GOOD NEWWZ

CAST: Akshay Kumar, Diljit Dosanjh, Kareena Kapoor, Kiara Advani

DIRECTOR: Raj Mehta

RATING: 3.5/5

Good Newwz

Deepti (Kareena Kapoor Khan) and Varun Batra (Akshay Kumar) are a posh, high-flying married couple, living in Mumbai and are much involved with their respective careers. Deepti also has her heart set on having a baby and after trying for a few years and then, some prodding by the family, both Varun and she decide to consult one of the best fertility specialists in the city. The doctor advises IVF and they are ready for it. Only hitch, few days after the procedure is through, Deepti and Varun are told there has been a sperm mix-up with another couple with the same last name. Enter ‘the Batras from Chandigarh’ into their lives. Honey (Diljit Dosanjh) and Monika (Kiara Advani) are a loud Punjabi couple and now it’s a complete clash of sensibilities between the two sets of Batras. As both Deepti and Monika soon find out they are pregnant, the rest of the film forms how the couples come to terms and deal with this unusual situation.

Through much of its runtime, director Raj Mehta ensures that ‘Good Newwz’ stays true to its genre with several light-hearted and funny moments. Add to that, the pace of the film stays mostly tight. Although given the subject and premise the narrative, at times, treads into a problematic zone and stance. And some of the jokes seem off-colour. There’s also a tendency to over explain and simplify in some portions which stick out. Also, the screenplay barely scratches the surface when it comes to getting into the depth and complexity of the situation.

However, the performances are top-notch. Kareena Kapoor Khan steals the show and delivers a knockout performance as the sophisticated Deepti, and her character’s emotional arc is developed well. Akshay Kumar hits the right spot with his comic timing. As does Diljit Dosanjh, who sinks his teeth into his character and plays it with full gusto. Kiara Advani is sincere and makes an impression. Adil Hussain as the straight-faced doctor, at the core of all the confusion, is a hoot. And as a couple, both Kareena and Akshay play off each other well and many of their interactions come off as very relatable.

IT:CHAPTER TWO

Director: Andy muschetti

Stars: Jessica Chastain, James McAvoy, Bill Hader

It: Chapter 2 begins with a terrifying homophobic crime, which Stephen King had used in his novel. After a bunch of bullies attack Adrian Mellon and his boyfriend, they throw Adridan over the bridge into the water. Just as he is about to drown, he sees the monstrous clown. And of course, Pennywise eats him in front of Adrian’s boyfriend.

It: Chapter 2 explores those who are trapped in the closet, and also works as an examination, a rather blotchy one maybe, on how not being to able to come out can sometimes eat into a person and kill them in the end. And that’s exactly what Pennywise does. He taunts Richie continuously on his hidden sexuality. While the film has its heart in the right place, and many times strikes the right chord, the execution is a bit messy at points.

The book does a brilliant job of showing how difficult life was in the homophobic town of Derry for queer kids living in the 80s.

THE EMOTIONAL VALUE

Even if It: Chapter 2 is rather shaky in the horror elements, its emotional moments do hit you in the feels. There is a sense of wholesome friendship and love in the film. There is heartbreak, when close friends die, and there is finally the attainment of closure; for Billy, that is. This is the rare mastery of both the It films, as they both know when to just twist the knife. Eddie overcomes his fear at last, and shows his heroic side, only to be wounded fatally.

Pennywise, the clown.

CRAZY, STUPID, LOVE

Release date: 29th July 2011

Cast: Steve Carell, Julianne Moore, Emma Stone, Ryan Gosling, Kevin Bacon

Director: Glenn Ficaara, John Requa

Run time: 2hrs 20mins

Rating: 3.5/5

It may be a romantic story all over again but there is a freshness to Crazy Stupid Love which makes it eminently watchable. The characters are familiar: a middle-aged couple, a young couple and a teenage couple. Yet, their trajectory of romance is not so familiar. The middle-aged, much-married and recently separated Weavers try hard to go their separate ways but being quintessential soulmates, they never end up distanced and truly divorced. The 25-year old romance which began in high school with a chocolate mint ice cream is impossible to write off, however tempting the new options may seem. After all his heady encounters, which include one with wild cat school teacher Marisa Tomei (hilarious), Cal always ends up at Emily’s doorstep, tending to their garden in the dead of night.


The other love tracks include a teeny bopper one where Cal’s 13-year-old son (Jonah Bobo) falls crazily in love with his 17-year-old baby-sitter (Analeigh Tipton) who in turn, harbours naughty fantasies for the father. Equally zany is the one-night stand between swashbuckling Ryan Gosling and the yuppie lawyer (Emma Stone) which ends up on a fiery note and doesn’t take long to get transformed into a till-death-do-us-part affair. But nothing, just nothing is run-of-the-mill here, neither the characters nor the screenplay. The drama is finely nuanced with little touches that raise the emotional quotient to a high level while the humour is subtle, bordering on mild amusement. Steve Carell and Julianna Moore make a fine couple, lending both dignity and vulnerability to their roles while Gosling and Stone are perfectly mismatched (quite appealing). Young Jonah and his babysitter too lend a fine performance and never get thwarted by the adults and their affairs. In fact, the 13-year-old ends up as the torch bearer for the confused lot, enunciating the true credo of love and all that jazz.

A charming watch, don’t forget to take time out for Crazy Stupid Love, despite the crazy, stupid title.

BRIDESMAIDS

Release date: 28th April 2011

Cast: Kristin Wiig, Maya Rudolph, Rose Byrne, Chris O’Dowd, Melissa McCarthy, Wendi McLendon-Covey, Ellie Kemper, Jill Clayburgh, Matt Lucas, Rebel Wilson, Michael Hitchcock, Jon Hamm

Director: Paul Feig

Run time: 125 minutes

Rating: 4.5/5

This spring, Universal Pictures and producer Judd Apatow (Knocked Up, The 40-Year-Old Virgin) invite you to experience Bridesmaids. Kristen Wiig leads the cast as Annie, a maid of honor whose life unravels as she leads her best friend, Lillian (Maya Rudolph), and a group of colorful bridesmaids (Rose Byrne, Melissa McCarthy, Wendi McLendon-Covey and Ellie Kemper) on a wild ride down the road to matrimony. Annie’s life is a mess. But when she finds out her lifetime best friend is engaged, she simply must serve as Lillian’s maid of honor. Though lovelorn and broke, Annie bluffs her way through the expensive and bizarre rituals. With one chance to get it perfect, she’ll show Lillian and her bridesmaids just how far you’ll go for someone you love.

BADRINATH KI DULHANIYA

Release date: 10th March 2017

Cast: Varun Dhawan, Alia Bhatt

Director: Shashank Khaitan

Run time: 2hrs 14mins

Rating: 3.5/5

Badri (Varun) is a young fella from Jhansi, a lovable simpleton who wears his heart on his sleeve. He falls hard for Vaidehi (Alia), a spunky girl from Kota whom he meets at a wedding and to whom he promptly proposes marriage. But she’s got big career ambitions, and laughs in the face of his tenth-pass qualifications. She has no interest in marriage.Badri pursues her relentlessly, and because Vaidehi is amused – although still not interested – we’re meant to regard this stalking as cute.

Complications ensue, including a second-act detour to Singapore, where Vaidehi is studying to become an air hostess. (This is the best career Mr. Khaitan could dream up for his heroine?) Badrinath turns up in Singapore, too, and it’s on this non-Indian ground that the movie hammers home its point: A real man is one who respects women, or in his case, learns to. (And, yes, it’s sad that the movie’s simple moral has currency in present-day America as well as in India.)

If “Badrinath” ends up being less about female empowerment than about schooling gents on a cardinal rule, its pop comes from Ms. Bhatt. Hindi cinema conventions and Mr. Khaitan’s script may constrict Vaidehi’s options, but Ms. Bhatt cannot be contained. Without ever falling into the clichés of spunky Bollywood heroine, she effortlessly embodies that admirable thing: a modern woman.

AJAB PREM KI GAZAB KAHANI

Release date: 6th November 2009

Cast: Ranbir kapoor and katrina kaif

Director: Rajkumar santhoshi

Run time: 2hrs 14mins

Rating: 3/5


Prem (Ranbir Kapoor), with his friends, runs a Happy Club that works towards uniting people in love. When a new-girl Jenny (Katrina Kaif) shifts in the fancy town, Prem is predictably attracted towards her but doesn’t dare to propose till half the film. So when Jenny accepts Prem’s proposal and they start singing songs, you clearly know it’s a dream sequence.

Jenny’s foster-parents take her to Goa to get her married against her will. Prem reaches there and promises to bail her out of the situation ala Shah Rukh Khan from DDLJ. Soon Jenny reveals she loves Rahul (Upen Patel) giving the film a Jab We Met triangular twist. Kabhi Haan Kabhi Naa comes into picture as Prem tries hard to get Rahul away from Jenny.

A politician and an underworld don create more chaos until the film reaches its cliched climax. It’s for the zillionth time since Dil Hai Ke Maanta Nahi that realization strikes the bride on her marriage day as she walks out to seek true love. The happy end is a result of the divine intervention with a literal Christ Ne Bana Di Jodi conclusion.

TITANIC

Release date: 18th November 1997

Cast: Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet

Director: James Cameron

Run time: 2hrs 31mins

Rating: 7.8/10

A daunting blend of state-of-the-art special effects melded around a sterling central story, Titanic plumbs personal and philosophical story depths not usually found in “event-scale” movies that, beneath their girth and pyrotechnics, often have nothing at their core.

Titanic, however, is no soulless junket into techno-glop wizardry but rather a complex and radiant tale that essays both mankind’s destructive arrogance and its noble endurance.

Ultimately, we all know the horrible outcome of the Titanic sinking. We can recite the numbers lost and the awesome dimensions of the ship, and we can construct some sort of comparative scope for the catastrophe. But all these are mere quantifications and chit-chat regurgitation.

Cameron, who wrote and directed the film, has put a face on that horrific happening; he has taken us beyond the forensics of the sinking and put us inside the skin and psyches of those who perished and those who survived. In both, we see facets of ourselves: In philosophical microcosm, Cameron shows that in the end — both the good and the bad endings — we’re all in the same boat.

On its hightest level, Titanic is no meager disaster movie, greased by generic formula and goosed by big-bucks technology, but it is rather a probing scope of what great feats mankind can accomplish and, in turn, what terrible results these feats can spawn. Fortunately, Cameron lets the film’s philosophical seams and girdings show. Titanic — and no one will ever forget — is one big, bruising movie that will appeal on different levels to different audiences.

Told in flashback as a single-minded fortune hunter (Bill Paxton) combs the Titanic’s wreckage with his state-of-the-art search ship in hopes of finding undiscovered treasure, the story is recalled by a 103-year-old woman (Gloria Stuart) who was a passenger on the ship’s ill-fated maiden voyage. Drifting back to that time in April 1912, we see the trip through Rose’s (Kate Winslet) 17-year-old eyes.

High-spirited and betrothed to a monied mill heir (Billy Zane), Rose is, nevertheless, despondent. Like a Henry James heroine, she finds that she is not suited for life in the gilded cage that society is shaping for her as the baubled wife of a leisured industrialist. She foresees her life as being measured out by serving spoons, and she wants no part of such a stuffy existence. Her ennui turns to deep depression, and she nearly ends it by diving into icy waters, where she is saved only by the wise grace of a third-class passenger, Jack (Leonardo DiCaprio), whose joy for life and eagerness for living it to the fullest soon revitalize the young Rose.

In general, roughly the first half of this three-hours-plus movie is akin to having an engraved invitation to attend the first-class functions of that glittery voyage. Navigator Cameron introduces us to a wide lot of characters, from the prigs of the paneled staterooms to the dregs of the raging furnace room. Since most of them are either rich or British, they’re an entertaining array of swellheads and loons. All of this is pinioned around Rose’s personal blossoming as Jack reawakens the artistic and personal juices in her, those nearly suffocated by the rigid and judgmental confines of Edwardian society.

All the while, Cameron plants calamitous forebodings — the inadequacies of the life rafts, equipment shortages and the vanity of the ship’s creators and captain. Narratively, Titanic is a masterwork of big-canvas storytelling, broad enough to entrance and entertain yet precise and delicate enough to educate and illuminate. Undeniably, one could nitpick — critic-types may snicker at some ’60s-era lines and easy-pop ’90s-vantage hindsights — but that’s like dismissing a Mercedes on the grounds that its glove compartment interior is drab.

Unlike in most monstrosities of this film’s size and girth, the characters are not assembled from a standard stock pot. Within the dimensions of such an undertaking, Cameron, along with his well-chosen cast, has created memorable, idiosyncratic and believable characters. Our sympathies are warmed by the two leads: Winslet is effervescently rambunctious as the trapped Rose, while DiCaprio’s willowy steadfastness wonderfully heroic. On the stuffy side of the deck, Zane is aptly snide as Rose’s cowardly fiance, while Frances Fisher is perfect as a social snob, both shrill and frightened. Kathy Bates is a hoot as the big-hatted, big-mouthed Molly Brown — she is, indeed, indestructible. On the seamier side, David Warner is positively chilling as a ruthless valet. As the deep-sea treasure hunter, Paxton brings a Cameron-type obsessiveness to his quest.

The film’s most captivating performance, however, belongs to Stuart, whose luminous portrayal of the 103-year-old Rose is an inspirational joy. Pencil Stuart in for a likely best supporting actress nomination this winter.

Also on the Oscar front, clear the deck for multiple technical nominations. Front and center is, of course, Cameron. A decided cut above other superstar directors in that he can also write, Cameron deserves a director’s nomination for his masterful creation — it’s both a logistical and aesthetic marvel. The film’s fluid, masterfully punctuated editing, including some elegantly economical match cuts, is outstanding: Editors Conrad Buff and Richard A. Harris deserve nominations, as does cinematographer Russell Carpenter for his brilliantly lit scopings; his range of blues seems to hit every human emotion.

Titanic‘s visual and special effects transcend state-of-the-art workmanship, invoking feelings within us not usually called up by razzle-dazzlery. Highest honors to visual effects supervisor Rob Legato and special effects coordinator Thomas L. Fisher for the powerful, knockdown imagery. It’s often awesome, most prominently in showing the ship’s unfathomable rupture. The splitting of the iron monster is a heart stopper, in no small measure compounded by the sound team’s creaking thunders. Through it all, James Horner’s resonant and lilting musical score, at times uplifted by a mournful Irish reed, is a deep treasure by itself.

PK

Release date: 19th December 2014

Cast: Aamir Khan, Anushka Sharma, a Sanjay Dutt

Director: Rajkumar Hirani

Run time: 2hrs 33mins

Rating: 4/5

PK is as much a philosophy as a film. Starting with the alien’s desperation, PK captures the fears and falsehoods humans weave around faith. When PK decides to pray for his remote, he’s bewildered about whom to and how to pray. PK features brave scenes – money extracted at temples, coconuts offered in confusion at a church, god-men doling out tortuous advice – and strong lines, including a Muslim girl bravely asserting. Capturing faith whipped into hate, PK’s sterling message, directed sensitively, stands out.
As does Aamir Khan as the wide-eyed alien bemused by human life, a paan-chomping Chaplin from outer space, liked by rustic Bhairon Singh (Sanjay Dutt). PK’s simplicity contrasts with Jaggu’s complicated life, heartbroken after she thinks her Pakistani boyfriend Sarfaraz (Sushant) ditched her in Belgium. Tapasvi warned Jaggu’s father that her Muslim lover would betray her – does PK prove him wrong?

Anushka presents a sprightly show while Boman Irani stands out as a TV channel head. Some supporting acts and special effects could’ve been sharper though while at points, editor Raju Hirani should’ve been sterner with director Raju Hirani in trimming tighter scenes. Between gods, frauds, love and bombs, there are multiple threads here. Some distract, others impact, like PK hilariously dazed by humans hiding when they make out – except when they announce it with band-baaja on their wedding day.

BARFI!

Release date: 14th September 2012

Cast: Ranbir kapoor, Priyanka chopra, Illeana d’cruz

Director: Anurag basu

Run time: 2hrs 31mins

Rating: 4/5

Love needs expressions not language, it requires feelings no boundaries, it’s beyond oceans beyond limits.Barfi ! Essentially is a chapter of life which has numerable good moments to recall, laugh and to love with. Every character is well placed without being dramatic with excellent music, performances, direction and screenplay.
His parents named him Murphy, but everyone calls him Barfi! Always ready with a prank up his sleeve, he’s quite the charmer, especially with the ladies! In Darjeeling, Barfi (Ranbir Kapoor) is the talk of the town. Even though he can neither speak nor listen! His bitter-sweet relationship with two beautiful young ladies, Shruti (Ileana D’cruz) and Jhilmil (Priyanka Chopra) sets in motion a chain of events that will turn his life upside down! UTV Motion Pictures and director Anurag Basu invite you to witness the amusing, naughty and sometimes crazy antics of Barfi. A heart-warming tale of selfless love and about finding happiness in the smallest things in life; that tells you no matter how tough your life may be, “Don’t Worry. Be Barfi!”

RAB NE BANA DI JODI

Release date: 12th December 2008

Cast: Anushka Sharma, Shah Rukh Khan

Director: Aditya Chopra

Run time: 2hrs 52mins

Rating: 7.2/10

Shah Rukh Khan plays Surinder Sahni, a working-class simpleton from Amritsar who goes in for an image makeover, and poses as a cooler, trendier fellow so he can woo his young, distracted wife Taani (played by newcomer Anushka Sharma). Picked to be partners in a local dance contest, the lady and her husband-in-disguise, Raj, become fast friends, until she finds herself falling for him.

To be honest, even if you are willing to buy into that bizarre premise – that Taani fails to recognize her own husband because he’s shaved his moustache, lost the spectacles and picked a funky hairstyle – Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi is still an exhausting watch because it’s such a predictable story, because it recycles the same old clichés, and because the characters are so poorly developed.

It’s difficult to get your head around Taani, easily the film’s most confusing character, who takes the drastic step of marrying a man she doesn’t love on the urging of her deathbed-bound father, when her fiancé is killed in a road accident. Never once does she remember or refer to either her fiancé or her father in the film. She’s progressive enough to think it’s cool to be having gol-gappa eating matches with a male friend, but conveniently forgets to tell him she’s married.

Newcomer Anushka Sharma appears confident, and is well cast as the spirited Taani, but saddled with an inconsistent character she fails to leave a lasting impression. The same, thankfully can’t be said forVinay Pathak, who’s absolutely delightful as Suri’s faithful friend Bobby.
Chopra’s return to direction after eight years is marked by a flawed script, which in turn spawns a disappointing film. Where’s the smart dialogue and the spirited characters that defined his debut film,Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge? There’s no trace of either in this film.