Saturday, March 19, 2011

High School Musical

Ah, I'm a typical teenager now. I saw High School Musical 3: Senior Year, and I totally loved it. Vanessa Hudgens is very sweet and lovable, and Zac Efron - wait I need to breathe properly - is freaking awesome! He's very cute, and the hottest hunk ever! Both of them make a very beautiful couple - watch out for the song Can I have a dance. As the title proclaims, it is a musical - full of lovely songs and dances to watch out for, set in a high school environment.

It is based on how kids, in their senior year, are grappling with career choices and are still struggling to come to terms with the fact that in a few days, they will be off to college, leaving behind their world, friends, and family. Also, they have to perform a musical based on the senior Prom. Lovely, lovely film. Must watch for all kids, and adults alike.

I have to mention here, the movie is completely watchable, even with parents, unlike most Hollywood movies. Save for one kissing scene, it is the kind of movie that doesn't make you wince uncomfortably every five minutes. Amazingness.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Movies galore

I just realized how I am lagging behind with this blog. The other one, has 49 posts and this one has 30 less. OK, 29 less. Anyway, I mostly save my rantings about life for that one, and movies for this one. I have reduced my movie-watching a bit nowadays, thanks to Mommy dearest, but yes, I did manage to get a few done. And there's lots. I'm afraid I can't write full fledged reviews, but I shall surely do as and when I manage to scrimp a little time.

Saving Private Ryan

Lots of blood, action, skin, and gore. Not typically my stuff, but this was part of my research on the 'Why guys are so weird' thesis. And as I have readily testified on so many occasions, I find fighting very sexy. This movie, is an Oscar-winning one, and no doubt, Tom Hanks - amazing. He salvages most sagging movies with his performances, and enhances the good ones. And the theme was off-beat. Not the typical movie about how soldiers face hardships and how they miss the family and the after-effects of war, though this does form an integral part of the story. It is about how eight men reluctantly set out on a mission to find a soldier who has lost all his brothers in the war, and they must find him, for his mother does not have any body else to fall back on. It is about selflessness, and about Ryan promising to live his life well - six men have given up theirs for his. I particularly liked the last scene - in which the veteran Ryan visits Miller's (Hanks) grave and tells his soul, that he has earned it, and lived a good life.

Bride Wars

Frilly, frothy, bitchy and very enjoyable. We all love a good fight, don't we? As long as we're not in the middle of it! And every one enjoys a cat-fight, and this movie is just about that. Childhood friends Emma (Hathaway, very pretty) and Liv (Hudson, bitchy and ruthless) turn into foes when forced to share the same date, time and venue for their respective weddings. Both are unwilling to compromise, or see the other's point of view. And this leads to a series of Bride Wars, in which both of them try their best to sabotage each other's weddings - including tanning the other orange, and colouring hair blue. If I were any of their wedding, I would be scared - very scared.
A perfect chick-flick, to watch with your girlfriends.

Princess Diaries

Anne Hathaway is at it again. She is perfect as the clumsy high-school teen who transforms into the graceful princess. It tells us how she copes with the sudden catastrophe thrust on her - as she slowly starts to drift from her best friends and family. It tells us how she manages to savour the best of both worlds - as a world-famous royal, as well as the regular high school teen. At one moment, she addresses a press conference in her long gown and tiara, while the other, she gets hit by a ball in her gym class. On the whole, very sweet and girly movie. Fun to watch.


Sunday, March 6, 2011

Dil Toh Baccha Hai Ji ***

Love grows. Men don't. The promotional catchline for the film aptly describes the theme. Madhur Bhandarkar, known mostly for his hard-hitting and realistic portrayals of popular culture themes, scores with this one. Though he has ventured outside his comfort zone, he manages to strike well. Dil Toh Baccha Hai Ji is a funny, yet realistic depiction of urban life situations and people, and at a close look, about three men, who are on a loser's streak in their love life. Naren Ahuja (Ajay Devgn, perfect as the geek) is seeking a divorce from his wife, and moves into his ancestral house to start afresh. To dispense pangs of loneliness, he finds two paying guests to move in with him -Abhay, or Abby (Emraan Hashmi), a womaniser, who is involved with a former beauty queen as her toyboy, and Milind (Omi Vaidya, a delight to watch), who works with Jhatpatshaadi.com, a matrimonial site, and is on the quest for true love.

Things take a turn when Naren meets pretty young thing June, in his office, working as his intern. Milind, on a night spouting shayari, falls for Gungun, a radio jockey and a struggler. Both of them with initial apprehension, plow along, and slowly start falling in love. As for Abhay, dilemma appears in the form of Nikki, Anushka's stepdaughter, whom he falls in love with. What happens when a 38 year old man, facing mid-life crisis, falls for a young 19 year old; or a naive bumbling idiot hankers behind a gold-digger, form the crux of the story.

The film is well-scripted and made, and edited well. Certain scenes simply leave their mark, like the one in which Shruti Haasan proclaims that she loves watching pornography, or the one in which Ajay Devgn tries hard to fit in with a bunch of teenagers. About the performances, Ajay Devgn is as usual, good. He plays the part of the geek to the hilt. Emraan Hashmi has nothing new to offer. Omi Vaidya, however, is a delight to watch on the screen. He is cute, naive, bumbling, and very adorable. His dialogue delivery, with its particular accent, is endearing. Shazahn Padamsee was passable, though very cute and lovable. Shruti Hassan has a striking screen presence, though with weak dialogue delivery, and is unimpressive in this one. Newcomer Shraddha Das does okay too.

Madhur Bhandarkar has certainly done well for a first-time comedy. The film may not be an in-your-face comedy, but is sure worth a watch.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Rain Man ****

Ah, Tom Cruise. But in Rain Man, Dustin Hoffman turns out to be the surprise package. Ole, ole movie (it was released in 1988, like 23 years before), but is, according to me, evergreen. Charlie Babbitt (Tom Cruise) faces debt problems, and his business is suffering. He is literally in the throes of despair, when he gets to know that his estranged father has passed away. He, with his girlfriend Susanna, goes to his hometown, to claim his legacy, when he learns that his father has left his entire fortune of $3 million to his estranged brother Dustin. But hey, Dustin turns out to be an autistic savant, a condition that many are not aware of. Though he has problems exhibiting his emotions and communicating, he is a genius at solving math problems and has an amazing memory. Initially Charlie despises his brother, contemptuously thinking him a burden, and struggles with him and his odd habits and rituals, just for the sake of tricking him out of the fortune. The turning point is when Charlie discovers that Dustin is Rain Man, whom he long brushed off as an imaginary friend, who sang to him every night. In fact, when Charlie was two, Rain Man was sent to Wallbrook, fearing that he might hurt the child. That brings about a change of heart in Charlie, and from then on, the film explores the relationship between the two brothers.

The performances are simply awe-inspiring, especially that of Dustin Hoffman. Tom Cruise is commendable, and plays his part to perfection. Some of the scenes strike a chord, such as the one when Charlie runs hot water, and Dustin turns violent, fearing that it might 'hurt the baby', and the one in which Charlie teaches Dustin how to dance. This one should definitely score on your must watch list. Awesomeness.

Tum Mile *

It pains me to witness the downfall of the very man who gave us Jannat. Kunal Deshmukh's second attempt at filmmaking does not manage to achieve the required chutzpah as his previous film did. Let's cook up a cheesy, stale, weak and predictable love story against a backdrop of a disaster (yawn!), and voila, we have Tum Mile!
Mr Director, breathtaking locales, pretty eyecandy leading ladies, wannabe rom-com situations and terrific music have absolutely no meaning if the script and screenplay is null.

Emraan Hashmi does not deliver quite up to the mark, and his expressions look forced. Wait, does he even have any? Soha is okay, and manages to look pretty, but that's about it. Mantra is the surprise package, and manages to save the sagging film, with his witticisms and crisp dialogue delivery. Apart from beautiful locales, flooded scenes, and good music, do not expect anythinge else. Taut editing, better performances from the lead actors, and a better screenplay would have done wonders. Alas.

Bruce Almighty ***

Don't we all always complain about how tough our lives are, and how difficult and boring the job is, nothing ever goes right, we don't have this, we don't have that, and so on? This is exactly what Bruce Nolan (Jim Carrey) does. Nothing in his life goes right. Or so he thinks. Until an encounter with God (Morgan Freeman) bestows him with all God-like powers for a week. Drunk with power, Bruce Almighty has a gala time, and enjoys himself to the fullest. All goes fine, till the feeling of really being God sinks in. And it ain't as much fun as he thinks it to be. There are numerous prayers to be answered, and our lazy protagonist generously grants everyone their wishes. Until all wishes conflict each other, and everyone gets what he or she wants, but it leads to an unsightly mess all over the world, and in his life. And no, no, no, God does not step in to rid the world of the topsy turvies. It's upto Bruce Almighty to save the world. And this is what forms the crux of the story.

Jim's performance is praise-worthy. He manages to infuse the role with the right amount of enthu and energy. Morgan Freeman, as usual, manages to deliver a stellar performance. Jennifer Aniston is good. The comic gags and a few funny moments give the film a much-needed push in the beginning, but then, it is meant to be a feel good light-hearted comedy with the conventional ending.

Marley And Me *** 1/2



Delightful. And this is a lot, considering I'm an animal hater. I was pretty sceptical about the movie, since I dislike all animals, especially dogs. But this movie made me fall in love with Marley, and his antics. The film chronicles the life of Marley, and how it bonds his owners' (Owen Wilson and Jennifer Aniston - both extraordinarily superb) relationship over the years. Often teased as the world's worst dog, Marley proves to be the exact opposite. John and Jenny expand their family over the years, yet Marley is always a part of it right from the beginning. From swallowing a gold necklace and knocking over the dog trainer, Marley has done it all.

Lovely film, tugs at your heart strings. Marley makes you laugh, cry and smile. Perfect film to watch with your family on a Sunday afternoon.

My Best Friend's Girl **



Pretty average. Though it manages to give the term anti-romance a new twist, it has the usual ingredients - a laid back asshole jerk kinda guy, and a searching for romance girl, and the faithful sidekick. Sherman (Alec Baldwin), a carefree New York quintessential dude, gets paid for a very unusual job - to take his friends' ex-girlfriends out on horrible dates, to make them realize how good their previous boyfriends were. And voila, the ex-girlfriends run straight into the arms of their ever ready boyfriends. And this manages to work almost all the time - almost. Until his cousin Dusty (Jason Biggs - very cute and chips in well) hires him to take out Alexis (Kate Hudson - forgettable), a colleague he loves, and make her realize how many jerks actually exist, and that she is lucky to get a nice guy like him. And clichedly, Sherman falls for her. After this, it is pretty predictable.

For someone looking for a so-so rom-com, it might be good, but otherwise it is pretty forgettable.

Back after a hiatus

Low on internet, high on movies. That's how it is. I got a Tata Sky+ account recently, and gleefully I have been recording all movies I want to watch, and the past couple of weeks have been pretty awesome, as I have been catching up with movies, movies and more movies. Sad life - all full of movies. Well, I am happy whenever I manage to watch a movie - even its a bad one. Because that's what I like doing nowadays - in the absence of a good social life, all I can manage to get done is watch movies. And hey, I have a pretty good collection in my Tata Sky+ account.


I plan on watching

The Blair Witch Project
Mission Impossible II
50 First Dates
The Princess Diaries

Though I have watched some of them earlier, I want to watch them all over again for two reasons. One, frivolous though it may seem, I want to watch them again! Two, I want to write a good, decent review on them. I will update, if not on the blog, either in my Notebook or on the Notepad. So, there.