Categories
2020 Hindi

Vidya Balan as Shakuntala Devi (2020)

Anu Menon’s film Shakuntala Devi straddles a difficult territory between the public & private lives of a public figure. She goes about this by focussing on the lives of the said famous woman & the other key women who shapes her life, her choices to love, hate, discard & be possessive about them on her terms while she continues to live a life she owns on her merit.

A major focus is on her daughter, and a tale of a strained relationship between the daughter Sanya Malhotra as Anu Banerjee and her mother played by Vidya Balan.

Menon’s motive of making a film on the chinks in the relationship of mothers & daughters is clear from the beginning. If it isn’t, the repetition of mothers & daughters thrice by three different sets of people towards the end should drive it in. Shakuntala Devi & Anu Banerjee happen to be a part of it.

Did she need to feature them to tell this tale of a World Famous Mathematical Genius is a question to ponder about. Since she chooses them the next question is, do we really want to know the inside lives of a world famous personality — the not so always smiling for the camera, sanguine cheerful & vibrant persona on screen & shows? This clash in a fan’s perspective is brought in through the character of Ajay, Anu’s husband brilliantly executed by Amit Sadh.

Then, what is it like to be a famous personality when the camera and mics are not focused on them. Do they carry the fame inside their homes, or do they leave it at the doorstep and walk in to lead “perfectly normal” lives like the rest of the world? What is their definition of ‘normal’?

Vidya Balan owns her role. Sanya Malhotra looks a little weird in her outfits & hairstyles but she brings out the irritation and strain of living in the shadow of a famous mother well. If only the script was meatier then this film would have been an equally engaging one like Menon’s earlier outing Waiting.

One thing I did after watching the film is, I went searching for Shakuntala Devi’s videos to see her perform her genius. Youtube has a few of them ☺

Categories
2020 Malayalam

Anjaam Pathira (2020) sets out well but …

Anjaam Pathira sets out as an edge of the seat first half. The background score by Sushin Shyam, the slick editing and the play of lights create the desired shock to the characters, and the audience before they break for the interval. But it loses this quality somewhere in the middle of the second to create a predicatable but fitting ending.

The film begins and ends with Kunjachacko Boban, the consulting criminologist on the case. His first real case, therefore he seems to be the most invested in it, his intuitions take the story forward, this is also one of the flaws in the script. His character does not organically grow to fill the plot like the doctor he played in Virus. Here, he happened to be, and became like a coincidence.

But director Mithun Manuel Thomas has chosen him to shoulder the anticipation of the crimes to be. Even then, his deductions aren’t mindblowing breaks. They aren’t exactly flattering to the round the clock working police force. Therefore, a weak script. A character and actor to look out for, Unnimaya Prasad as the lead investigator in a full length role makes a mark. Her dubbing for this character is also excellent.

That said, in this age when the audience begins to participate in the making of a story streaming in front of us, it becomes tricky to make a film like anjaam pathira. We are unconsciously making our own conclusions and moving to the next scene in our heads, it may match, it may run parallel to the plot until we find a point of re-entry into the plot to continue our hypothesis. But nothing will come close to the motive of these murders until the big reveal here. So much so that when the sketch of the killer is shown to the audience we have no idea who this person is, or how they are related to the crime as this is their first appearance on screen..

the premise of the backstory is relevant to our times, it is a story to be told, to be made aware of, one we should not ignore no matter what.

Categories
2020 Tovino Thomas

Forensic (2020) :-(

Forensic fails from the word go to be this edge of the seat thriller as it focusses more on a. Tovino’s prominence b. Mamta’s arrogance c. Reba’s dresses & shoes d. the processes in a lab, and e. the misplaced focus on instuments used to test & identify. The focus of the film shifted to the bgm, therefore the plot felt wanting. By the intermission, we’d be chuckling about the plot, and its intricate ties to the murders.

However, people in Kerala/those who follow news from Kerala who watched the film yesterday (Friday) would feel a little bizarre as the film connected to a missing child’s death in Kollam that morning.

That said watch at your risk, I needed a scup of extra strong coffee after the film ended as I was yawning beyond control. The crime thriller sort of becomes an amusing genre by the second half, taking away the edge of the seat nail biting effect.

ps. I’m not comparing it with any other film. It just didnt retain my interest however twisted the plots and mysterious the revelations were

Categories
2020 Malayalam

Trance (2020) : an out & out Fahadh Faasil film

Trance is about of Viju Prasad (Fahadh Faasil). He is a troubled man, but a man with big dreams. At the beginning of the film, he conducts workshops outside his working hours at a local restaurant, for people who need some kind of motivation in their lives to move on, the irony being he needs it more.

Soon we are introduced to his younger brother Kunjan (Sreenath Bhasi) a troubled guy again, on medication to keep his depression in check. The brothers try to overcome the dents their mother’s suicide has created in their lives, the elder looking out for the younger, until the latter decides to go on a long journey like their mother.

A dejected Viju who is also deeply affected by his circumstances, tries to keep himself motivated by the speel he gives his clients to get through the day, everyday. He is the little boy who was never consoled, never cried, had to be grow up soon for the sake of looking after his younger brother. We see the chinks in our protagonist, and wait for the moment he may break. His dreams of making it big with his workshops is one such hope he feeds himself. As an audience we know that would require a miracle seeing his current clientele!

The first half of Trance shows Viju’s that miracle in action. He is hired by top brass Solomon Davis (Gautam Vasudev Menon) and Isaac Thomas (Chemban Jose) on the recommendation of Kavitha (Aswathi Menon), a film casting agent in Mumbai to mint money using people’s addiction and recourse to religion, miracle workers and godmen & women. He is trained by Avarachan (Dileesh Pothan) to be renamed as Pastor Joshua Carlton, the face of their new venture. They bank on his training, charisma, the drugs to keep him hyperactive and an atmosphere their backend team creates to gain followers and a worldwide reach. And they do.

Viju’s world changes from the terraces and kaccha lanes of a quiet seaside town of Kanyakumari to the glitz, glamour, a world of showmanship & limelight of Joshua Carlton, JC for short speaking to auditoriums jam packed with ‘followers’ who line up to listen to him. Gradually, he begins to believe in the lies he creates through his performance like he used to feed himself his motivational speeches forgetting he is only a member of a well planned scheme to fool people. The remaining half of Trance reveals the back stories, issues of mental health, drug abuse, and the underbelly of the making of this image, and its aftermath. It is slower than the first, but a needed explanation to the crisp first half that kept us on a rush.

I half expected somebody in the audience to shout Hallelujah mersmerised by Fahad’s act, that is how real this entire project is, like the cricket match is in Lagaan. This Anwar Rasheed team of Vincent Vadakkan, Sushin Shyam, Jackson Vijayan, Amal Neerad, Rasool Pookutty, Praveen Prabhakar, Ajayan Challissery and the actors have delivered a delicious film about a current problem we are facing that takes advantage of the gullibility of people for their business gains.

The film will immediately strike a cord with anybody who is fed up with the industry of gods, human gods, and any kind of stubborn belief in isms, products, fashion and people who are so mersmerised by the idea advertised that they listen to no reason. They have used Christianity as a token idea to make people aware of a darker side to these popular influential people and products about blindly following any such. But it is bound to get brickbacks from the people who are living this life, we need to see if the audience keeps coming to the theatre after the first over booked weekend.

With the kind of ending Trance signed off with, it brings in a kind of closure to the story of Viju Prasad making it a bildungsroman. This gives us Fahadh Faasil at his best. But I would have preferred the film packing up when JC faded away into smoke the last time he was on stage, making it open ended for the sake of a mystery, much like the other inconclusive tidbits in the film that will keep us wondering if they were all an act or for real? Or done in a state of trance 🙃

The film also stars Nazriya Nazim, Arjun Ashokan, Soubin Shahir, Vinayakan, Jins Joseph, Srinda and Joju George.

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