Saturday, November 03, 2007

Hope Floats

I’ve been thinking about the point of this blog and blogging in general for some time now. I’m no wiser. I feel like writing something today so I will.

I just came back from a show of Jab We Met. The movie has received good reviews and being an incorrigible sucker for anything from Bollywood that seems remotely promising I not only watched it myself in a movie hall I persuaded a group of friends to watch it too. The movie made me want to tear my hair out in frustration at the Bollywood clichés, at its DDLJ redoing, at some lame comedy. I spent most of the film marveling at the illogic or making fun of the impracticality displayed by the characters or second-guessing the Director. The music seemed the only redeeming feature of an effort with often amateurish direction, poor editing and average acting. Moreover, one of the opening sequences that has a taxi plying at night through the streets of Ram Ganj or something similar has production values harking back to the era of cardboard boats and smoky caverns of Alif Laila and its ilk. But the interesting bit is this: I left the theatre full of good cheer. The “recency effect” worked full on in leaving me with a great aftertaste even though most of the movie was rubbish by ending the film with possibly its best scene followed by a nice, peppy number and above all, making the nice guy get the girl in the end.

The last Hindi movie I watched before this was Johnny Gaddaar. This movie got great press too but probably for different reasons. I was very impressed by its director’s earlier effort – Ek Hasina Thi. Johnny Gaddaar was extensively advertised as being derived from and containing references to a number of Hollywood, foreign language and old Hindi films. I watched the movie and thought it was total rubbish and was very surprised to see all the great reviews it seemed to get. I’m probably being too simplistic but I believe a large proportion of reviewers were just impressed by the long list of exotic films from all over the world that seemed to have collectively inspired the movie. I thought the actors were uniformly bad, barring some character actors who were either wrongly cast or poorly directed. Neil Mukesh, the hero, was consistently wooden and looked appropriately dumb for the kind of plan he hatched. Rimi Sen looked confused and worried as always. A word about the minor actors: just because they are ‘character’ actors, they aren’t automatically good actors. The direction was alright but the real fault lay with the script. For the kind of movie Johnny Gaddaar is, I’m justified in comparing it to Lock, Stock… and Snatch. These movies have stories that are driven by coincidences but they have so many coincidences that the viewer accepts them within the movie’s universe. This film had twists that were too few and too late and just jarred.

I’ll still go for Om Shanti Om.

9 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Gud to see you r still fighting it out with bollywood ..

Om shanti om is somethign I am waiting for eagerly.. hope it gets bad press.. :)

3/11/07 8:15 PM

 
Blogger Captain Subtext said...

You don't even make sense! Lock Stock and Snatch make sense because they have got too many coincidences and Johnny Gaddar doesn't because it's got too few! Logic ka to band hi baja diya hai!

Did you catch No Smoking by any chance? Would love to see you rant about it in the near future.

6/11/07 9:29 AM

 
Blogger Robert Frust said...

I know it doesn't make much sense. I'm not able to articulate my thoughts properly about this. About No Smoking, somehow, I feel turned off from it. I get the feeling it's arty-farty and will appeal to my 'evolved' taste. I'm still thirsting for a big, bad Bollywood bash. How did Hindi movies becomes so uderwhelming?

6/11/07 4:33 PM

 
Blogger Ritwik said...

You set up your constraints in weird, self-contradictory ways. You will dislike the movie even though it appeals to you because it appeals to a part of you which you don't want it to appeal to ??!! Any further discussion will move into the emantics of the word 'appeal' and hence I'll refrain.

I get the feeling that I'll love No Smoking. It's got bloody John Abraham. It can't be arty farty.

8/11/07 5:04 PM

 
Blogger Ships said...

In my opinion, no movie is good or bad... It's all a matter of whether you connect to it...

Btw... O M O (another crappy clichedMAX movie) did hv a few good liners - "itni shiddat se maine tumhe paane ki koshish ki hai ki har zarre ne mujhe tumse milane ki saazish ki hai"

:)

Cheers!!!

26/11/07 5:47 PM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

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29/12/07 4:54 PM

 
Blogger Ritwik said...

I knew I'd not find anything new. You disappoint me.

31/12/07 9:11 PM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

You're hard to please. Must be a hard life. Jab We Met might have been a cliched story but it's the most positive-feeling Hindi movie ever. It's characterisation was pretty good too. If you only check every movie by its "weightiness", you'll have to fight with your basic instincts to like it

17/1/08 12:49 AM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

have u ever thought abt being a writer??

16/4/08 3:22 PM

 

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