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Sunday, November 16, 2008

karthi prefers bala than ameer


Paruthiveeran Karthi seems to be in a jinx of sorts, his films never get completed in time, they make us wait for eternity. We all know that it took forever for Paruthiveeran to get to theaters. What happened once it got there is another story, but we are looking at the struggles to get it there. A shooting schedule that stretched for nearly 500 days and numerous

Then, fresh news is that Karthi has given a nod to Bala's next project. Since when did Bala move on to his next project, you might wonder. It is justified bearing in mind the fact that Naan Kadavul seems to be still suspended in mid air with Arya's career precariously positioned. Well, Zee TV is believed to have paid both the actor and the director an amount each as advance and one can believe that they will not do such a thing without seeing sufficient reason. The question here is, Karthi has developed a jinxed reputation while Bala has been walking around with this tag for a few years now. Will this combination work well?

simbu finally does it


We thought Silambattam would release for Deepavali. We were disappointed. Then we were told November, but it didn't happen then either. Finally, the official word is that it will release on December 5. Silambarasan's fans have had a patient wait, and we can only hope the film will satisfy all. That is certainly Silambarasan's aim.

Starring along with heroine Sana Khan is also Sneha, who is said to have a very interesting role. Silambarasan himself will be seen in two getups – not a double act but the same character will appear as a street smart city type and an orthodox looking village Brahmin.

Saar! Saar! Saaaar! Ava peru enna, saar?


The breakfast scene unfolding in silence –refreshingly rare in our loud cinema and very welcome.

Saroja spends the night out, but it’s cool with her liberal parents- even at the end there is no typical scene with dad preaching to daughter about the dangers of sneaking out and keeping late nights.

Parodying television serials with its overwrought family melodrama, narrated with shock reactions and mock slow motion: Prabhu cuts to this scene without letting us know it’s a shoot, and the pleasure for the audience is in spotting that midway. What is delightful is that when it cuts without warning to the serial shoot, you know there’s something wrong with the tone of the movie suddenly – it is not subtle and hip anymore, but loud and overwrought. You can feel the pleasure Venkat Prabhu takes in writing these things into the script.

Premji’s Tamil movie fantasies (the dancing girls) isn’t new, but what is new is how they talk back to him: in the movie’s most daring, funny moment the dancing girls materialize around the gagged, blindfolded and bound Saroja! For a moment the audience is shocked that his mind works the way it does…and when he shoos the girls, and they sulk away, you realize how close it comes to saying something about the mind of a fantasy-driven adolescent. And if men are truthful, they’ll admit that the erotic erupts at the most reverent, unlikely moments in life.

Premji’s ironic use of Vijay’s line from Azhagiya Tamil Maghan (“Evlovo panrom idha panna mattama”). It’s a nice movie in-joke from the director (continuing Premji’s Chandramukhi in -joke from Chennai 28, “enna koduma saar ithu”)

Saroja is different for how self referential it is: another nice bit of skewering is the romance flashback done in quotation marks. This is the scene with the guy off to reveal his love with a bouquet of roses and finding out she loves his friend. How many such scenes we’ve witnessed before, and they are all done the same way: the awkward opening salvo when the boy and girl speak at the same time and then giggle; the typical dialogue (“my mind has been restless”, “he is 100 percent best choice, “200 percent best choice” “you shouldn’t declare your love late”) the brave front he dons after discovering she loves his best friend, and the girl thanking him for making it all happen. You know the scene is in quotation marks because of the formulaic way it is shot and lit.

Saar! Saar! Saaaar! Ava peru enna, saar? The Saroja gang calling each other saar and not machi could well be Venkat’s contribution to injecting new slang into colloquial Tamil speech – a new way for buddies to call each other. I’ll wager that friends are already calling each other saar after seeing Saroja.

The Dosth bada dost song is inventively shot and edited. It’s inspiration is that road song from Dil Chaata Hai, but the roadie song in Saroja is more fun; don’t miss that moment when the two guys at the back are singing along and one of them turns off the radio/CD. That’s really cool – like something out of a smart Hollywood movie.

The easy, convincing banter between the four friends, and the black and white cut-aways to how each of them is seen by the wife, is new.

For a mid-budget film, the road accident is spectacularly and convincingly staged.

The movie derails once they arrive at the gangster’s hideout. It’s not just the characters who are trapped but Venkat Prabhu himself is trapped within the limits the plot imposes. When they were on the road, he had plenty of room to play around, to skewer, be ironic, and stage formulaic scenes in new ways. A lot of the cool, hip experimentation that had been going on freezes once the plot pins these characters down in that factory. And it goes on for too long.

But, in spite of this handicap, Venkat manages a few surprises. The one most worth commenting on are the scenes showing a bunch of ordinary men fight thugs. No Tamil hero machismo here. In one witty scene they imagine themselves in the place of a Vijay or an Ajith and charge at the bad guys. Cut to: they are on the floor as prisoners with the bad guys laughing around them.

The yellow clock ticking away doesn’t work, just as the ‘day before yesterday’, ‘yesterday’ and ‘today’ chapter cues don’t work. And the reason? They don’t contribute anything to the plot. These time warp devises are there in cinema to complicate a plot that is time-driven, to increase the tension. If only Venkat Prabhu could have found a way to make the ticking clock count. As used now in Saroja, it is an empty gimmick.

Sampath is a memorable presence in the movie – and that his character is really in love and cares for his mistress is a nice touch.

What –or rather who - is a great, unforgettable presence in Saroja is Nikitha. Has there been anyone – vamp, heroine, second heroine – recently who sizzles the way she does? Kondana Kodi has to be the sexiest number out there. Having her in that gorgeous saree highlighted in flaming orange while the rest of the frame is in sepia is brilliant. Nikitha as Kalyani in Soroja is another example of how Venkat Prabhu re-imagines and re-invents things familiar to us. Nikitha, as seen here, feels like the discovery of the year.

Saar! Saar! Ava peru enna, saar?
Ava peru, saar, is Saroja!

varanam ayiram nenjukul peithidum

azagey kolluthey varanam ayiram

Monday, January 7, 2008

Rahman and his music school


Rahman has on his birthday announced another initiative worthy of applause and this time it is about nurturing local talent. In his communiqué to Behindwoods he announced that his label KM music has started the KM Music Conservatory and Audio Media Education, India's First Apple authorized training center. Located in Chennai, the center will offer a Program in Music and Music Technology. He says electronic sounds have in the last two decades played an instrumental role in revolutionizing music so much so that listeners have lost interest in live classical compositions. This, he believes, will deprive future generations from appreciating the joy of live classical music and KM Music Conservatory will play a significant role in rekindling interest in live classical music. As of now, Indian music composers have to travel abroad in search of orchestras; it is this hassle that KM Music Conservatory intends to eliminate. The conservatory faculties include both Indian as well as International professors and musicians who will educate students in Indian and Western Classical music. The school will be auditioning and accepting singers and students who play flute, oboe, clarinet, French horn, trumpet, trombone, violin, viola, cello, double bass, and percussion. Courses will include Western Vocal and Instrumental Performance, Indian Classical Vocal, Western and Indian Music Theory, Music Appreciation, Ear Training, Piano, Audio Engineering, an Apple certified course in Logic Pro, and a Digidesign certified course in Pro Tools. Scholarships will be offered to deserving students from the A.R. Rahman Foundation. Students also have the opportunity to audition for the professional KM Music Symphony Orchestra upon completion of the program. For more details visit http://www.arrahman.com and http://www.audiomedia.in.

King khan stops dhoom 3


Sadly, 2007 wasn’t the year for Yash Raj Films as all their films except Chak De turned croppers at the box office. King Khan wasn’t Yash Raj’s favorite, in recent times, as the relationship between the two turned sour the previous year. Now all that is dead and buried as they say you can’t argue with success. Guess that applies to SRK as well. Aditya Chopra of Yash Raj Films has decided to cast SRK in their film, to begin this year and the producer seems so hell bent that he has even postponed his plans to start Dhoom 3, which had earlier topped his priority list. Now that is what you call star power. So fans of the Dhoom series will have to wait for the king to make way.