retire. Srihari - the gang leader baits each of the three with a thing or two dear to their hearts. Will they succeed? Will they survive the police inspector Ranjit Kumar (brilliantly played by veteran theatre actor and voice coach Vinay Varma)? And will Sarvanand get his love Priya Anand (The “English Vinglish” cutie who played Sridevi’s niece)? That’s the long story of an unsually long film which has its queer eccentricities and oftentimes humor that’s dark, obnoxious and adult-grade variety. Sometimes, the humor resembles the “Delhi Belly” profanities which grate on you, no wonder the movie got an A-grade.


In the name of experimental, obtuse humor and unwarranted twists, director Anish Kuruvilla (debut film “Avakaay Biryani”) has created a film rich in violence and crude jokes and the only thing that sustains the film is performances by Srihari, Sarvanand and stage actor Vinay Varma. For the first forty minutes, the director takes a long time to register the plot and the principal characters and gives no relief except by way of interactions between the four characters. After that, suddenly, the songs appear one after another almost in quick succession. The narrative also moves in forward play and flashback which jars the flow – such techniques will make an action drama unduly sag. Also, the film is completely unfit for family audiences and director compounds the agony by killing off some great entertainers like Chitti, PC and Inspector Ranjit Kumar. I keep reiterating that killing off the lively characters in the film is inimical to the success of any film. Even in a film like “Gambler” starring Ajith, the director Venkat Prabhu eliminates the comic characters in the film and the film met with below-par success; such actions are anti-sentiment and never received well by the audience.

The length of the film could have been better edited. Music by S K Karthick sounds better in some songs and camerawork is good. Sarvanand is a good actor but this film produced by himself is not worthy of his money and efforts. He has to build his versatility as an actor in selecting themes which enhance the range of his body language, he is getting consigned to being the metrosexual male with a thick beard, mr.cool, and a decent lover boy. If he has to make it to the next cut of mass heroes, he has to “escape gravity” to do a mass roles, the audiences will tire of his benign smiles and cool walks in background songs. Actor Raaja of “Anand” fame also went out of offers because of this monostyle acting. Fact is, Sarvanand has potential which needs better leverage. Srihari gives a  fine performance and he shows a better range of Telugu accent but his characterisation lacks consistency and mars the film in the second half. Director Anish who produced such fine films like "Anand" leaves a bad taste with this film with a lack-lustre plot thats trite and characterisations that go haywire. With regard to theatre heavyweight Vinay Varma, it is surprising he got such a brief role and gets killed; he gave some brilliant moments with his scheming looks and rich timber voice and just mouths off "Dongre" with hilarity. He certainly deserves to be noticed by Tollywood for meatier roles. On the whole, “Ko Ante Koti” is barely watchable for the jarring notes it hits, faulty screenplay and very few characters redeem the film as outlined. It deserves just 2/5.

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