Movie Review : Mardaani 2

Rating : Good (3.7/5)
Genre : Drama
Year : 2019
Running time : 1 hour 43 minutes
Director : Gopi Puthran
Cast : Rani Mukerji, Vishwa Jethwa, Prasanna Ketkar, Taswi Singh Ahlawat
Kidwise : PG-15

Where Mardaani dealt with child sex-trafficking, Mardaani 2 deals with the rape/murder of women. Here fearless cop Shivani Shivaji Roy must find a serial rapist, who preys on women by assuming a helpful, non-threatening demeanor.

When Kota’s ACP Shivani Roy is called to the scene of a grisly rape and murder, she is appalled at the inhumanity of the crime, and the brutality with which the perpetrator has tortured his victim. With public outrage growing at the perceived incompetence of the police, ACP Roy is determined to get the sadistic rapist, but he is wily and targets her instead.

Director Gopi Puthran delivers a solid, well-paced film, and Mardaani 2 delivers some facts and numbers along with the drama. ACP Roy takes a stand against rampant sexism by fighting back against the smirking condescension she faces from peers and superiors. There is also the pressure to be in control but not too stridently.

Mukerjee is in top form, and the Vishal Jethwa as the insouciant, cold-blooded perpetrator is impressive. As before, Mardaani 2’s heroine delivers justice while playing to the crowd’s sentiments. When compared to films like Soni, Mardaani 2 is superficial because it points to the symptom but not to the malady, and the harder questions that brings. However it is still important because it focuses on rampant violence against women.

Kidwise: A film for older kids. Grisly violence is implied.

Posted in 2019, bollywood, crime, dark, drama, rating-PG15, social issues, suspense, women | 1 Comment

Movie Preview : Dabangg 3 (releases 20th December 2019)

Another Dabangg; this ones seems the silliest of the three. And it is directed by Prabhudeva, so hope is almost lost. Villain Sudeep looks impressive, and Mahesh Manjrekar’s daughter Saiee Manjrekar makes her debut.

Posted in 2019, bollywood, drama, Previews | Comments Off on Movie Preview : Dabangg 3 (releases 20th December 2019)

What To Watch on Netflix and Amazon Prime – Edition #33


-Unbelievable (Netflix, Series)

The series is based on the true life story of Marie Adler, a young woman who’s moved from foster home to foster home. She’s finally starting to find friends and some confidence as she settles into a program for disturbed youth, when she is raped by a masked intruder in her apartment. The nightmare intensifies when the police begin to doubt her version of the story.

In a parallel storyline in a different American city, two female detectives Grace Rasmussen and Karen Duvall(the fabulous Toni Collette and Merritt Wever) are starting to investigate a serial rapist . . .

– Modern Love (Amazon Prime, Series)

This is an 8 episode series, each an independent romantic story, based on a weekly column published by the New York Times. The stories are very different, from one about an obsessive doorman who judges a young woman’s boyfriends, to the tale of a find-love-appmaker who can’t find love himself.

The series has a large star cast – Anne Hathway, Dev Patel, Tina Fey, Cristin Milotti and many more. I loved the series because of its whimsical nature and feel-goodness. Also I wept buckets 🙂

– The Spy (Netflix, Series)

This is another true life tale of notorious Mossad agent Eli Cohen who goes undercover and infiltrates the Syrian government. He has the ear of the powerful and becomes very close to the President. The series starts from the time Cohen’s cover is blown and when he is arrested by the Syrians and tells the story via flashback. Sacha Baron Cohen (of Borat fame) plays Eli Cohen beautifully.

– Outlander (Netflix, Series)

Outlander is based on books of the same name by Marie Gabaldon. I’ve read the first one, and am a fan because of the time-traveling aspect. It is about World War II nurse Claire Randall who in 1946, is suddenly transported back in time to 1743. There, Claire is immediately thrust in danger and is rescued by the gallant Highland warrior James Fraser.

– Marcella (Netflix, Series)

Marcella Backland (Anna Friel) is a London detective who has returned to work after a span of many years. At work, she reopens a cold case of a serial killer, and at home must deal with her husband who’s getting ready to leave her. Friel plays Marcella with an arresting intensity, and this series is one of the best I’ve seen (of the same calibre as “Broadchurch” and “Happy Valley”).

Posted in 2012, 2019, All Netflix, Amazon Prime, Amazon Prime Video Recommendations, book to film, crime, detective-film, drama, fantasy, historical, lists, mini-reviews, Netflix Recommendations, recommended, romance, suspense, WhaTWON, women | Comments Off on What To Watch on Netflix and Amazon Prime – Edition #33

Movie Preview : Mardaani 2 (releases 13th December, 2019)

Rani Mukherjee returns in Mardaani 2. Gopi Puthran who was a writer for Mardaani, turns director for this one. Let’s hope he is able to deliver!

Posted in 2019, bollywood, crime, dark, drama, Previews, social issues, women | 1 Comment

Movie Review : Bala

Rating : 4/5
Genre : Drama
Year : 2019
Running time : 2 hours 11 minutes
Director : Amar Kaushik
Cast : Ayushmann Khurana, Bhumi Pednekar, Yami Gautam, Saurabh Shukla, Seema Pahwa, Sunita Rajwar, Abhishek Banerjee
Kid rating : PG

Balmukund Shukla (Ayushman Khurana) is a young man with a rapidly receding hairline. There seems to be no cure for his condition, and Bala is losing hope of ever finding love. Things take a turn for the better when Bala is gifted a hairpiece. With the hairpiece securely on his head, Bala turns into the confident young man of his dreams and even begins to romance model Pari Mishra (Yami Gautam)!

Bala works in the marketing department of “Pretty You”, a fairness cream. Pari Mishra is the fair model of “Pretty You”, whom Bala crushes over. And Latika Trivedi (Bhumi Pednekar) is Bala’s dark-skinned friend, infuriated by his perpetual criticism of her skin color. So there is the obvious storyline with balding issues, but there is a secondary angle which deals with fairness creams and the fervor to be light-skinned.

Bala is about acceptance, and you know that by the end of the film, the hero would have made peace with his (lack of) hair. But Bala goes beyond the balding theme, and takes to task society’s double-standards and sexism. Latika has learnt to deal with the taunts on her dark-skin but the barbs still hurt. In little asides, Latika’s single aunt admits that her “mooch” (she displays a mustache) put paid to her attempts to settle down. Latika, as a lawyer, advises a woman to divorce her philanderer husband, but the woman demurs; the unfaithful man is her “true love”. It underscores everyday sexism, when Bala’s friends exhort him to lie to his fiancee until marriage. Such is the order of things, they say; women just have to deal with it.

The film is set in Kanpur (which is referred to as “Kanepur”) and excels in building the small town milieu. Each character in Bala is beautifully sketched out, from Bala’s Ranji-trophy-playing, bald dad (Saurabh Shukla), to his mom (Sunita Rajwar) and barber-friend Ajju (Abhishek Banerjee). Seema Pahwa as Latika’s mausi (aunt) is, as always, magnificent. Khurana and Pednekar are excellent of course, but I was blown away by Yami Gautam. Gautam plays small-town model Pari, and she gets her role down pat, from the accent to the mannerisms.

While Bala gives Latika’s issues some screen time, it focuses on Bala and his hairy problems. I’d so like to see a film on Latika though – her fiery character seemed very interesting, and the issue of skin-color deserves some discussion! Bhumi’s skin has been darkened for the role, but the makeup was inconsistent; in some shots she seemed darker and in some lighter.

Ultimately Bala succeeds, even though it felt a little stretched. Director Kaushik manages  to tell this almost-preachy tale with panache and humor, while creating an interesting, flawed hero whom we really like – no small feat that! I’m having a hard time believing that this is the same guy who gave us Stree – Bala is so, so much better than that film. Go see!

Kidwise: Apart from some mild references to Bala’s nether regions, this film is pretty family-friendly.

Posted in 2019, bollywood, comedy, drama, family-friendly, humor, New Films, rating-PG, recommended, social issues, women | Comments Off on Movie Review : Bala

Movie Preview : Motichoor Chaknachoor (releases 15th November 2019)

Motichoor Chaknachoor stars Athiya Shetty and Nawazuddin Siddiqu, a pairing I’d never thought I’d see. Leggy Ms Shetty plays Anita, a small-town girl who’s looking for marriage as a ticket to go abroad. Siddiqui is Pushpinder Tyagi, a 36 year old who can’t find a bride.

The twain shall meet. And how!

Posted in 2019, bollywood, drama, humor, New Films, Previews, quirky | Comments Off on Movie Preview : Motichoor Chaknachoor (releases 15th November 2019)

Movie Review : Saand ki Aankh (2019)

Rating : 3.9/5
Genre : Drama
Year : 2019
Running time : 2 hours 14 minutes
Director : Tushar Hiranandani
Cast : Bhumi Pednekar, Taapsee Pannu, Vinnet Kumar Singh, Prakash Jha
Kid rating : G

Saand ki Aankh (literally Bullseye) is getting massive hype, but then all I read about is the makeup (poor) and the age of the lead actors (too young). Fine, I agree about the makeup, but we seem to be missing the forest for the trees – Saand ki Aankh is a very enjoyable movie, and well worth the watch.

The film, as you might know is based on the real life “Shooter-Dadis” – Shooter grandmothers: Parkashi and Chandro Tomar, who, in their 60s, took up shooting as a sport and were natural sharpshooters. Married into the patriarchal Tomar family, both women, along with other female members of the household, spend their days cooking, cleaning and working in the fields, while their menfolk lounge about smoking hookahs.

Remaining in their veils (ghoonghats) – there is a scene where they watch a film through their ghoonghats, and we see the hazy images just as they see them – Parkashi and Chandro accept living life literally barefoot and pregnant (they birth broods) until an enterprising young doctor builds a shooting range in their village and one of their granddaughters Shefali want to learn to shoot. Since it is expressly forbidden, Parkashi and Chandro accompany her to the range in secrecy, and in encouraging Shefali, fire a few rounds themselves. Amazed by their skill, the doctor (Vineet Singh) encourages them. Thus starts their journey, all in secrecy.

The story – the triumph of the brave grandmas is such a crowd-pleaser that it is hard not to like this film. Since much of the story has the Tomar women finding ways to train and attend competitions in secrecy, afraid of the strict rules curtailing the behavior of the household women, “Saand ki Ankh” finds its secondary focus in protesting the patriarchy. The earnestness and the depiction of the simple desires of these women is moving. All they want are better lives for their daughters. They don’t say it in as many words, but Chandro and Parkashi lie and connive so that their daughters can get simple opportunities, which will enable them to get good jobs, step out and see the world.

Despite the inconsistent makeup, Bhumi and Taapsee do well. While Taapsee is a fine actress (Manmarziyaan), Bhumi is better. Bhumi portrays Chandro through and through – she walks like she really is tired, and age has slowed her limbs. This is where Pannu was lacking; her Parkashi displayed the sprightliness of a much younger woman. Jha is quite effective as patriarch Rattan Singh and Vineet Kumar Singh (of Mukkabaaz fame) is his marvelous self as Dr. Yashpal.

The flaw in Saand ki Aankh it is its lack of nuance. The characters are black and white – the women are good and intelligent, the men are lazy oafs. This almost underdog story has nicely rounded corners, no sharp edges or signs of strife within. The big challenges are defined, the undertones mellowed; the film is packaged and presented to tug at the heartstrings. I’m not sure how much of the film or the struggle has been fictionalized, although a struggle it must have been, but the film-makers do us a disservice by hamming up this otherwise extraordinary tale.

Still, Saand ki Aankh remains a very good watch, and will probably come in as one of the best films of the year. Highly recommended.

Kidwise: Clean.

Posted in 2019, bio-pic, bollywood, drama, family-friendly, feminism, rating-G, real-life-based, recommended, social issues, women | Comments Off on Movie Review : Saand ki Aankh (2019)

Movie Preview : Bala (releases 7th November 2019)

Ayushmann Khurana plays Bala, a balding young man searching for true love. Yami Gautam plays the love interest, who falls for the wigged-out (pun intended) Bala. Ah, deception! What will it lead to?

The trailer looks interesting and reminds me of another fabulous movie in the same vein – “Main, Meri Patni aur Woh”.

Posted in 2019, bollywood, comedy, drama, humor, New Films, Previews, quirky | Comments Off on Movie Preview : Bala (releases 7th November 2019)

Movie Review : The Zoya Factor

Rating : 2.5/5
Genre : Romance
Year : 2019
Running time : 2 hours 14 minutes
Director : Abhishek Sharma
Cast : Dulquer Salma, Sonam Kapoor Ahuja, Sanjay Kapoor, Angad Bedi, Sikander Kher
Kid rating : G

Zoya Solanki (Sonam) is a scatter-brained ad agency exec. Unlucky in love and getting the short end of the stick at work, life changes when she unwittingly becomes a good luck charm for the Indian Cricket Team. This is palatable to all but the Captain Nikhil Khoda (Dulquer) who believes that her “luck” will take away from the team’s hard work. Quite a bummer, this philosophy, especially because Zoya is on the verge of falling for Nikhil.

The Zoya Factor is based on the similarly named book by Anuja Chauhan. I haven’t read the book, but I sure hope that it is better than this vapid, empty-headed film. The film feels sparse, like a short story stretched thinly over it’s 2 hour runtime. There’s very little happening in the film, so there’s lots of empty space with nothing interesting on screen. Ergo, boring.

There is very little character development. The film is mainly focussed on Zoya, and a ditzy little whiner she is.There are so many characters in the film; one would have thought that a little backstory for some of them might have bolstered the film a bit. Also, for a romance, this film seemed to have precious little of it – and I’m going to blame the pitiful screenplay here. The two leads just fall in love; the why and the how are a mystery. For a romance to work, there have be more than just the broad brush strokes.

Once again, Sonam Kapoor Ahuja portrays a flighty young girl, accident-prone but well-meaning; she must be able to play one in her sleep now given the practice (Khoobsurat). Zoya’s character was pretty annoying. The girl seemed to wilt at the slightest setback, and wallowed in tubfuls of self-pity and petulance. Zoya is shown to come from a middle-class family but she appears fairly entitled and princessy – or maybe that’s just Sonam being herself 🙂 Kapoor hams her way through the movie, and her acting is just so affected, that it is off-putting. I always though she was a good actress (Delhi-6, Neerja) but she probably needs to have a stronger director to reel her in.

The only thing going for the movie is the charismatic hero (although what’s with the hair?). Dulquer, whom you might have seen in Karwaan, is charming as Nikhil, and actually manages to brighten up the scenes he is in. It is hard to imagine why a charmer like Nikhil falls for a whiner like Zoya; I’m not bought into the romance at all. The Zoya Factor had so many problems, it is hard to imagine a scenario where this film would work. One would have needed a better screenplay, a less insipid heroine (someone like Alia would have worked) and a director who knew what he was doing.

Unfortunately, with the current combination, the Zoya Factor is at best less than average.

Kidwise: Clean

Posted in 2019, bollywood, book to film, family-friendly, humor, rating-G, romance | Comments Off on Movie Review : The Zoya Factor

Movie Preview : Laal Kaptaan (releases 18th October, 2019)

From Navdeep Singh, the director of the fabulous “Manorama 6 feet under” and “NH-10 comes, comes Laal Kaptaan. It stars Saif Ali Khan (who’s having a come-back of sorts, especially after the very successful Sacred Games) and Zoya Hussain (remember the mute heroine of Mukkabaaz?).

I’m waiting for this one.

Posted in 2019, bollywood, directors, drama, New Films, Previews | Comments Off on Movie Preview : Laal Kaptaan (releases 18th October, 2019)