Thejas Krishnan

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Talaash is Not what you expect it to be!



Cast: Aamir Khan, Rani Mukherjee, Kareena Kapoor, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Shernaz Patel, Rajkumar Yadav, Sheeba Chadha
Director: Reema Kagti

What strikes you most when you start watching Talaash is its credits which includes Dialogues by Farhan Akhtar, story and screen play by Reema kagti and Zoya Akthar, and Anurag Kashyap in Cinematography department. Yet at some place it does seem a let-off, after all its is an Aamir Khan Movie!

Talaash, directed competently by Reema Kagti, opens with a leisurely paced shade of Mumbai after dark. Across  the dirty bars and crampy gullies , camera pokes its head into the backrooms of brothels where prostitutes doll up before heading out to showcase  their wares. Crummy-looking pimps lure prospective clients for their girls, an old destitute woman stares blankly huddled in a streetside corner, even as urchins tap hopefully on taxi windows.What Kagti conveys through Talaash is that this is a living-breathing strata of our society, and these people must matter – they deserve humanity and compassion.

The murder mystery is  kicked off at  the night when a film star drives his car straight into a railing and plunges it into the sea, killing himself. Inspector Surjan Singh Shekhawat (Aamir Khan) finds himself sucked into the underbelly of the city as he investigates this case that is evidently more complicated than it appears.Himself straining under the burden of guilt since the death of a loved one, Shekhawat immerses himself in the investigation, even as his wife Roshni (Rani Mukherjee) wrestles with depression and loneliness. As the cop spends long nights driving around the city’s darkest corners in search of clues, he’s befriended by a kindly hooker, Rosy (Kareena Kapoor), who helps him uncoil the maze of this case.

Talaash benefits from its crisply written characters and the exceptional actors who play these parts. As Taimur, the limping odd-jobs guy in the brothel, Nawazuddin Siddiqui is terrific, inhabiting the role like a chameleon. Playing Shekhawat’s junior officer, it takes Rajkumar Yadav just one scene – in which he’s merely a spectator with a single line of dialogue – to show what a good actor can bring even to a small part. The same is true of Shernaz Patel who shows up as a kooky psychic, and Sheeba Chadha who appears as a past-her-prime sex worker.

Of the leads, Kareena Kapoor brings both heat and heart to her role, despite the sometimes clunky lines she must mouth. Rani Mukherjee shines as the cop’s desperate wife, investing her performance with an array  of emotions, never once reducing the character to a pathetic caricature. It’s Aamir Khan, in the film’s central role, who not surprisingly leaves the biggest impression. Shekhawat internalizes his emotions for the most part, and Aamir brings volumes of depth to this troubled man…that furrowed brow, the moustache, all adding to this remarkable performance.

But the most disappointing fact is there is not much to the movie. Apart from the initial tremors all the rest is pretty must base lined. It doesn’t feel nearly as tense or urgent as it ought to, and its plot simply isn’t as deliciously complex as it could’ve been. As a result, it’s a very watchable film, but not an unforgettable one.

Talaash is not a bad movie. Sad part is it isnt a much good one too! But watch it for its power performances. Powerful and definitive. 

Rating : 3/5



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Tuesday, May 29, 2012

My Top Ten Tom Hank Movies

10.Forest Gump


9.The Green Mile


8.Appolo 13


7.You've Got Mail!


6. Catch me if You can!


5. Angels And Demons


4. The Da Vinci Code


3. Saving Private Ryan


2. Cast Away


1. The Terminal


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Monday, April 30, 2012

Avengers-Its every boys dream...


Cast: Robert Downey Jr, Chris Evans, Mark Ruffalo, Scarlett Johansson Samuel L Jackson ....
Director: Joss Whedon



This is a super hero movie on steroids!!! Its everything you wanted as a kid.
After successfully introducing movie-goers to Iron Man, Hulk, Captain America, and Thor in previous films, the decision to get all these big guns firing as one was brave to say the least…given that each of them inhabits a different space, and comes with his own set of quirks and characteristics. But writer-director Joss Whedon, recognizes that challenge clearly, and uses exactly that to form the basis of his story – in order to come together to fight a common enemy, these superheroes must first sort out their own egos and differences.



The enemy  here  is Loki, the  demi-god who you might remember, was banished from heavens in THOR. The Avengers opens with Loki (Tom Hiddleston) stealing the Tesseract, a powerful energy source, with which he intends to open a portal to space to summon an alien army to help him enslave all mankind.
In response, Nick Fury (Samuel L Jackson), director of international peacekeeping agency SHIELD, gathers his best men: billionaire industrialist Tony Stark aka Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr), supersoldier Steve Rogers aka Captain America (Chris Evans), god of thunder and Loki's brother Thor (Chris Hemsworth), ace scientist and Hulk alter-ego Bruce Banner (Mark Ruffalo), along with slinky Russian spy Natasha Romanoff aka Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), and expert marksman Clint Barton aka Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner). Together they must work as a team to fight Loki's world-ending scheme but there's that small matter of fighting amongst each other to resolve first.
Director Joss Whedon have to be credited for more than one reason here. For one, the scenes are properly shot. There are no redundant action sequences or boring dialogue manifestations. The actions are shot with drop dead reality that the X factor that keeps every one to the edge of their seats. He also maintains a cracking pace, switching deftly between spectacular action sequences, and witty interaction scenes between the characters.
Though Robert Downey Jr. gets the Lions Share of punch dialogues, its the Hulk that wins the most applause. The significance is equally divided among its six leads each with their own areas of expertise and no-one feels left out. It is also the sheer brilliance of the director to keep the Humor in every situation through-out the film.
The performances are top-notch across the cast, particularly from Mark Ruffalo, who plays the Hulk far more sympathetically than in the two previous films that starred Eric Bana and Edward Norton as the angry green fellow. Ruffalo nails the almost  relationship between Dr Banner and his alter ego, and delivers plenty spontaneous laughs.
In the end, The Avengers isn't just an ultimate spectacle, but also incredibly smart and surprisingly humorous. The Unexpected moments, both action and humor, will surely glue you to the seats.
Go on.. Full fill your childhood fantasy... :D
Rating : 5/5


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