Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Saturday, June 23, 2012
Saguni Review
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Karthi`s Saguni is a commercial mass masala movie made purely to work overtime at the box-office.
And it works to a large extent dues to its hero and his side-kick who provide the necessary ingredient in large doses.
Shankar Dayal formula is simple, a larger than life hero who comes to the city with a personal agenda. In the big bad city he is caught up in the turf war for power among rival politicians. Our hero, the street smart guy using brawn and machiavellian tactics cleans up the political system of the scums. He also gets what he wants from the new chief minister and takes the next train back home with the heroine in tow.
Don`t look for a story or logic, the hero has to win at all cost in commercial potboilers. The major highlight of the film is the rocking Tom and Jerry type comedy scenes between Karthi and Santhanam and the one-liners they say.
New girl Pranitha is there as Karthi`s love interest and the idea of naming these three characters as Kamal, Rajini and Sridevi brings the house down. And to add to the mirth there is Anushka playing a cameo as a Malayalee cop who falls for the handsome Kamal!
There are only black and white characters, an essential requirement for mass movies. So you have politicians as baddies - Prakash Raj as the malevolent and cunning chief minister, Radhika as an Idly Kada lady and moneylender who becomes the Mayor, Kota Srinivasa Rao as the idiotic politician, Kiran as the wicked and ambitious concubine of Prakash Raj and Roja as heroine`s mom.
The film laced with humour is packaged as a mass entertainer by Shankar Dayal who has woven certain recent political happening into the story. The film hints that money, muscle power and political horse trading are what win elections.
GV Prakash music is foot tapping and plays to the galleries. Velmurugan`s "Pottadhu Pathalai Maapillai.." has people dancing to the kuthu number while the melody sung by Sonu Nigam and Saindhavi, "Manasellam Mazhaiye..", is the pick of the lot. PG Muthiah`s camera is ok with some good top angle shots. Nani (Sreekar Prasad) forgot his scissors as the film needs trimming. On the downside the film at 2 hours 45 minutes is too long; characters disappear half way through the film.
Karthi is one reason to buy a ticket for the film. He has evolved as a bankable commercial mass hero and his dancing in "Vella Bambaram" song is a revelation. The moment Santhanam appears on the screen people burst out laughing, and he is too good. His comedy timing and his combination with Karthi is the perfect mix. Heroine Pranitha has nothing much to do other than looking glamorous. Radhika is impressive in a role with shades of grey, no better political villain in south screen than Prakash Raj .
On the whole if you are looking just for staple masala entertainment, Saguniis the right prescription.
Verdict- Time Pass Entertainer
courtesy :www.sify.com
Sunday, April 8, 2012
Titanic 3D
Critic's Rating: 4/5
Cast: Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, Billy Zane,
Gloria Stuart
Direction: James Cameron
Genre: Romance
Duration: 3 hours 14 minutes
Avg Readers Rating: 4/5
Story: The
love story between commoner Jack Dawson ( Leonardo DiCaprio) and aristocratic
Rose Dewitt Bukater (Kate Winslet), set against the ornate yet tragic backdrop
of the sinking luxury liner, sends out all the right signals. It talks of a
love that is passionate, permanent, soul stirring, death defying and powerful
enough to break all barriers of class and destiny.
Movie Review: It took some 300 hundred people, 60 weeks,
279,000 frames and $18 million more (initially costing some $200 million) for
director James Cameron to sink the Titanic all over again. Not to say, his
earlier Titanic (1997) did not have its fair share of numbers to deal with: a
movie stretching to 194 minutes; a movie bagging 11 Oscars that year. The fact
that James Cameron managed to blend steamy romance with mind-blowing depiction
of disaster made the film even more spectacular. Watching the Titanic sink,
with all the attendant creaks and cracks, was truly a milestone moment in movie
lore. That was then. For now, the Big Question: What is it that really makes
Titanic (1997) look all different from Titanic (2012)?
For starters, the decor and dresses look more elegant, the ocean
more blue and deadly, the ship more huge and gigantic. Not to miss out is Kate
Winslet's very first entry with an enormous hat and an even more enormous bow.
Spectacular. Next, it's the sweeping and romantic shot of Leonardo DiCaprioand
Kate Winslet as 'king (and queen) of the world'. More iconic a shot in 3D. But
then unfortunately, Cameron's real trick-n-treat visual wizardry is primarily
seen during the last 30 minutes of the movie. Perhaps, that's why you just
can't wait for the Titanic to snap. And snap it does, 3D ishtyle. Right from
the luxury liner being hit by the oh-so-big iceberg, water blasting through the
hull, those on board being washed away by violent waves... to the ship's final
plunge as it breaks into two, is what makes Titanic different... and worth a
watch ek baar phir! Special mention: 1) The section of the ship rising up
perpendicular to the ocean 2) Hundred of lifeless bodies floating around in the
cold water... in the middle of nowhere.
So grab your 3D glasses and book yourself a tryst with the
turn-of-the-century cinema all over again. And incase you feel the wait (for
the special effects to set the screen ablaze) is too long, worry not. It's the
overwhelming sentimentality of the liner, along with the then Kate-and-Leo
chemistry, that still classifies the Titanic as an epic romance, 3D or no
3D.
A word about James Cameron: No doubt Cameron is mastering the
art of advancing technology, not just in the world of cinema, but his very own
cinema. First Avatar (followed by Avatar 3D), now Titanic.
Tip off: You know what's coming up next on screen. But rest assured, you still won't mind seeing the Titanic sink all over again - in 3D... exactly a hundred years from the moment it actually happened.
Courtesy: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com
Saturday, March 31, 2012
3 Movie Review
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Sunday, January 1, 2012
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