Dhokha ka mat....

Of the three movies released on 31 August, Dhoka is the movie having the new genre and new subject in it. The movie is much realistic and well contemplated. The subject is thought provoking and Pooja has, this time, done very well. The movie is presented by Mahesh Bhatt, produced by Mukesh Bhatt and directed by Pooja Bhatt.
Zaid Ahmed Khan (Muzammil) is a policeman in the Mumbai police force, who suddenly finds that his wife Sara (Tulip) has been accused of being a suicide bomber, while she simultaneously goes missing. Zaid tries to uncover the truth and meets several people enroute a senior cop Mehra (Gulshan Grover), Sara's grandfather (Anupam Kher) and even the head of a terrorist organisation (Munish Makhija), before realising the big truth. Mehra, who is heading the anti-terrorist squad, even has Zaid suspended from his work because he suspects him to have links with his wife and the terrorist organisation as well. Zaid, who is also despatched to the cooler earlier under suspicion, is then let off because intelligence reports clear him. Zaid now sets off to find the truthHe goes off to the place Sara had set left for and realizies that she was with her grandfather in Nasik. Then he comes to know about her past and how she was a victim of ridicule and rape by the police and how it led to her being a terrorist and how her brother Danish too was affected. Then he moves on to meet the head of the terrorist organization who is inciting many such people to turn into suicide bombers. And before he knows it he has a big task on his hands - defusing a plan to blow up Mumbai's leading railway station. Pooja Bhatt excels as a director. Her vision as a filmmaker seems to have grown. But she needs to strengthen her script a lot more. Words normally not used in common parlance by commoners seem to seep easily into the film. A scene where a cop says main tafteesh kar raha hun is out of the 70s. People don't use such words these days, Pooja. But films, these days seem to talk a lot about the trauma of the Indian Muslim. Peek back into Chak De and look at Kabir Khan being the losing captain of the Indian hockey team in a match against Pakistan. Ditto with Zaid when he turns out to be a cop from the minority at a hospital where victims from the majority community are being brought in, in a blast purportedly enigineered by a Muslim suicide bomber. Questions about the accountability and the responsibilities of the Indian Muslim are brought forth - stories that we have been hearing time and again in movies made on these subjects right after the 1993 Bombay Bomb Blasts. The socio-econonomic and socio-cultural nature of the film does make it stand apart from the rest of the films of this genre. One just wishes that Pooja had made the film a little more hard hitting. Nevertheless, the film does not look like a film usually out from the Bhatt camp. Watch out for a scene involving a cop Ashutosh Rana, Tulip Joshi, and an MMS wish this scene had been stronger - the film should have been yards ahead.
Suffused with a sense of imminent catastrophe and an aura of implosive tension applied to the explosive theme, "Dhokha" is a film that persuades you not-so-gently to think about the quality of lives that we live and a social order that thinks terrorism happens only to 'them'.
Really, one hasn't had a more jolting reality-check in a while.
The cast of the movie includes Muzammil Ibrahim as Zaid Ahmed, Tulip Joshi as Sarah, Anupam Kher, Gulshan Grover, Ashutosh Rana, Anupam Shyam, Vineet Kumar, Aushima Sawhney as Nandini. The story of the movie has been written by Mahesh Bhatt.

RGV ki AAG - Mockery of the classic !!!!!


Ram Gopal Varma Ki Aag tells the story of a certain Inspector Narsimha (Mohanlal) who takes on one of the dreaded underworld dons – Babban (Amitabh). Needless to say, he pays for it dearly and practically loses his entire family to Babban’s wrath.
For the first 30 minutes you wonder what’s happening on screen. There’s no direction, there’s no script (of course it’s a remake of SHOLAY, we all know) but the way Ramu goes about introducing the characters of Ajay Devgan and his buddy is stuff made by novices. And this is a RGV flick! Then there’s Rajpal Yadav’s annoying act with a put-on accent. After that you know where this AAG is headed. It’s a blaze, and Ramu and gang desperately try to quell the fire using Amitabh Bachchan (Baban) who meekly tries to blow with his parted lips in an effort to scare the daylights off you!!!
It's kinda fitting that Gabbar is now called Babban.Because Ram Gopal Varma Ki Aag, ladies and gentlemen, as its title suggests, is a B-movie. It's like one of those TLV Prasad films of the 1990s that revels in its mediocrity, the kind of film that wouldn't normally get a theatrical release in Mumbai except for the stray morning show in a ramshackle single screen theatre.Except that this time it's a Ram Gopal Varma movie, a mega-hyped vehicle of gimmick and bluster, and thanks to the casting decision of Amitabh Bachchan as the film's villain, occasionally elevated to, well, a Big-B-movie. A B-movie, of course, can still be a work of art. As a filmmaker, you can choose to embrace the unreal, overdone style of (seemingly) slipshod filmmaking for its very lack of boundaries and aesthetics rather than against, directing inside the tacky box and painting everything super-bad with a delicious layer of postmodern irony -- in short, something so bad it's good.
This is how I chose to watch the new film, deciding that it's about the glory of unashamed hamming and the joy of the larger-than-life. I sat back, winced in the uber-badness of it all, and managed to actually survive through the first half. I can't say I liked it -- I doubt anybody can, really -- but it left me with some hopes of exciting action setpieces or interesting confrontation moments. Post-interval, I failed. I really, really wanted to like Aag, to enjoy it for its sheer, (hopefully) contrived badness, but this was a dismal battle. This film is horrid beyond belief. Or redemption.It's not that Ramu doesn't try. Varma's always been among the most excellent framers of a shot in the business, and here he goes funky and classic at the same time. Making cinematographer Amit Roy constantly tilt his lens at our actors, going from Sushmita Sen's dupatta to Mohanlal's beard in one fell, overemotional swoop aided by great angles and a constant movement. Even Ramu's ever-intriguing camera has never seemed this dynamic, often idiosyncratic here as he whimsically follows the trajectory of an apple here, a corpse there.
It's just that he doesn't really have anything to shoot. A lazily written half-baked script is overcompensated by the one man most responsible for single-handedly crippling a large part of RGV's oeuvre, Amar Mohile. The background-score man is in characteristically painful form, hitting constant ear-splitting melodrama as a bunch of non-actors are given a heavy load, while those sharing a half-dozen National Awards between themselves (Mohanlal 4, Ajay Devgan 2) are trapped by caricatures. Which aren't even remotely inventive.And then there's Amitabh Bachchan. His Babban Singh (it's really hard not to giggle at all of the character names) is a uniquely twisted individual, with onebrown-onegreen eyes like an erstwhile Bausch & Lomb model, limping menacingly in combat boots and a military jacket. He's initially engaging, turning the cliche around to paraphrase immortal lines with brevity, and putting himself on the line during a compelling game of Russian roulette. Bachchan gamely gets into the character, slithering and hissing as he readies to strike fear in the hearts of faraway crying kids and policeman's wives.
While Amitabh does indeed provide commendable steam to the sinking ship, Babban is so over-written it hurts. He does superbly with a one-liner and a piece of fruit, but the frantic anxiety to make him Bollywood's greatest ever villain is all too visible as the character is loaded with bizarre lines about America and Al Qaeda . And let's not forget the Osama nod, with Babban suddenly cloaked in black a la Skeletor. Add to this a snaky tongue, a laugh that can't choose between ominous shudders and raspy hisses, and a Castor/Pollux complex that obviously stems more from Face/Off than Greek mythology.Amitabh conjures up some great moments, but he was a better villain in Aks.Mohanlal is the film's protagonist, Narsimha, an improbably overweight encounter cop with a justifiable vendetta against Babban. He's a fine, restrained actor but despite a Hindi accent to rival Inspector Cousteau, is made to speak entirely in farcical, formulaic tripe. The best of performers would struggle, and this man -- certainly among the finest Indian living actors -- seems to give up the chase for greatness halfway through. I would, however, like to know how to throw a steak knife without using your fingers.
The rest of the characters, well, the lesser said the better. Surprisingly, newbie Prashant Raj emerges as the most tolerable of the bunch, but then again his role simply requires him to look, well, tall. Sen dresses in black and pretends to be stoic but constantly cries, looking like she's auditioning for Vaastu Shastra 2. Rajpal Yadav pipes up with a comic act limited to squeakily plugging Varma's next release. Sushant Singh plays a valiant Tambhe. Abhishek Bachchan chubbily comes on in a one-song cameo, with Urmila Matondkar , the latter forcing Babban to utter the most gimmicky line ever.
Special criticism must be reserved for Devgan and Nisha Kothari , who play Heero and Ghungroo. In one of current cinema's worst leading pairs, Ajay unfathomably plumbs new depths of idiocy with this follow-up to Cash. Kothari can't act -- or look remotely good -- but has acres of script-space, and has to explore everything from comic timing to hysterical weeping, which isn't a smart script choice. As Devgan pulls a pistol to his head to make suicide threats, we sorely wish he'd pull the trigger.It’s such torture to sit through the movie that it made a dud like CASH look better. The music is passable and dialogues lack the finesse and punch. If Gabbar’s ‘Kitne Aadmi The’ line still rings loud and clear, Babban has not a single line to shout about. If Gabbar’s mannerisms terrorized Thakur and his villagers, Narsima looks Babban straight in the eye. If Samba was a perfect side-kick for Gabbar, Tambhe is a character caught in a fix. If Basanti rocked, Ghungroo annoys. And if Helen’s dance in Mehbooba Mehbooba was class personified, Urmila Matondkar does not even come close to it.
Forgive me for the comparison with such a classic as SHOLAY, but comparisons are a must when it’s a remake. If Bally Sagoo could immortalize the song Chura Liya from the film YAADON KI BARAAT and re-introduce it to today’s generation with his classic remix, Ramu with his remake of SHOLAY has shown how a parody should be made for Television. Sorry Ramu, Babban does not work. I just wonder how you now plan to quell this fire. Or will you now sing Billy Joel’s famous song “We didn’t start the fire…” Ram Gopal Varma might have started out -- I see no better explanation -- to make a so-bad-it's-good kinda B-movie, but tragically hurtled past the stop-signs and ended up with, quite simply, a so-so-bad film. It's the director's most depressingly disappointing work.
Ramu is a maverick, a director usually given to laughing at critics and scathing reviews, which is as it should be. The scary thing is that he might just truly believe Aag is a good movie. I pray not.