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 Post subject: RGV's SARKAR
PostPosted: Sun Jun 19, 2005 10:31 am 
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I saw the promo on V-DESI show. It looks really interesting. A good Hindi movie to look forward to during the summer. 8)


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PostPosted: Mon Jun 20, 2005 6:50 am 
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Anyone know where I can download the trailers of this film on a wmp file? I haven't even seen a single promo of this film yet, and it releases in like what, 2 weeks?


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PostPosted: Mon Jun 20, 2005 9:20 am 
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Promo (not a recent one)
:arrow:
http://www.indiafm.com/feature/05/mar/1 ... ndex.shtml


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PostPosted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 7:42 am 
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Finally saw a promo here: http://www.factoryatwork.com (and it's looking GOOOD)


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PostPosted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 3:58 pm 
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Whoever saw promos?

What you think, about Southish cinema overtones? rightfuly or wrongfuly?


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PostPosted: Thu Jun 30, 2005 12:47 pm 
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Rediff.com's review says that Sarkar is a letdown!!!



http://us.rediff.com/movies/2005/jun/30sarkar.htm

Sarkar is just Godfather, dumbed-down

Raja Sen | June 30, 2005 16:41 IST


Sarkar has an amazing opening sequence. From Frame One, where we see a yellow and black autorickshaw framed artfully between barbed wire, Ram Gopal Varma's latest film begins with a hapless man going to meet Sarkar, in search of retribution for his raped daughter.

As he walks down the compellingly shot, dark hallways in the fantastically chosen old mansion, we sit rapt with attention, looking at a Godfather recreation -- the story of Bonasera, and how Don Corleone got him vengeance.

Sarkar does the same, and very interestingly. It's the same plot, but Ramu does it entirely his way, and it's very exciting to watch.

If only it continued in the same vein.

Sarkar could well have been an inspiringly awesome remake, but, as it gets increasingly diluted, it turns into The Godfather, rehashed. Flitting between Ramu's own take on an uber-powerful family and Francis Ford Coppola's classic, mixing mythology with masala, is far too ambitious a plan, and even a director as accomplished as Varma bites off far too much more than he can tolerably chew.

Sarkar on rediff.com !




Amitabh: Sarkar is a director's film

Ramu: If Thackeray can exist, Sarkar can

Abhishek: Sarkar is about dad






Amitabh Bachchan is Sarkar, the Goodfather. A mafiosi leader with a strong NGO streak in him, he's effectively playing a grizzled, Marathi shahenshah, a man who essentially sits and listens to unjust tales, sending out a righteous army of goons. No immoralities for this soft dictator. He bears a resemblance to Shiv Sena supremo Bal Thackeray, but this is entirely superficial, confined to the rudraksh and the red tika.

Amitabh is incredibly restrained, his character bereft of soliloquy and bluster, and his task is to sit there and look simmeringly angry. This he does pretty darn adequately, and it's good to see the old man underplay.

Abhishek plays Michael Corleone. Only, in this case, he has been updated to a pink-shirted son studying abroad instead of Pacino's decorated army hero. In a film touting the young Bachchan as the best thing to happen to acting, he is given surprisingly little room to perform. His character, Shankar, toes dad's line with zealous loyalty. Which means he sits next to dad and tries to glare and look angry.

Abhishek is a fine actor, but his character is too thinly etched to really allow him histrionics.

Too thinly etched, you ask? Why, isn't this a take on the greatest crime saga of all, with some of the most memorable characters in motion picture history? Yes, but the quality of writing is abysmal. The dialogues are clunky, and there's a whole host of addendums to the Coppola concept, as if Varma wants to say this is his film, not a clone. Big mistake. It would never have been a replica, merely because of Ramu's treatment.

In the desperate urge to establish originality, the story overcompensates -- to very unfortunate effect. Sloppy editing, with an uncharacteristic lack of sharp economy usually shown by the director, worsens things further.

Kay Kay, playing Vishnu, the older son, is marvellous. He glares with an intensity putting the rest of the cast to shame. Every scene he is in sizzles with manic energy, and his screen presence is spectacular.

And this is where the rehash hurts. He starts off playing Sonny, the furious and reckless elder son of Don Corleone, and he pulls the film furiously along in this part. By the time the film coasts past intermission, however, his character is mixed with Fredo, the snivelling middle son. A ludicrous mix of opposites, this unsurprisingly wrecks Vishnu's persona. Still, by then, Kay Kay has made his mark.

Sarkar is Coppola by numbers, Ram Gopal Varma tragically dumbing down his film, taking it from high concept to nigh concept. He has added a slew of 'Indian' characters -- a Chandraswami: a Madrasi stereotype; a redundant politician (Anupam Kher) -- and thrown out consiglieri Tommy Hagen, Luca Brasi, Johnny Fontane, some of the most compelling Godfather men. This is a Francis Ford Coppola film, as directed by Joel Schumacher, subtle as a sledgehammer.

Maybe Ramu just wanted to make room for the women, an inexplicable part of the film by themselves. Supriya Pathak is perfect as Amitabh's submissive wife and Kay Kay's helpless mother, but the others, Ramu, why? Katrina Kaif plays Abhishek's girlfriend, who, promptly disillusioned by his father's lawlessness, weeps a goodbye.

Rukhsar wears a sari and says roughly six words in the film, her role essentially being that of bringing kids into the room with awful timing.

The mother of such inappropriate moments, however, is chosen by Tanishaa to inarticulately proposition Abhishek. Gawd!

Why on earth is there this fleet of women, in an adaptation of a film where Al Pacino closes the door to his business world, cutting the ladyfolk off from that world forever? The answer is simple, and saddening: In Sarkar, the philosophy is opposite to the line making The Godfather cinema's Bible: For Sarkar, it's not business, it's personal.

Sarkar suffers, horribly, from the increasing obsession with an overwhelming background score. Trying to use audio to carve an aura from time to time is a perfectly good thing, but using chaotic violins -- and, oh God, even sitars -- in a maudlin mush of music aimed at achieving a constant crescendo, well, is not. There's a reason a climax is called thus, and a film cannot be perpetually forced to fake one.

By the time Abhishek is, with peculiar convenience, sprinting up prison stairways, we've already been assaulted by the Govinda Govinda Govinda theme at least 17 times, and we're tired. This is the point when you look at your watch, wonder why time is dragging so, and wonder whether, as the background theme incessantly chants, you ought not have gone to watch a Chi-Chi film instead.

Because you would have got what you expected. Which is my big bone with Sarkar. It's a decently made film. Technically, Ramu's films seem to get increasingly polished. It's superbly shot, and has a few moments that are applause-worthy. Again, lovers of the Coppola classic are likely to be unforgiving of this film, but, as mentioned, its biggest demerit is its refusal to remain an adaptation. Wasted potential is written all over Sarkar, and a few good frames do not a good movie make. This film, as the opening minutes reveal, had the potential to be Great. It turns out to be passable.

If this was a film made by a first-time director, I'd have smiled and called it a valiant effort. But when Ram Gopal Varma, crafter of Company, calls this his greatest film ever, I can't help but be dejected.


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PostPosted: Thu Jun 30, 2005 4:06 pm 
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'Sarkar' reports: Not too hot?

By Our Correspondent ©2005 Bollyvista.com






Amitabh Bachchan in Sarkar
Many have seen Ram Gopal Varma's 'Sarkar'. There were media screenings in London and Mumbai and a premiere held on Wednesday night in Mumbai.

The overall response is mixed with some (those who matter) having liked it but most saying that it has not lived up to expectations, thanks to a weak and unengaging plot and a large degree of pretentiousness. The girls (Tanishaa and Katrina Kaif) have nothing much to do, while the two Bachchans are adept at what they've done. Sadly, that doesn't seem good enough to salvage the film! But we'll wait for our official reviewer to pass her verdict soon!


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PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2005 9:06 pm 
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It seems no one even wants to discuss about SARKAR. what happened guys, is the movie so bad :( . Faddy where r u?


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PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2005 10:43 pm 
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enjoy wrote:
It seems no one even wants to discuss about SARKAR. what happened guys, is the movie so bad :( . Faddy where r u?


I refuse to watch or discuss, Ramu's every fortnight underworld/gangster extravaganza!! I dont care how polished it got since satya! :roll:

Quote:
Varma’s much-too-simplistic film is riddled with holes, and just seems like an extension – both in style and content—to the gangster movies he has been making so far, with his usual coterie of sinister-looking actors. Amitabh Bachchan makes up with his personal charisma what is lacking in characterization. Both Kay Kay Menon and Abhishek Bachchan breathe fire into the parts. But in the end, Sarkar is neither entertaining nor provocative.

Sarkar At: Eros and other cinemas Directed by Ram Gopal Varma With: Amitabh Bachchan, Abhishek
2.5*


From Deppa Gahlot's Review!

deepa gahlot | Friday, July 01, 2005 13:37:40 IST Ram Gopal Varma pays


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PostPosted: Sat Jul 02, 2005 1:43 am 
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Movie Review from Indiaglitz

Expressions and screenplay create maximum impact in the intense drama called 'Sarkar'. It won't be wrong to say that 'Sarkar' stands firm on these two pillars. From the very first shot of Amitabh Bachchan's 'qila' (fort) being projected in a innovative fusion of convex and concave lenses to the last shot where Abhishek Bachchan enters his father's (big) boots to become 'Sarkar', Ram Gopal Verma's genius of creating a spell binding impact is clearly visible. And no! The director didn't go away anywhere to come back in form! He was just waiting for a good enough product to hit back. And he does that in a tremendous fashion !

Welcome to the world of 'Sarkar'. 'Sarkar', who lives in a fort that has its own army. 'Sarkar', who does what HE feels is right. 'Sarkar', who doesn't need a business management course to learn that 'Power' comes by uniting people, not by creating a rift between them ! 'Sarkar', who runs a parallel government. While Subhash Nagare [Amitabh Bachchan] popularly called 'Sarkar' by his followers, does his bit for the needy after hearing their grievances, or offers drug peddlers a cup of tea while refusing to either work with them or letting them work, the camera never fails to capture subtleties like a maid in the background cleaning up floors or his grandson cycling in the lobby! And this is where the beauty in the screenplay lies!

'Sarkar' begins with a one line statement on the screen - When A System Fails, A Power Will Rise - hence paving way for Nagre to make a kick start with his ready judgment. Good 30 minutes are spent to introduce every character in the movie. Dark look accompanies every frame, be it 'Sarkar's elder son Vishnu [Kay Kay], his 'secretary' Ishrat Ali, his consiglieri Chandar [Ravi Kale], his South India counterpart Selvan Mani, his CM friend Deepak Shirke, politician Raju Mavani, drug peddlar Rashid [Zakir] and Chandraswami 'character-alike' Virendraswami [Jeeva]. Abhishek Bachchan, as a mature son returning from US doesn't get a grand entry but the scene showing him arrive at airport with 15 odd gun wielding guards in tow do create an aura. There is (rather unwanted) love triangle too with Katrina Kaif and Tanissha, but thankfully it is relegated to the background.

Story wise 'Sarkar' is quite simple as it is about a man who does his best for the 'junta'. How everyone from politicians, underworld, religious 'gurus' and his own son Kay Kay conspire against him and attempt to eliminate him and his 'Sarkar’ forms the crux of the movie. How Abhishek Bachchan thwarts their plans and becomes 'Sarkar' himself is the biggest highlight. If one thought that coming together of both the Bachchans on a single frame would be the single most USP then that would be unfair to other actors. Some of the best scenes in the movie are not with the two of them but some others like:

1) Drug peddler Rashid approaching Sarkar with a profit sharing proposal. The way Sarkar rebukes him and then warns him in quick succession is a brilliantly executed sequence. Background music elevates the scene to a high from where the movie never looks back again.

2) Kay Kay's confrontation with Big B after killing the hero of his film. His outburst, abusive language and sheer displeasure for his father make him the most hated man on the scene. One of the best dramatic scene, Bachchan's eyes and his subsequent wave of hands asking him to go away say it all.

3) Interval point, which is candidly shot with Big B getting ready for jail while Abhishek stands near the door say it all....that the younger son wants to own the responsibilities from this moment on.

4) Killing of Rashid is quite stylishly shot
In fact, it is difficult to single out any sequences that are not impressive! The 2 hr. long movie can be easily treated as one single scene since the narrative never breaks for a single moment, except at places when Katrina and Tanissha get emotional. For the rest 99% of the movie's time, RGV sticks to his task and delivers much more than the expected. Camerawork is outright original from RGV school of movies and inspite of the same technique used by his assistants in their products, the originality of the genius still stands out. Use of light brown shades throughout is another masterstroke that signifies the right setting for 'Sarkar'.

It won't be wrong to say that 'Sarkar' wouldn't have been possible without background music composer Amar Mohile. He comes up with a score of his lifetime and justifies each bit of confidence shown in him. He has a right tune for every situation and still maintains a consistent theme. Yes, the sound does tend to get loud at most of the places, but it only heightens the dramatic and tense moments. ‘Govinda’ chants by Bapi-Tutul at frequent intervals works perfectly. Dialogues are characteristic of RGV style and fit well for the movie's genre. Alan Amin does well in the action scenes where he is required to move away from his stylized action sequences and instead come up with raw 'on the street' action.

Coming to performances. THE Amitabh Bachchan portrays the character of 'Sarkar' with such conviction that for a change you don't realize it is Big B you are watching. Instead, his lean and frail look, drooping shoulders, overall getup, deep lines on his face, short sentences and yet a powerful persona clearly indicate that this is one protagonist who has seen it, done all and is now a demi-God. It would be a strong competition for the awards organizers to choose a award for him out of 'Black' or 'Sarkar' this year. Abhishek Bachchan comes up with yet another bravura performance after 'Yuva'. He handles his character, especially the part in the second half with utmost maturity. Kay Kay comes up with a knockout performance once more after 'Chhal' and 'Hazaaron Khwahishen Aisi' and how one wishes if he could have got more screen time. Supriya Pathak and Rukhsar play their part as required while Katrina Kaif and Tanissha are hardly there. Ravi Kale, Zakir and the character playing Selvan Mani make the strongest impact amongst the supporting cast. Anupam Kher is wasted.

It would be wrong to compare 'Sarkar' with 'The Godfather'. Doing that would be akin to finding match between 'DDLJ' and 'Titanic' because though both were love stories set on a luxury trip, the similarity was only in theme and not the treatment. Same holds good for 'Sarkar' too where though the lead protagonist is shown as a mass leader a la 'The Godfather', the overall subject treatment is pretty much identifiable with Indian setting.

RGV reserves the best for him while coming up with ‘Sarkar’. While he never falls short of calling each of his assistant director's movie as a masterpiece (Ab Tak Chappan, Ek Hasina Thi, Vaastushastra, D), the fact remains that his work still counts as one of the best in Indian cinema today. 'Sarkar' may not hold too high in entertainment value for those who want to go for a fun filled weekend experience (like ladies and young couples). But with the fast changing trend in audience's outlook, ‘Sarkar’ should do well both with the classes and masses. In overseas, it may just be about average as NRIs tilt lies more towards 'feel good family affairs', but its business should be quite prosperous in India, especially in Mumbai and South.

Rating: ****


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PostPosted: Sun Jul 03, 2005 8:45 pm 
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Quote:
The film is irritatingly slow. RGV has definitely attempted to capture the same mood as in Godfather but there was an underlying tension in that one to give that edge-of-the-seat feel. Here the pace and pauses are very irritating! But one man who has really performed and almost walked away with the film is Kay Kay. He rocks and is the only memorable thing about it. A pity that this talented actor still hasn't got his due in Bollywood. But hopefully things might get rosy for him now. To sum it up, 'Sarkar' is yet another film with great style but no content! Cannot predict its fate at the box office but will surely not last after the initial hype is over.

* * (TWO STAR


http://www.bollyvista.com/article/a/29/5166[/code][/quote]


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PostPosted: Sun Jul 03, 2005 9:22 pm 
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Ramgopal Varma may claim that "Sarkar" is his best film to date, but his fans, myself included, will unanimously argue that he has made better films and will continue to do so. With "Sarkar", there seemed to be a digression from the story´s most gripping thematic characteristic - power. Somehow, Varma´s adaptation of "The Godfather" lacks the epic-scale that the theme and story demand, an aspect Mani Ratnam and Mukul Anand hit the bull´s eye with in "Nayakan" and "Agneepath" respectively. "Sarkar" could have been that great epic by India´s finest maker of gangster cinema. Unfortunately it ends up being simply a sleek gangster film that you can enjoy while it lasts, with nothing more to take from as you walk out of the theater.


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Sarkar" is a golden opportunity wasted. It could have been the greatest Indian gangster film, a title still retained by Mani Ratnam´s classic "Nayakan". Though drawing inspiration from "The Godfather" both films are not wholesomely faithful adaptations of Mario Puzo´s power saga. While Ratnam and Kamal Haasan overwhelmed viewers through their epic-scaled depiction of raw power, Varma´s film ironically does not provide as arresting a sense of Sarkar´s power over his people despite one of Amitabh Bachchan´s most refined performances.


http://planetbollywood.com/Film/Sarkar/


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PostPosted: Mon Jul 04, 2005 1:13 pm 
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i still not seen this.. just like i not seen waqt, bunty aur bubbli and now sarkar.. i dont really get the time....


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PostPosted: Mon Jul 04, 2005 4:54 pm 
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Saw Sarkar on Friday night, and I thought it rocked! It's a slow(ish), but engrossing film, with fantastic performances from AB, Kay Kay Menon and Abhishek. Much better than any Hindi film I've seen recently (not seen Parineeta before all the supporters jump on my back), and definitely worth a watch - I was not disappointed. Much better use of the two ABs than Bunty Aur Babli.


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PostPosted: Mon Jul 04, 2005 5:55 pm 
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bhaskar wrote:
Saw Sarkar on Friday night, and I thought it rocked! It's a slow(ish), but engrossing film, with fantastic performances from AB, Kay Kay Menon and Abhishek. Much better than any Hindi film I've seen recently (not seen Parineeta before all the supporters jump on my back), and definitely worth a watch - I was not disappointed. Much better use of the two ABs than Bunty Aur Babli.


I would rather see him in VIRUDDH or DEV kinda films rather same old Ghissa Pitta roles, in Baghban , Waqt, Underdon etc or 10 minutes loud presentations


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