Friday, 9 August 2013

Chennai Express review: Romanticly Amazing & Simple Stunning

Dammit! No out-takes!! Is this really a Rohit Shetty film? Every film of the Gol Maal director has so far ended with out-takes giving us entertaining glimpses from during the making of the film. Here those trademark Shetty out-takes are replaced by a Honey Singh track which celebrates Rajnikanth and the lungi.

The rest of the film resembles those typical sambar-and-sandalwood creations by K. Raghvendra Rao, and worse still, Raj Kanwar's Dhai Akshar Prem Ke where Aishwarya to escape her parental wrath at her elopement, introduces to her family a man she has just met as her soul-mate.

Of course, there are the flying cars exploding in the air to make sure we know that all said and drummed, this is a Rohit Shetty presentation.

Packaged with pickled precision, peppered with just the right doses of naughty jokes and precocious pranks that go well with Shah Rukh's 40-year-old brat's act, Chennai Express is the kind of non-toxic comic entertainer where the most damaging double-entendres you'd get is a Tamil word that sounds like Angelina Jolie's name.

Come again?

That brings me to another major hurdle in the heap of hilarity that Shetty builds so meticulously in the first-half.

The generous outflow of Tamil that seems initially engaging (more so, since Shah Rukh shares our non-comprehension of the rapidfire Tamilian cloudburst that accompanies Deepika's quicksilver character) begins to come in the way as the narration grows older and runs out of energy.


Deepika plays Meena Amma with flavourful flourish. She is specially delightful in three key sequences, two of them comic and the other unexpectedly sombre.

In the sequence where her character turns into a sleeping, kicking and convulsive zombie, she's unbelievably goofy. It's not just Shah Rukh who gets a kick out of that scene.

Would Rohit Shetty please do a full-fledged out-and-out comedy with Deepika? That, Chennai Express is not. It is a half-hearted but laugh-hearted effort that makes the fatal error of taking itself too seriously.

Towards the end when the utterly shammed climactic fight ensues, we even have a long speech by Shah Rukh on the social status of the girl child.

Not now, please!

As we squirm at the attempt to turn comedy into a serious business we look back at the rest of the film with some amount of warmth and affection.

Some of the long shots of the train winding through green acres is breathtaking. And Shah Rukh's first meeting with Deepika's father over a bridge over a fast-flowing river is shot with amazing brio.

There's a wonderfully-shot sequence where Shah Rukh has to carry Deepika to a temple over hundreds of steps. Deepika here goes from amusement and mockery to a sense of belonging and pride in her man's arms. It's a moment built with care and love.


All these self-tributes work better than what Puri Jagganath did with the Bachchan persona Buddha... Hoga Tera Baap.




Rohit Shetty is more in command of his canvas here than in his last comedy Bol Bachchan. But the self-deprecatory laughter is still not good enough. Somewhere you feel the one-line plot (okay, if not one then two-line plot) is stretched into an unwelcome second-half where nothing really happens. Even the humour tracks stops short beyond a point.

But there is some genuine steam and spark in the early part of Chennai Express.

Towards the beginning of the train journey when Deepika and Shah Rukh play a kind of antakshari of Hindi film songs to put the goons off her trail, Deepika completely overshadows her kingly co-star, who should be okay with being upstaged by his female co-star.

After all he has given Deepika priority over his own name in the credit titles. And Deepika takes the lead very seriously. She has never looked better and never been funnier on screen without even trying too hard.

But then the plot and the situations let her down. The antakshari-speak that was amusing in the beginning recurs during a stale fight sequence in the second-half.

We are no longer laughing. Not when Shah Rukh's purported big chase sequences end in embarrassing deadends. Not when an item song with incoherent words and even more misguided logistics pops up like a joke whose punchline has gone missing.

Through all of this, Shah Rukh Khan braves it with a delicious sense of self-mockery bordering almost on a masochistic absence of heroic pride.


Yes, he likes it when the joke is on him. But that happens once too often here.

So it's finally here. The film that all Shah Rukh Khan fans (which covers half the hemisphere) have been waiting for. The good news first. Chennai Express is a pleasant and likable film in parts. The bad news is, it does nothing for Shah Rukh Khan's imdomitable star power except to tell us he can still play a 40-year Rahul without faltering.

That we already know.





Wednesday, 26 June 2013

Deepika Padukone's Yeh Jawani Hai Deewani look has now inspired Divya Dutta

Deepika Padukone's nerdy look in Yeh Jawani Hai Deewani spread like it's caught fire. In no time after the release of YJHD, Deepika's glasses became a rage with the youth. Even many Bollywood lasses were spotted with their chashma on at recent parties and public events.

Her look -- comprising a chashma, neatly done up hair and printed dresses and skirts -- caught attention of many fashion experts. So much so that Deepika was snapped with the look at many recent events. And the actress was even quoted as saying that she wants to keep her glasses on as the look has got a thumbs up by everyone. 

Now, the latest to be inspired by Deepika Padukone is Divya Dutta. Did you notice how the so-far-so-sober actress has suddenly taken to a pair of glasses and printed skirts which bear an uncanny resemblance to those sported by Dippy?

Here, take a look. Don't miss the short skirt and the black-rimmed, oversized glasses. 
All we can say is that Deepika looked really cute in this look. 

Ranbir Kapoor to play a ganglord?

Playing a don's role seems to fascinate our actors.
After Ajay Devgn, Emraan Hashmi, Akshay Kumar, Sonu Sood, Rishi Kapoor and Imran Khan it is now Ranbir Kapoor's turn to turn gangster.
Our source says that Ranbir is all set to essay the role of a ganglord for the first time in an upcoming venture expected to hit floors soon.

Why Katrina Kaif rejected Chennai Express, Yeh Jawani Hai Deewani and Ram Leela ??

Katrina Kaif, who's Bollywood career has skyrocketed past few years, is now always offered A-list, big budget films, opposite all the A-list actors. She's also one of the highest paid actresses in the country. Kat has been part of films which have crossed the 100-crore mark. 

In a few years of her career, she's done films with Shah Rukh Khan, Salman Khan, Aamir Khan, Akshay Kumar, Ranbir Kapoor, Hrithik Roshan, Imran Khan - you name an actor and she's already been paired opposite him in mega budget films. 

Her upcoming films are Dhoom 3 and Bang Bang - both slated to be blockbusters. Now, that she's grabbed the top position in the film industry, she plans to get better roles and more meaningful films. 

But then, why did the actress say no to all the big releases last year? Within the last year, she said no to a film with Shah Rukh Khan, one with Ranveer Singh and one even with (ahem, ahem) Ranbir Kapoor!
 
What's wrong? Why is Kat on a rejection spree, that too for big budget films?

Katrina Kaif set to produce her own film

Every actress makes the transition at some point — from the front of the camera to behind the scenes. Katrina Kaif is getting ready for Phase 2. Having crossed the Rs100-crore club several times over and conquered every commercial peak, she has no qualms turning down films that don’t interest her. 

In the current transitional phase, producing a film is not just a possibility but a veritable reality in 2014 for Kat. She has decided to take it easy with the public exposure till her filmsDhoom 3 and Bang Bangrelease. She won’t make too many public appearances including performing at a public platform. Says a source close to  Katrina, “It’s a conscious decision taken by Kat and her team. 

She has no release until December 2013. There’s no point in being visible all over the place or giving interviews because in any case she is not allowed to talk about Dhoom 3 or Bang Bang. Until the release of these two films, Katrina will maintain a low profile.”

One also hears about Katrina’s dilemma regarding what to sign next. Says a friend of the actress, “She wants to move out of her comfort zone. But she doesn’t know which way to move. She has done practically everything there is to do as a mainstream actress. She wants to move ahead. But  doesn’t want to do an offbeat film. She is on the look-out for a full-on crazy script that would allow her to do everything she hasn’t been able to do so far.” So the next best thing would be to turn a producer and give herself that opportunity to act in films that she wants to.”

Friday, 21 June 2013

Deepika Padukone breaks free of Brad Pitt syndrome

Nearly six years after her model-to-actress career move, Deepika Padukone says she is finally being praised for her acting in films and not just for her good looks.
Ayan Mukerji's "Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani", which stars Padukone in the lead with Ranbir Kapoor, got her box-office success and critical appreciation this month. Some reviews said she overshadowed her co-star.
It's a far cry from her Bollywood debut with "Om Shanti Om" in 2007 and subsequent films when critics described her acting as wooden and mocked her accent.
"We call it the Brad Pitt syndrome where for some reason if you are good-looking then people think you cannot act," Padukone told Reuters in an interview.
"I have been slotted in that way where people thought she is good enough to just add glamour to a film," the 27-year-old actress said.
Padukone, the daughter of India's most famous badminton player, was worried about the undue focus on her physical attributes.
Her acting skills were first noticed in the Homi Adajania film "Cocktail" last year. Padukone played Veronica, an impulsive and spunky woman, poles apart from the self-effacing characters she had played earlier.
Initially, Padukone wasn't sure she could pull off the "out of comfort zone" role but was convinced by filmmaker Imtiaz Ali, the screen writer for "Cocktail".
"I have seen the wild, crazy, fun side of that girl, which she was initially trying very hard to conceal," Ali told Reuters.

If it weren't for Ali's advice, Padukone may have opted for the film's other female lead, a role cast in the mould of the traditional Bollywood heroine.


"You are ambitious about a project, you hope that it does well and you hope that you gain from it," says Padukone. "Sometimes it happens and sometimes it doesn't happen."
It was a phase that saw her act in several box-office duds or in films with an ensemble cast, ones that didn't propel her career forward. And then "Cocktail" happened.
Over the years, her personal life and a much publicised break-up with Kapoor has been fodder for Indian tabloids.
Padukone says her experiences have added to her skills as an actor.
"Just spending everyday on a film set has taught me so much. Also life," she says. "It's your growth as a person also, you try and channelize your experiences and bring those to a film set."
Ali, who directed Padukone in "Love Aaj Kal", says the actress is getting ample opportunities to prove her acting chops.
"She is coming to a place in her emotional life where she is becoming connected," says Ali. "So she is ready for things, for performances."

Star-studded telly awards event

Small screen celebs turn up in their fashionable best at the Star Parivaar Awards 2013. The night was a star lit affair as the popular actors from the various shows walked the red carpet at Yash Raj Studio