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Showing posts with label moviereview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label moviereview. Show all posts

The Best Bad Boys of Bollywood

 By Kratika Sharma

"Kitne aadmi the?” this dialogue not only reminds me of one of the greatest movies ever made but is also symbolic of the importance of a villain in a Hindi film. The untidy profile, crass language, the devil may care attitude made Gabbar Singh one of the most liked villains in the history of Indian cinema. Just like a villain is supposed to do, he too made the lives of the heroes difficult; he abducted the heroine and used her as bait. If it wasn't for him there wouldn't be any need of Jay and Veeru. Thakur would have had his family well and alive and Basanti would've probably married a farmer and be a mother of three. There would probably be no Sholay to remember and love. Yes, villains are the unsung heroes of the script of a film. There would be no need of a hero to rescue the damsel. There would be no dead father to avenge. No spice. A plain, normal life for all. The villain makes it all happen.

  Bollywood has had its share of villains in these 100 years. Be it the circumstantial villain who just fell in love with same girl the hero has feelings for and to acquire her he chooses the path where evil resides or the plain satanic rich lad who gets pleasure out of people's pain; we've seen it all. 

The 60's saw Prem Chopra and Pran rising to fame with the villainous roles they performed in their early years. Prem Chopra's presence on screen was enough to scare away the women in the vicinity and run for their lives. Pran, on the other hand got to play a rich, sophisticated and sly man who would back-stab the hero after gaining his trust most often. Of course, this era saw many other villains, as well and one of them being Vinod Khanna, but none are remembered the way Prem Chopra and Pran are. While Pran did go on playing a lot of positive roles, Prem Chopra remained THE villain for most of his films. His infamous dialogue "Prem naam hai mera, Prem Chopra" gives us a reason to remember Bobby other than just Dimple Kapadia's hot avatar and Rishi Kapoor's chocolate boy looks.

Then came the era of larger than life sets, long romantic sequences, bell-bottoms and rock n’ roll. The 70's also belonged to Ajit and Amjad Khan. Both these actors started by playing positive roles but achieved success with roles like Lion (Loyan) and Gabbar Singh. These roles are so popular that till date these actors are identified with them. Even though Mughal-e-Azam was a huge success, you probably would not remember Ajit being a part of that film as much as you remember him being a part of Zanjeer as Lion. This respected man of the city with the most unique way of speaking and intimidating the crowd with his class was the most cunning of them all. His actions in Yaadon ki Baarat made Dharmendra mad with vengeance. Same is the story with Amjad Khan, he played positive roles in Lawaaris, Yaarana, Chameli ki Shaadi, Shatranj ke Khiladi; yet what he is most remembered for are his roles in Sholay and Muqaddar Ka Sikandar. His alliance with JD (Ranjeet, who also is one of the most noted villains in Indian cinema) becomes the reasons for the trials and tribulations in Sikandar's (Amitabh Bachchan) life.

Following the 70's, in the 80's came Shaan, a film Kulbhushan Kharbanda will always be remembered for. Shakaal, the cruel,techno-savvy crime-lord with the coolest headquarters gave audiences a wave of fear the moment he decided to punish a man. His way of feeding his crocodiles with the men who would oppose him remains one of the scariest tactics used by any Bollywood villain ever. Another intelligent villain that the 80's witnessed was Dr. Dang. After playing a retired man in Saransh mourning for his dead son, this role added to the versatility of Anupam Kher.

Not a year had passed when Indian cinema saw another super-villain and this one is the man who comes to any Indian mind the moment a person thinks of the word villain; yes, it is Mogambo (Amrish Puri). This widely feared and evil-brained, Satan of a man can give any other villain a run for his money. His obsession with power and the inability to remember his own minions (causing Mr. India to win) is legendary.

The late 80's and the 90's did not particularly see character driven roles such as Shakaal or Mogambo but there was still Crime master Gogo (Shakti kapoor); this one just cracks me up with his hillarious catch phrases, one of them being "Aankhein nikaal ke gotiyan khelunga". He was evil with a hint of cuteness. And if we need to be reminded of pure evil, Kancha Cheena in Aneepath and Katya in Ghatak played by Danny Denzongappa are pretty convincing examples. Also, Gokul (Ashutosh Rana) the postman in Dushman can be hired for the job if we are head hunting for extremely scary villains. He was not dressed in fancy outfits; almost broke but with the extraordinary ability to scare the off screen women as well. Gulshan Grover gained the tag of Badman due to his villainous performances in movies like Mohra, International Khiladi, Raam Lakhan, Khiladiyon ke khiladi etc. His eccentric style of speaking with at least one pet dialogue in every film like "Maya teri toh palat dunga main Kaya" and "Badman" that his character is in love with.

The same era saw Rahul (Shahrukh Khan), the fatally obsessive lover who would go to any extent to win the heart of the love of his life. He played a similar role in Anjaam. Baazigar too was a film in which he played the villain and impressed the audiences by trying to avenge the death of his father and sister and a deranged mother. And unlike other actors who were trapped in the image of a villain for most of their career, these were Shahrukh's only films in which he played a villain, that is if we don't count Duplicate where he played both the good guy and the bad guy and Don makes a different case for itself altogether.

With the end of the 90's somewhere the typical hero v/s villain era came to an end; meaning, Gabbar and Mogambo were now a thing of the past. The power of the actor exceeded the importance of the character. The type of movies that have the proper hero-villain chemistry are either remakes of old classics or remakes of south-indian classics or remakes of hollywood action flicks. Having said that, I only mean that there is a lesser possibility of having a proper villain in the film; there might be a negative role but the chances of a proper villain are bleak. Kritika Tandon, a huge fan of popular hindi cinema says, "Villains are equally important in our popular Hindi cinema as heroes. We, as audience, have grown up watching the two pillars of good and evil being created in these films. We are losing such formats, in the sense that now anyone is made a villain because (s)he has become less important than the hero. Sometimes the need of a typical villain is not even felt as mainstream actors/heroes play such grey roles themselves."

Villain centric movies like the Dhoom series are majorly called villain centric because of the stars that played the negative role and the amount of attention they received. The characters were not entirely evil without any ounce of care in their minds but with feelings and probably with a bit of regret. Roles like that of Dr. Asthana (Boman Irani in Munnabhai, MBBS) provide a new dimension to the concept of villains in bollywood. In fact from one point of view, the man wasn't a villain at all; all he was trying to do was protect his daughter from a man he considered not worthy enough to marry her. If anything, the "hero" was more violent which is traditionally the job of the villain.

The presence of a villain in a film these days has become highly situational and somehow the lines between the hero and the villain are blurring. There are no extremes, no black and white. It is just more subtle now.

Bollywood has become synonymous to entertainment in India. The job of the villain is to make this happen; create problems, take the story to a new level, intrigue, scare or at times humor the audience. He gives hero the chance to be looked as the "hero". The action, the drama, the suspense; villain gives it all.


About:  A Journalism student from Delhi University. Simple. Happy.

21 Jump Street - Movie Review


 By Leela G. Prasad


'21 jump street is funny enough to make your face hurt with laughter.'

It is not the first time that I have been suckered into watching a movie that was recommended by a critic. And it won't be the last either. If you'd take 'Super Bad' as the yardstick to measure all teenage comedies, then 21 jump street would probably squeeze itself between American Pie 4 and American Pie 5.

Super Bad had an equally super fat and super funny Jonah Hill and 21 jump street has a half funny and a half-sized Jonah Hill (lost 40 pounds since then). The last time I have seen Channing Tatum, before watching 21 jump street, was in the forgettable G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra. He makes ballet dancing in Step Up look easier than his attempt at R-rated comedy.

21 jump street follows two buddy cops on their first assignment, as they go undercover dressed as high school students, to bust a drug supplier peddling hallucinogens at school. High school doesn't particularly bring any happy memories for both as they missed their prom night.

Eight years after passing out of school, they think they know everything they had to know about school but they are in for a surprise. Apparently, punching the black-gay kid at school is not cool anymore nor is driving a mustang that gives seven miles to the gallon. On a mission to infiltrate the dealers and find the drug supplier, they would have to win over the trust of a group of cool kids who drive cars that run on bio-fuel and are in the school's drama team.

A mix of flat jokes, punctuated with a romance angle between Jonah Hill and Brie Larson, which includes a scene where Jonah and Tatum try to force vomit by sticking their fingers down each others throats sets the tempo for the rest of the movie. It has more dick jokes than the number of F words in 'Goodfellas' and it tries so hard to make you laugh that it features Johnny Depp in a cameo role with a tatoo on his dick.

Ice Cube starring as Captain DICKson, is probably the only character in the movie who could make you LOL without trying too hard. Sometimes, you'd wish for him to become 'XXX' again and shoot the two leads ending the movie then and there. 21 jump street is like the 'scary movie' version of all the buddy cop films that Hollywood has been rehashing since the beginning of time. It's strictly for those who don't have date on a prom night.

Rating: 2/5

And The Oscar Goes To


 Oh her long, long silky smooth leg. The Academy Awards could have been so much more entertaining had they been hosted by Angelina Jolie's right leg. Instead, they chose Billy Crystal. Now as film buffs may recollect, Crystal was welcomed by a standing ovation when he came on to present at last year's awards. The Academy apparently mistook a brief spurt of nostalgia for a message from above and handed him the gig. His jokes seemed outdated and at times made younger viewers like me cringe. Hugh Jackman raised the bar and now it seems only contemporary stars can match his performance as host of the academy awards. Crystal's misery was compounded by the fact that one half of the first presenter duo was Emma Stone who I believe should have hosted the awards this year. She was genuinely funny and ever so energetic. Ben Stiller for once wasn't in full outer-space make-up! 

Usually when I discuss the Awards with friends I skip the technical awards line-up so as to not bore them to death. But even I was surprised to watch Hugo win the award for best special effects. I thought Rise of the Planet of the Apes (ROTPOTA) had this category nailed. This category exists to recognize groundbreaking work in visual effects and in the case of Hugo, as breath-taking as the visuals were, there was nothing path-breaking about them. The motion capture technology developed for ROTPOTA was the greatest achievement in special effects since Avatar. 

The writing category, as always had a lot of deserving contenders. It was only too easy to predict a win for The Descendants in the adapted screenplay category. It's debatable as to whether it deserved the award over say Hugo. In the original screenplay category I was rooting for Bridesmaids which was among the most hilarious comedies of the year. Never stood a chance against Midnight In Paris though. I'm not much of a Woody Allen fan but a deserving screenplay in a movie that featured the hitherto unknown acting talents of Owen Wilson! 

As for Editing, a category that is under-rated beyond belief, The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo with an easy win. It was a no contest really. That screenplay with David Fincher at the helm is an editor's dream. The creepy setting and plot only add to the appeal. It's not uncommon for editing to walk hand in hand with Cinematography but this year Hugo owned this category for a visual treat of a film that it was. No one can dare grudge them their Oscar! Neither can anyone doubt Rango's credentials. Quite easily the best among the animated film category. If you're among those wondering why TinTin isn't even nominated it's because TinTin features Motion-capture animation which according to the academy puts it in the feature film category.

Christopher Plummer
Right. Now on to the big one quickly before I start talking about Angelina's leg again! In the Supporting Actor category Max Von Sydow and Christopher Plummer brought the stone age back to the Oscars and Plummer, the eventual winner made great, heartfelt acceptance speeches fashionable once more. Watching him receive the award after decades of rejection felt like watching Morgan Freeman's character finally receive parole in The Shawshank Redemption. After all those rejected parole pleas, Freeman's "Red" couldn't care less about getting parole and for the first time, speaks straight from the heart without any rehearsed embellishments. Much like Christopher Plummer at this year's Oscars. As for the women, another no contest with Octavia Spencer being the most deserving nominee. 

Meryl Streep
Jean Dujardin
For the awards for performances in the lead - The men's category had George Clooney and Brad Pitt in career defining performances and Gary Oldman nominated for yet another stellar performance. But the year belonged to Jean Dujardin who brought nostalgia to a theater near you in such poignant fashion. This is what The Academy wanted Billy Crystal to do, and it's what Dujardin did to perfection. Among the women, it's been a while since an award was this fiercely contested. As soon as the nominees were announced, people were quick to approve Rooney Mara's inclusion for having the balls to take on a role so risque that early on in her career and owning it. But they were just as quick to dismiss her chances of winning. Not this year. Not when Viola Davis, Michelle Williams and Glenn Close were nominated for performances which would have clinched the awards any other year. Not this year. Not when Meryl Streep is nominated for her portrayal of Margaret Thatcher. Not when she's nominated for a record 17th time. Not when on top of all else, she had to put on a foreign accent. Not this year. This year was Streep's and Streep's alone. 

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Nishant Boorla
Sarcasm means the world to me. Yeah that's always a good place to start. I watch movies...a lot of movies! Sports nut and a die hard Manchester United fan. Highly opinionated and that shows in my articles.


Bollywood Hulla

By Pragyananda Mishra 

1) No 1 Killed Jessica
Worthier title: Femme Pro’fan’ity
Weird quotient: The movie defined Justice in a new sense Just‘Fire’ seemed more apt with Rani’s verbal histrionics and Vidya’s relentless acts.
Memories: The scene in which an about-to-indulge-Rani halts a love maker. Quietus Interruptus J
 
2) Dhobi Ghaat
Worthier title: Fourplay at the not-so-Tinsel town
Weird Quotient: Looks like they have deleted some words from the saying “dhobi ka kutta na ghar ka na ghat ka” :) to make it a title
Memories: Not much except Aamiresque “Thinking man” posture

3) Saat Khoon Maaf
Worthier title
: Pyaarabnormal Activity
Weird quotient: It was used freely by the free press to highlight budget 2011 :(
Memories: Keemat Lal’s (Annu Kapoor) Via agra-esque appetite leading to his doom :)

4) Dum Maro Dum
Worthier title
: Cast, Sting, Dope, Rope Blues
Weird Quotient: Did Deepika’s iTem ensure a sequel ? Could have very well included Dev Anand in a scene :(
Memories: Goa- “Liqour cheap, women cheaper” promo and the bad man named Biscuta...Lol :)

5) F.A.L.T.U
Worthier title
: R.O.F.L (the title is open to the sequelJ)
Weird Quotient: It released on Apr 1, Fooly F.A.L.T.U concept :)
Memories: Google Chand’s efforts in setting up the university

6) Haunted
Worthier title
: Bhoot.Rewind.Forward
Weird Quotient: The longest rape in history- 75 years. The movie also reaffirmed faith that every ghost is modelled after horcruxes nowadays :)
Memories: The vase-blow-act :); prompting a grim rapist on the loose

7) Ready
Worthier title: Spoiler Alert
Weird quotient: Pants-are new extras, they seem to portray quite a lot of emotions-DhinkaChicka :)
Memories: The good old sms flooding with Jawaan Sheela vs Character Dheela....

8) Shaitan
Worthier Title
: None, by far the pick of 2011
Weird quotient: Hummers, Accident, Drugs, Deceit and Kal-ki actress
Memories: Epic rendition of Khoya Khoya Chand and the peppy Hawa Hawaii. Forceful performances by the entire cast.

9) Delhi Belly
Worthier title
: Heist meets love meets lust meets Boss, D.K
Weird quotient: The first movie in which an actor has been brave enough to be a ‘cunning linguist’ quitting the ‘master debater’ role :P
Memories: The orange juice wiping solution, the banana peeling via the knife at the table and lots of obsceneties :)

10) Murder2
Worthier title
: Layman and Blademaniac
Weird quotient: We expected skin, got leather. The movie was weird in a sense that he picked prostitutes and did not do the sexpected needful. Sunny Leone is next and we can expect more/less
memories: The gaping wide mouth in the promos :o

11) Singham
Worthier title
: Power.Full
Weird quotient: The movie was Ajay’s biggest hit ! Apparently Chennai Super Kings have sued the Movie’s posters
Memories: The I-got-out-of-a-moving-Scorpio-defying-(mv^2/r) act 

12) Bodyguard
worthier title
: colosSAL-MAN
Weird quotient: For a change Salman donned a formal attire for most of the movie. Wonder if Sunny Deol would have been a good choice?
memories: The so called twist in the tail, whats, whys and how the F’s are left for the audience to fathom

13) RaOne
worthier title: Quit playing games for our heart
Weird quotient: How do you expect the not so kids to enjoy this ? Even the kids complained that Arjun Rampal, the emotionless vaudeville was actually a Ra-bot :(
Memories: The only thing we are not looking forward to is a sequel named Ra.ttU

14) Rockstar
Worthier title
: Pal, Lung tod
Weird quotient: The movie revolved on the Rockstar’s proclivity to indulge in a kiss and somehow in the end we see that he has fathered. Junglee Jawan, bhak sala
memories: The songs, the million odd facebook obituaries and Ranbir claiming it was his bestest role :P  

15) Dirty picture
Worthier title
: Picture this, Dirty
Weird quotient: N.D Tiwari, the scandalous octagenarian would have been the perfect one-actor-fitting all against Vidya Baloon...oops
Memories: Blousy.Lousy.Arousy.period

16) Don 2
worthier title
: Don’T(wo)
Weird Quotient: How could Duggu be that generous? What happened to Don’s Ducati at the end(How did they move from the bridge) ? Isha, Lara who’s next...........:o
memories: The car chase, the clichés, the heist.RIP


Pragyananda Mishra
20 something-year old taciturn hobbledehoy; I try to win but a loss is always heartening. Presently bewildered and still not sure that 0% of everything is better than 100% of nothing.


New Star Of India



By Sahil Mehta

Alright, here’s something you might not know. There is a Bollywood movie being made staring no less than Ranbir Kapoor and directed by chorepgrapher/director Ahmed Khan which auditioned by thousands of people entirely on Facebook!  

Yep folks you heard it right. The cast for the movie was selected using Facebook. This is the first time that such a movie is being made. The project, sponsored and brought about Nissan India, invited people to post videos showcasing their acting and dancing skills on their Facebook page. These were viewed by the thousands of people who access Facebook every day and voted upon. Over 2000 hopefuls auditioned for the movie, and based on public opinion 100 of them were chosen. Out of these 20 candidates were finally cast in the movie by Ranbir and Ahmed. Move over TV talent shows! 

The movie called “A New Star Of India”, has already gone on the floor and filming has started in Hyderabad.  Here are some exclusive behind the scene pictures.







Check out this exclusive video from the sets



 The project is being followed by an astounding 3 lakh people on the Facebook page. And even though the casting phase is over, you still have an opportunity to be a part of the movie by influencing the story! Check out the page for further details. 


Irrespective of how the movie finally pans out, this movie has certainly opened a world of possibilities for filmmakers and the millions of aspiring actors/actresses.

Iti Mrinalini

Iti Mrinalini  (Yours Mrinalini) ~ An Unfinished Letter

“ …. But I feel that by doing my own thing the way I believe, and not abiding every single rule that is laid down, I am holding myself up as an example. I don’t presume that I am but I don’t see what else I can do.” – Aparna Sen, Director Iti Mrinalini.

Starry lights, the best of clothes, undaunted attention from fans, aren’t that all an Actor’s life is all about?  Especially when she is the best of the lot, there is no looking back really. But as Mrinalini Says in the movie, “Is it the truth or must we cling on to our pretences to the very end?” According to common perception, an actor is a public figure who must lay themselves bare in front of the media and their audiences. No secrets and most certainly not a clandestine affair with your film director who happens to be a married man with two children. 

But Mrinalini was not one of your skinny female protagonists who can barely remember their lines. She was a young woman of flesh, blood and most importantly a soul. She loved reading and Yeats was her favourite poet. For someone who loved the work of Bergman, Truffaut and Godard, she decided to start her career with mainstream commercial Bengali cinema. That is Mrinalini for you. Over the years she did prove her merit as a talented actress, winning several accolades for her numerous performances but what she lost in return was herself. From a young woman bubbling with energy she quietly transformed into an older woman, mature by years but making the same mistakes. Mistakes of trusting people, of falling for the wrong people, for expecting love to be a long lasting affair rather than a momentary phase in her life. She was so different yet alike so many successful women for their never ending quest for love.

 

The movie begins with an older Mrinalini writing a letter rather a suicide note about how she intends on ending her life without blaming anyone for her grievances. The movie is about how she spends that night contemplating and reminiscing about days long gone by. Letters, calendars, posters, pictures all come to life as Mrinalini looks back into her past remembering the good moments and the bad. And then finally dawn arrives whilst Mrinalini remembers her friend Chintan’s words, -“Sometimes you just have to let go and take life as it comes.”  She wipes her tears and takes her German shepherd for a walk as an effort to think afresh and start anew.

And that is the story of Iti Mrinalini. Of love, youthful, domestic, growing from friendship or resulting from loneliness and seclusion. It is the story of the random incidents and unbelievable occurrences which makes life what it is. More than anything else it is realistic shedding light on the fact that Life can’t be controlled, it is like a river or the lines of a poem which flow at their own pace into creating something effortlessly beautiful. I thoroughly enjoyed the movie and the credit goes to Aparna Sen and her team for making a movie like this. The last voice over in the movie finally summarizes on what the movie is all about.
 
“Lanes and by-lanes trip my heels,
Fragile households! Whose are these?
In a profound comedy of life and death
Lies the essence of tears and mirth.”


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Amrita Paul

 I write. I read. I eat. I sleep (a lot ). Oh yes, Chick flicks make me cry and I love dogs. Some say I am a feminist, I say- " Is it necessary to define every ounce of passion arising from an individual?" I think not. Anyway that is me :)

A Brief History Of Animated Movies

 From 1937’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the animated feature film has come a long way. Disney’s Snow White wasn’t the first full length animated feature, but it was the first successful one. Each frame of the movie was hand-drawn, a process that came to be known as ‘cel animation’ or simply ‘traditional animation. Stop-motion is another kind of animation that uses puppets or clay models instead of drawings where each frame is a photograph. Chicken Run and Wallace and Gromit are two examples of this kind of animation.
While traditionally animated movies needed every frame to be drawn, the modern CGI(Computer-generated imagery) animated movies use powerful software to draw/model scenes and to animate things. Almost all animated movies these days are CGI-animated. The first full-length feature that was CGI-animated was Toy Story (1995) by the studio that revolutionized the animation industry, Pixar. Disney and DreamWorks are the other two giants in the industry, although after Disney’s acquisition of Pixar in 2006, it’s really two studios that currently monopolize the animated feature film industry.
You just have to love Disney. It’s impossible not to. Our generation grew up on Disney movies, and they will always be classics. The Lion King (1994), Aladdin (1992), The Little Mermaid (1989), Beauty and the Beast (1991) and Mulan (1998) are just a few among the 50-odd movies they’ve released so far that are must-watches. They’re the bosses, enough said.
Pixar(Disney•Pixar, if you want to get technical) has given us some real gems; their movies are noted for being visually gorgeous, technically advanced and their stories always strike an emotional chord with the audience. In fact, Cars(2006) and The Incredibles(2004) are the only ones that come to mind when I think of a Pixar movie that didn’t make me want to cry(personally, I prefer these movies for that very reason). Pixar crossed a big hurdle for animated movies, though, they proved that animated movies are not just for children. Before Pixar, the animated film industry was dominated by Disney, whose films, while really really good, catered mostly to the younger crowd and (out of necessity) their parents. Pixar movies contain great depth: WALL•E deals with environmental issues, Up deals with some heavy human emotions and so beautifully that you feel every single one without getting the feeling that you’re being hit over the head repeatedly with them, unlike most live-action movies. Who would have thought that a rag-tag bunch of beat-up toys or a couple of monsters(Monsters Inc.) could reduce adults to tears? That is the magic of Pixar.

 DreamWorks Animation SKG was a part of DreamWorks Pictures until 2004. Their first success was Shrek(2001) which won the academy award for Best Animated Feature that year and since then they’ve made a string of pretty popular movies and given Pixar some competition in the field. I am a huge fan of DreamWorks, mostly because their movies are hilarious. Shrek was followed by some great movies like Madagascar(2005), Kung Fu Panda(2008), Monsters vs Aliens(2009) and How to train your dragon (2010). Although Pixar generally receives all the oscars and critical acclaim, How to train your dragon was one of DreamWorks’s recent movies that was well-received by critics. Since Shrek, DreamWorks has developed a reputation of making movies that capitalize on humor and make several pop-culture or general satirical references. They make more movies than Pixar but only one in three turns out to be really good. The Shrek sequels were indicative of a trend that was to follow in later years, when Kung Fu Panda and Madagascar would be given the dubious honor of a sequel. One sequel usually works well, but after that, the whole franchise just somehow goes to hell. Toy Story 3 (2010) is the only one I know of that escaped the more-than-one-sequel curse. I’m dreading the release of Puss in Boots, a spinoff of Shrek, after watching it’s ridiculously campy trailer. DWA also, apparently, has plans for a total of six (!!) Kung Fu Panda movies and three (at least) How to train your dragon movies ,which is alarming, but we’ll see how it turns out.
   
 Sony Pictures Animation is a relatively new company, founded in 2006 and known best for Open Season(2006) and Cloudy with a chance of meatballs(2009). Cloudy was a great movie, I enjoyed it very much(made me laugh and made me hungry), and I’m optimistic about the future of this company. Their recent release, The Smurfs, may have been a bit of a damp squib, but it made a lot of money and they have several projects in the making, including Hotel Transylvania, The Pirates! Band of Misfits, a sequel to Cloudy, Popeye and Rollercoaster Tycoon - yes, a movie based on the game, I’m not sure how I feel about that. I do, however, like the idea of getting Hugh Grant to voice a pirate captain so I’ll let it go.

Blue Sky Studios(owned by 20th Century Fox) is worth a mention here for the excellent Ice Age (2002) movies, as well as Robots(2005) and the more recent Rio, which did quite well at the box-office, for a non-Disney, non-DreamWorks movie.

The future is bright for the animated feature film. Although it can never replace the live-action movie, it has carved a definite niche for itself in the market, an extremely lucrative niche, you realize upon examining the figures, and is now more than just a children’s film. I would argue that it was never just a children’s film. People tend to look down upon ‘cartoons’ as juvenile, which is ridiculous. Just get over yourselves, haters, what’s wrong with a movie that is good, clean, unadulterated fun for the whole family?

Also, I hope that the next person who calls it a ‘cartoon movie’ gets slapped around and then eaten by a giant walrus.

With most animated movies now being made in 3D, the result is a visually beautiful and grand affair that is a powerful contender for the ubiquitous live-action movie and always a safe bet for your hard-earned money.

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Rachina Ahuja
Writing about myself is an annoying task because I’m never the same. I like change, I’m used to it, but when I go to my favorite restaurant, I’ll always order the same thing. Why take a risk? My ideal occupation would be Captain of a pirate ship with a pet orangutan but I’ll settle for making animated movies.


Monalisa Smile

By Amrita Paul

Actress Cameron Diaz had once said, “I've always been a huge fan of Julia Roberts. Without her what would the world be like?”  And like her are a million others who look up to Julia Roberts in ways more than one.  As a little girl I would idolize Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Khan for his amicable ways and the manner in which his characters was able to impress the most beautiful of girls. But when it came to actresses, there was nobody whom I could relate to, even remotely. Then one day I happen to chance upon a movie by Roberts whom I had otherwise known as one of the highest paid actresses in Hollywood.  And that encounter of a couple of hours was enough to make me fall in love with her effortless transition into a teacher of 1950’s in Conservative America who held her own in spite of being challenged by the stalwarts of the society time and again.

Directed by Mike Newell, the man behind movies like Donnie Brasco, Four Weddings and a Funeral and more recently Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Monalisa Smile is the story of Katherine Ann Watson, a woman in her thirties who takes up a job in the conservative Wellesley College to teach “History of Art” to young minds. But sadly her unorthodox methods of letting students think for themselves instead of trying to complete the syllabus does not go down too well with the Wellesley Faculty. But this was just the beginning as Katherine had multiple battles to fight. Her first task was to inspire and to win over her students who have been strangely cautious of her presence. The fact that she was over thirty and was unmarried mattered to them more than what she taught in class as most of them were already engaged to be married as soon as they graduated. The movie is also made remarkable with stellar performances by Kristen Dunst, Julia Stiles, Maggie Gyllenhaal and Ginnifer Goodwin. But Julia Roberts was extraordinary in this movie. Her character was that of a woman who wants her students to realize their potential, to enjoy what they do and to believe and revel in the fact that if at all they get married, it should not put an end to their personal aspirations. One of my most favourite parts of the movie is when Katherine takes her students to a dilapidated building to show them a new painting. When asked if it was a marked assignment Katherine replies-  
                  
“You're not required to write a paper.
You're not even required to like it.

You are required...

...to consider it.”

 

I mean think about it, most of the time we end up being so very over critical about things which surround us.  Education is supposed to liberate our thought process, to help us think freely, to look beyond the obvious, then why do we, at the end of everything become so constricted in expressing ourselves? Remarkable isn’t? How a movie can make you question your very existence?

Although this movie was a commercial success, it did not win any accolades for all the wonderful performances which made the movie what it is. And even though I’ve seen over a dozen of Julia Robert’s other movies including her much acclaimed Erin Brockovich, I still feel this movie was one of her best. What I like most about Julia Roberts is that she is able to hold on to herself irrespective of whether she is in a movie with multiple star cast like the Ocean’s Series or is a minor character like that of in Fireflies in the Garden. She is my favourite actress for emoting her roles with passion and grace (not that the others don’t) and for inspiring me to not let go of that one little ounce of hope which makes live so much better.


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Amrita Paul

 I write. I read. I eat. I sleep (a lot ). Oh yes, Chick flicks make me cry and I love dogs. Some say I am a feminist, I say- " Is it necessary to define every ounce of passion arising from an individual?" I think not. Anyway that is me :)

Summer Of No Romance

- By Rachina Ahuja and Nishant Boorla (commentary in blue). Two platonic friends who agree to disagree. Always.
Summer is an exciting time for movie lovers. A lot of big ones release during these months. Personally, I don’t care for action flicks and I live with a cherished hope that rom-coms will someday get smarter and I won’t be looked-down upon for watching them. Summer is usually a good time for the romance genre because people have a lot of time on their hands and I assume the target audience is couples (where women drag men along) and single women (the depressing truth). This summer however, was pretty bad for the genre. Why, you ask? I’d LOVE to elaborate:

No Strings Attached, even though it wasn’t technically released in summer, was like a harbinger of what was to come. One of the most unintelligent, unimaginative movies I’ve seen in a while. And this coming from a person who likes ‘chick-flicks’! The only buzz surrounding that movie was something on the lines of “Ooooh sex between friends who aren’t dating!” And it left me feeling greasy thanks to the load of cheese they freely heaped on such a ‘daring’ scenario. 
Now these movies hardly ever have a twist in the tale. Even when the girl gets pregnant you know they’re working towards a mushy happy ending. Happily Ever After.
Basic principles of a rom-com-
1.Boy+Girl - They’re people whom you can usually identify with. The film-makers are supposed to make the characters likable. You should want them to live happily ever after. The screenwriter (I consider it sacrilege to even call them that. If you’re a screenwriter who writes only rom-coms, you’re the oompa-loompa of the screenwriting world). Ok, I have to start over. Writing screenplays for rom-coms is as sophisticated as writing Zodiac columns. Just pick random points everyone can relate to and build a character around those.
2.Conflict - There’s something keeping them apart, usually their own issues. IMPORTANT: This has to be believable! No one likes a heroine who is stupid or a hero who’s just being an A-hole.

3.The big resolution- Even though we know how it’s going to end, brownie points for film-makers who surprise us. We’re just saying be a little different. The airport/wedding scene has been done to death.
Even more points if you’re the guy who made 500 days of summer which was enjoyable even though it didn’t necessarily have a happy ending (which actually is a matter of opinion, because I didn’t think the ending was sad at all). Brickbats and cow dung for the guy who made P.S I Love You for writing a story so manipulative, trying to wring tears out of the viewer with every new scene. And failing miserably.
4.The process- This is why we go watch movies that have no suspense. We want to see HOW it all unfurls. We want to be told a story without being stressed out that it’s all going to end badly. Everyone loves a story, right? Most importantly, it should ring true. We shouldn’t be walking out of the theaters grumbling about the idiocy of the characters and about how ridiculous the premise was.
There. Now you have it. Now let’s take a look-see at what came out this summer eh? I am STRICTLY talking about the romance or the romantic comedy genre. I’ll leave it to Nishant to bash the genre (as he will) and talk about other movies. Not to take off on a tangent, but there’s an interesting article Meg Cabot (really, people, the author of The Princess Diaries and many more fun books) wrote on why men don’t watch rom-coms but more on that later.
Right then. Movies.
Something Borrowed-
*ing: Ginnifer Goodwin, Kate Hudson, Colin Egglesfield, John Krasinski
Okay, so I read the book and that’s why I needed to watch the movie. It’s a thing. I’m sure it happens to everyone, right? Not really, no! Not with every book anyway. I wouldn’t watch a Brer Rabbit movie if it ever comes out. Unless it has a graphic novel feel to it and is directed by Zack Snyder.
Anyway, it was a nice movie, one that I’d watch when I don’t feel like taxing my brains. It suffered from the usual flaws though, for example: Rachel is supposed to be plain, who in their right mind would call Ginnifer Goodwin that? But it’s a movie so I forgive them. Oh right, the premise is slightly different from the usual, except not really. Made of Honor comes to mind as well as 27 Dresses (although it plays out differently in that) and a dozen others that involve weddings. Protagonist is in love with someone who is getting married (wow…radical!). That someone is getting married to her best friend who has overshadowed her all her life. How she gathers up the courage to take what she wants, for a change, forms the rest of the movie (Yawn). I thought the guy was a HUGE idiot (They’ve sucked Rachina in to the rabbit hole and now she has formed opinions of the characters). Anyone could see Rachel wanted to go out with him but he asked her friend, Darcy, out instead, even though HE LIKED Rachel! (What a plot! Puts Fight Club to shame huh?) Gaaaaah. Not the shiniest fork in the drawer, if you ask me. The resolution was what you would expect. Nothing big or surprising about it. Moving on.
Bridesmaids
*ing: Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph, John Hamm, and a bunch of other people
This movie was pretty great. I walked in not knowing what to expect (a movie with a strong SNL influence); I mean it’s a bunch of 30 somethings and their love lives or lack thereof, you’d think it would be depressing.  Nope! I laughed myself into stitches. The best part? These are real women! They’re NOT glamorous, NOT skinny and NOT perfectly put together all the time. They get drunk and create havoc on airplanes, they say stupid things, they eat bad food and um “get sick” in public and also apparently steal puppies. The message that you get if you think about the movie after laughing yourself sick is - ‘All that glitters is not gold.’ Corny as it sounds. It’s all very lightly delivered, just in the way you should take life: with a large dose of humor. (Look who’s getting preachy!)
Crazy Stupid Love
*ing: Steve Carell, Julianne Moore, Emma Stone, Ryan Gosling
When I walked in to the theater, I was a bit alarmed because I barely saw anyone near my age sitting in there. I braced myself for a preachy, oldies romance, but soon I began to enjoy myself in earnest. Who can resist Steve Carell? He’s great as usual with his deadpanning. Julianne Moore was good too. Marisa Tomei was very entertaining, even in her tiny role. The scene-stealer for me was, of course, Ryan Gosling (He looks like a cross between cricketer Praveen Kumar and Hockey stud Dhanraj Pillay, only fairer!).
The climax of the movie reminded me a bit of a silly Bollywood movie: there are a bunch of misunderstandings and a scene ensues where all parties involved are in the same place and there is confusion galore. We do enjoy those, though, so no complaints! Also, Emma Stone was, as usual, wonderful but old Kevin Bacon was kinda weird and unnecessary (I still think of him as Rex from Footloose) (And I think of him as Capt. Jack Ross from A Few Good Men.)

Friends with Benefits
*ing: Justin Timberlake, Mila Kunis
Sigh. Just when you think No Strings Attached has properly ruined the premise, another one comes along. Awful acting helmed by the same guy that directed Easy A, which is why I thought this might not be so bad.It wasn’t bad, it was much better than No Strings Attached. It was self-deprecating and yet trying to be sweet at the same time.
If sweet is what you can call it. Best part? Very low amounts of cheese. That’s all we want, guys. That wasn’t so hard, was it? (For the record, this movie made me want to kill myself. This sucked just as much as No Strings Attached. At least they had a better lead pair for No Strings Attached. They got Natalie Portman while these guys got Mila Kunis AKA Poor man’s Black Swan!)
One day
*ing: Anne Hathaway, Jim Sturgess
YUCK.
They put us through hours of Jim Sturgess’ awful, irritating character for this! Seriously, he smirks his way through the ENTIRE movie. I liked him in 21 but halfway through this, I wanted to punch his face. The movie shows us one day (July 15th, if you care) in the life of these two people for 20 years of their lives. The fact that the story mostly flows even though it’s just one day at a time tells us what? THEIR LIVES ARE NOT THAT INTERESTING. I don’t know about others, but I sat through all the crud: through Emma dating some guy she doesn’t like, through Dexter being a jackass and doing nothing but womanizing and smoking up, through their friendship which was basically her whining to him about her life and him DDing her and them talking about what they could be and should be but never doing anything about it, sat through all of it hoping that things would turn out to be okay and I can leave the theater with a sigh of relief. No such luck, it just got worse. Ugh, just stay away from this crap. (I don’t think I need to add anything here. We at LTGTR do all we can to avoid using foul language and so I won’t comment.)
Sunk without a trace:
Disney’s Prom
Monte Carlo
Hits?
Blue Valentine
Water for elephants
A note on Meg’s article-
Here are a couple of quotes that pretty much say it all-
“Straight guys won’t go see a “romantic comedy” (or any movie featuring a female main character, unless it’s Megan Fox) unless they’ve been dragged to it by their significant other (or their mom)(BTW Meg Cabot – If a guy watches rom-coms with his mom, he’s not straight. No don’t give the ”he’s sweet and compassionate” crap. He’s not. He’s GAY!)
This is why, for every one Bridesmaids, we have four Die Hards, four Terminators, four Pirates of the Caribbean, three Transformers, and two Hangovers. I have seen all seventeen of these films (plus Bridesmaids), so I know the real reason they were so successful isn’t because men don’t enjoy a good romantic story (Men enjoy good love stories as much as women. As long as the emotions are real. The story doesn’t have to be realistic, just the emotions and scenario. Which is why Wall E worked. And that is also why “He’s Just Not That In To You” bombed! Most women who watch rom-coms almost exclusively still haven’t grown up, or so it seems.They crave fairy tale romances with plastic emotions all centered around the one woman no guy wants to marry. No premise, no futuristic setting, the same crap over and over again with different actresses.) Strip away the roofies, explosions, and talking robots and at the heart of each of the above franchises is a hero who will do anything to protect (or get home to) the woman he loves.
Perhaps it’s simply that because these more expensively made, man-centric, special-effects heavy films (I’m counting Mike Tyson as a special effect) tend to be so widely promoted, while romantic comedies are released in so many fewer cities, on less screens, with the only pre-release buzz centering around whatever real-life romantic travails their stars are currently enduring, that makes the “guys won’t see a romantic comedy” thing a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy.”(No Excuses now. Those films are promoted so much and are given such huge marketing budgets because the studios know they’ll make all that money back. Not the case with rom-coms. Too tiny a target audience. Single moms, single girls, end of story. Whereas as with action flicks you attract all men without exception. Yes even the gay ones who come in droves to gawk at Chris Helmsworth’s body in Thor. You also attract women in relationships whose boyfriends drag them along. Since these films interest men, most single women will watch them too so they can talk about what guys want to talk about. And here’s the best part – Almost all these films are rated PG-13. Studios make sure it’s a PG-13 and not an R. This means lots and lots of kids at the movies all dying to watch your movie first. This also means lots and lots of parents accompanying their kids to watch Transformers movies. Can’t beat that killer combo.)
”This isn’t to say movies with exploding talking robots, roofies, or pirates shouldn’t be made.  I would never say that, because I’m a fan of those films as well.  I just think we need to be honest and admit that all of these stories, like all of us, have something in common: We all yearn to watch others fall in love, as we have; struggle to find themselves, as we have; and of course be publicly humiliated by an adversary, and tortured by a domineering matriarchal figure, as we have.” (Class Dismissed!)

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Rachina Ahuja
Writing about myself is an annoying task because I’m never the same. I like change, I’m used to it, but when I go to my favorite restaurant, I’ll always order the same thing. Why take a risk? My ideal occupation would be Captain of a pirate ship with a pet orangutan but I’ll settle for making animated movies.



 

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