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PostPosted: Wed Jun 22, 2005 3:55 pm 
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FILM REVIEW: PAHELI (2005)

Producers: Gauri Khan
Director: Amol Palekar
Music: M.M. Kreem
Cast: Shah Rukh Khan, Amitabh Bachchan, Rani Mukherjee, Juhi Chawla, Suniel Shetty, Anupam Kher

Radio Sargam Rating: 5.5/10

Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan has formed a hugely successful pairing with Rani Mukherji. They have appeared in a variety of blockbusters together, from Kuch Kuch Hota Hai and Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham to Chalte Chalte and Veer Zaara. Therefore it’s hardly surprising the audience is expecting something special in their latest film together Paheli, which also stars the likes of Juhi Chawla, Amitabh Bachchan and Sunil Shetty in small roles.

In true fairytale style, Paheli tells the story of Lachchi (Rani Mukherji), an innocent girl married to Kishen, whose only real interest is making money. The aspiring businessman leaves home for a five-year business trip shortly after the wedding night itself, leaving behind a heart-broken wife. However a ghost (Shah Rukh Khan) has fallen in love with Lachchi’s beauty and therefore takes the appearance of her absent husband. The ghost wastes no time in telling Lachchi the truth about his identity and she wastes no time in accepting their relationship, which eventually leads to her pregnancy. When the real Kishen finally returns, confusion understandably abounds until finally a wise old shepherd (Amitabh Bachchan) devises the three tests to resolve the paheli that has baffled everyone.

The story of Paheli takes the audience into a pure fantasy world. Director Amol Palekar truly embraces this imaginative and colourful setting without making any apologies for tossing realism aside. However his approach is still expertly restrained. Despite the implausible subject (a married woman having a sexual affair with a ghost and actually conceiving a child with the spirit), the film doesn’t go overboard. The treatment of the story, together with the performances of Shah Rukh Khan and Rani Mukherji are subtle. Even the use of special effects is discreet and works well. However the story is too slow, especially in the second half. The constant supply of songs certainly doesn’t help the narrative. The music is pleasant enough, but the songs fail to leave a lasting impression and at least one or two songs could be deleted altogether.

Shah Rukh Khan tackles a double role once again in Paheli. There’s a definite improvement in his handling of two simultaneous characters, compared to the actor’s earlier effort in Mahesh Bhatt’s Duplicate. His subtle performance is very effective. Rani Mukherji also handles her role effortlessly, performing the various emotions of the character with élan. Its little wonder she’s considered one of the most dependable female performers in Bollywood. Amitabh Bachchan does very well in his small role. Unfortunately it’s another character without much prominence and the legendary actor needs to become more selective. Juhi Chawla and Sunil Shetty, playing husband and wife, are okay in their special appearances, although they are slightly wasted. Rajpal Yadav is a scene-stealer once again thanks to his comic ability. The rest are fine.

Paheli certainly offers something different to the audience. Bollywood is often described as ‘escapist entertainment’ and this film undoubtedly takes the viewer into a whole new world. However the slow pace and overflow of songs negatively affect the end result.


Reviewed by: Robeel Haq


http://radiosargam.com/movies/moviereviews/p/paheli.htm


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PostPosted: Wed Jun 22, 2005 3:56 pm 
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PAHELI PREVIEW SCREENING IN THE UK!
British journalists will watch the film today…

Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan has starred in countless blockbusters at the British box office, including the likes of Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham and Devdas. The actor is now hoping his latest film, Paheli, will also draw a large British Asian audience following its release on Friday. The promotional activities for the film have already included a press conference in London, attended by Shah Rukh Khan and his leading lady Rani Mukherjee. A selection of journalists from the UK are also set to attend a preview screening for the movie today in central London, so expect the first reviews to start hitting the internet soon! Paheli is Radio Sargam’s movie of the month…


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PostPosted: Thu Jun 23, 2005 4:08 pm 
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IN OTTAWA:

PAHELI is playing from Tomorrow onwards at Rainbow Cinemas, 4 shows daily. :D

Wow, highly hyped film for $ 3 Cdn (matinees and Tuesdays) and $ 4.25 Cdn (evenings), in its opening week. :D


Last edited by rana on Sat Jun 25, 2005 2:10 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 24, 2005 1:39 pm 
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rana wrote:
IN OTTAWA:

PAHELI

Wow, highly hyped film for $ 3 Cdn (matinees and Tuesdays) and $ 4.25 Cdn (evenings), in its opening week. :D


Oops. Never happened before, but Rainbow Cinemas in Ottawa pricing for Paheli is $ 7.50, all shows.


Last edited by rana on Sat Jun 25, 2005 2:10 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Fri Jun 24, 2005 1:45 pm 
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http://www.cinemaclock.com/aw/crva.aw/p ... aheli.html

Once upon a time, there was a lovely girl Lachchi (Rani Mukherji) who was married to a man interested only in making money. There was a ghost (Shahrukh Khan) who fell madly in love with her. On the wedding night itself, the husband left home for five long years on account of his business. The ghost took on the husband's appearance and entered her life...

----------------------------------------

Haven't we seen a few Adult films on this storyline??

Let's see how SRK family film scores against erotica??

Needless to speculate, SRK film is already a hit (already made a table profit before its release).


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 24, 2005 4:46 pm 
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Paheli is a breathtaking dream

Raja Sen | June 24, 2005 14:09 IST


My God, the visuals!

First things first, this is the best-looking Indian film in a very long time, and ranks up there with the finest ever. Amol Palekar has crafted a delectable fairytale that is incredibly well-shot. Ravi K Chandran's cinematography is spellbinding as he casts us into the fabulous sandscapes of Rajasthan with fluid harmony. Each frame of the film is picture-perfect, marinated in intoxicating colour.

Watching Paheli is quite an experience, and it's from the very opening shot of the film that its sheer, magical palette overwhelms us.

And we are immediately aware that we are witnessing a dream. Real life, as we ingloriously witness after reluctantly exiting the theatre, never looked this good. Rajasthan's colours are magnified to an awesome extent, every shot coordinated to the hilt. Girls in blood red cholis titter excitedly against vast golden sands, as an electric blue bird chirps past them. The contrasts are magnificent. The colours are vivid, unrelenting and addictively rich. This is life as we wistfully long for.


Rani Mukerji, too, never looked this good. In a rediff interview, the actress says she insists on movies shot by Chandran. Good move, Ms Mukerji.

The camera captures subtle nuances of Rani's everygirl face, and her expressive emoting talent is aided tremendously by the framing. Her Lachchi is an irresistible girl, just married to Kishenlal. She's a giggly little thing, mouthing handfuls of ber on the cart-ride back home, something that irks the newlywed groom, who feels they are above that sort of thing.

Note: Shah Rukh plays Kishenlal, and, in a while, another Shah Rukh plays Kishenlal 2. For the sake of sanity (both yours and mine), we'll just refer to both characters individually: Shah, the husband, and Rukh, the ghost.

Shah is the period Rajasthani equivalent of a chartered accountant. Born and bred to be nothing but a baniya, he is mesmerised by the concept of marriage. It's a whole new book to keep, you see. As his new bride throws him coy come-hither glances, he is still gaping at the khata, furiously trying to remember if he has totted up the figures right -- things aren't quite adding up. Won't you take off my ghoonghat? Yeah, okay, but did I remember to figure in pagris in the calculations?

Thankfully, the language used in the turn-of-the-century piece isn't as colloquial. The Rajput twang is thick in every line, yet -- and this is no mean feat -- comes across as very natural.

Rani is a fine actress, and both Shah and Rukh manage the inflections to a very believable degree. The lilt is quite endearing, and the words used are often out of Hindi, but their tone and context in the dialogue make sure we have no trouble comprehending what is said. The setting is also affluent, but avoids the pitfall of being overbearing.

Rukh is a sprite, a shapeshifting mischief-maker who wanders aimlessly around, amusing himself. Thoroughly smitten by Lachchi, he tries to woo her by entering the bodies of passing ravens and squirrels, even teasing her with a glimpse of his wet footprints. But Lachchi leaves, and the ghost is heartbroken. He circles a tree, disconsolate and disembodied, and talks to his friends, a pair of Rajasthani puppets, voiced perfectly by Naseeruddin and Ratna Pathak Shah.

The impassioned Rukh learns that Shah has left Lachchi alone the very morning after the wedding, and left on business for five years. The graveness of this injustice doesn't escape the besotted bhoot, and despite his puppet-friends' discouraging jeers, he decides to take Kishenlal's form, just so he can be closer to his lady-love. After all, the man won't be back for five whole years.

The chemistry between Rani and Rukh is great. It's warm and sensual, aggressive yet innocent. This is probably best credited to Rani, managing to be as credibly passionate as she was in Yuva.

When she nuzzles playfully into the side of Rukh's face, the magical romance this film is meant to be throbs, hard and content. No one in the industry does a love story quite as well as Rukh, and here too he is perfect, drawing Rani in with a smouldering combination of intensity and restraint. Plus, a snap of his fingers can do it all, and he shuffles rose petals in mid-air with playful, irresistible ease.

The music in the film is great, sure, but there's too much of it. The first half of the film is laden with songs, and this slows the already languorous pace of the film to a trickle. Palekar's fairytale is obviously a film enjoying itself, the screenplay concentrating on pleasure rather than tautness. Still, the songs hamper the narrative, and the music, while perfectly acceptable by itself, just isn't compelling enough to keep you riveted to the screen. And it doesn't help that the best song in the film plays during the closing credits. The lazy song moments, however, are made tolerable by the fact that the film is more than easy on the eye.

The plot is simple as can be: Shah misses his wife, while Rukh kisses her. While Shah tortures dear-dad letters that never make it, Rukh artfully fixes a camel race and valiantly leads the village to water, a staple of feel-good rural cinema, seen in everything from Lagaan to Swades. To be fair, Palekar has always loved this simplistic theme, shown best in his 1990 film, Thodasa Romaani Ho Jaaye. Even as Rukh is the toast of the town, Shah returns home. No one believes Shah, of course, but the gossip-loving panchayat wants 'justice', and they set off to see the king.

On their way, they are stopped by an eccentric old shepherd, who solves the day with superb, obvious efficiency. Amitabh Bachchan, kajal-eyed and wonderfully mad, is startlingly fantastic in this cameo. His wild shepherd is a gripping character, played with vintage accuracy reminiscent of his glory days. Perhaps these well-directed special appearances (remember the terrific dance in Veer-Zaara?) are just what the grizzled actor needs.

Of actors, Paheli is very appropriately fraught. Anupam Kher plays a fine, befuddled, Vitalstatistix-ian father; Juhi Chawla firmly enters Bollywood sis-in-law mode a la Renuka Shahane; Rajpal Yadav is great, as ever, as an incoherent messenger; and Dilip Prabhavalkar is just great as the oft-stoned Kanwarlal.

It is so easy to mess a film like this up, but Amol Palekar does remarkably well with Paheli. It's a leisurely told and naïve dream, and could simply descend into caricature at any point, but never crosses that line. It's a charming, warm romance capable of gifting the most sceptical of us a big, beaming smile. Children will love it, and the affection involved in the film's creation is infectiously visible to the audience. And the twist at the end raises astonishingly dark questions about fairytale metaphors, and sends you home thinking. Smiling, but thinking.

Yes, it's a slow film, but that's a small price to pay.

Shah Rukh has given a top-notch performance, justifying his supremacy in the film world. Despite what you may think of the mooch, odds are you'll come out of the film loving his opulent, dashing look.

Rani is undeniably one of the best actresses we have out there, and this is another perfectly played part.

The Badshah has finally produced a great film, and this won't be the last of them. It might not be a huge commercial hit, in fact, I doubt it will, but I'm going to revisit Paheli in theatres as often as I can afford.

As for Amol Palekar: He's brought Amar Chitra Katha marvellously alive, and for that I remain eternally grateful.


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 24, 2005 7:01 pm 
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I have always thought that 'Amar Chitra Katha' along with the 'Panchantatra Tales', would be a great source of story ideas for movies.


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 24, 2005 10:08 pm 
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Yaar Arsh miya...I think Robeel Haq is Taran Adarsh Redux.... who cares for his reviews....Raja sen on the other hand is all gushes...no objectivity...


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 24, 2005 10:10 pm 
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np, miyan, hath kangan ko arsi kiya, khud dekh laenge!! :wink:


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 24, 2005 10:23 pm 
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Paheli
Producer: Gauri Khan / Red Chillies Entertainment
Director: Amol Palekar
Starring: Shah Rukh Khan, Rani Mukerji, Anupam Kher, Aditi Govitrikar, Neena Kulkarni, Dilip Prabhavalkar, Rajpal Yadav with Aasif Sheikh, A.K. Hangal, Juhi Chawla, Suniel Shetty, Amitabh Bachchan (special appearances) and Naseeruddian & Ratna Pathak Shah (as puppet voiceovers)
Music:M.M Kreem
Lyrics: Gulzar

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Genre: Emotional Drama
Recommended Audience: General
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Released on: June 24, 2005
Reviewed by: Abid
Reviewer's Rating: 8 out of 10
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Cumulative Rating: 9.63 out of 10
Rated by: 19 unique users
Enter your Rating: 1 out of 10 2 out of 10 3 out of 10 4 out of 10 5 out of 10 6 out of 10 7 out of 10 8 out of 10 9 out of 10 10 out of 10
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´Paheli´ classified as a fantasy and passed with a ´U´ certificate by the censor board is based on Vijaydan Detha´s classic titled ´Duvidha´. The movie was earlier made in 1973 by Mani Kaul but this time we have the award winning Amol Palekar who wields the megaphone.

The movie opens with Amitabh Bachchan´s baritone voice going ´Barson purani ek kahani ...´ and the opening scene has the marriage scene of ´Laachi´ (Rani Mukherji) to Kishan Lal (Shah Rukh Khan) who is the son of a Rajasthani trader Bhanwar Lal (Anupam Kher). As ´Laachi´ proceeds to her in-laws house mysterious things happen on the way and a supernatural being, awestruck by her beauty falls in love with her.

For ´ Laachi´, marriage is the culmination of a dream and wedding night a once in a lifetime experience but for the business minded ´Kishan´ its just another night as he is more worried about the 5 year long business related journey the next morning (that is supposed to be an auspicious date) to fulfill the dreams of his money minded father.

´Kishan´ proceeds on his pre-planned journey with a trusted employee, leaving behind a sobbing ´Laachi´. On way the supernatural character(actually a ghost) takes the form of a human (Aasif Sheikh) and learns of the 5 year seperation and jumps at the opportunity and transforms himself into ´Kishan Lal´ and reaches his home and takes his place. He however is honest enough to tell ´Laachi´ (Rani) the truth who having been badly hurt by her real husband´s attitude accepts him, fully knowing that he is neither her husband nor a human. Love blossoms between the two and ´Laachi´ gets from her new relationship everything that she had desired.

In between the fake ´Kishan´ uses his supernatural powers to satisfy his money minded father and also manages to win a a camel race that brings the family honor back. Things progress smoothly until real ´Kishan´ lands up at his home (before the scheduled time period).

On the whole ´Paheli´ is fantasy joyride for the whole family, with a slightly slow first half (though livened up by some excellent special effects) and a thrill a minute second half. But the lovely Hariharan song ´Khali hai tere bina dono ankhiyan´ should be edited out as it slows the pace of the movie. Shah Rukh´s scenes with Rani are wonderful, specially their romantic scenes and the one where he owns up that he is not a human. The final climax scene standout, not to mention the light scenes between Shah Rukh, Anupam and Rajpal Yadav.

Muneesh Sappal´s sets bring authentic Rajasthani ambience to the screen and Ravi K. Chandran´s cinematography is there to capture it in the rich and vibarant colours (which are not gawdy) and will rate amongst his finest works.

Farah Khan shows why she is one of the best choreographers today as this time its not the Gen X choreography or dance floor ´item´ numbers. She surprises with her authentic Rajasthani dance steps. The opening song ´Minnat Kare´, ´Kangna Re´, ´Laga Re Jal Laaga´ are three wonderfully choreographed songs.

Allan Amin´s action sequences, specially the camel race are quite good. Amitabh Shukla´s editing is crisp.

The Gulzar-Kreem combo gives us some lovely songs with meaningful and apt lyrics. ´Dheere Jalna´, ´Khali hai tere bina dono ankhiyan, Tum gaye kahan´ are some examples of how music and lyrics complement each other.

Performance wise it is a third ´different´ performance for Shah Rukh (accused of doing the same things over and over again) after ´Veer-Zaara´ and ´Swades´. King Khan demonstrates his range of histrionics yet again (for the learned critics). Kudos to Shah Rukh Khan for striking an excellent balance in roles that had the potential to go overboard on both, the ´human´ as well as the ´ghost´ side! We must add that that Shah Rukh ´The ghost´ blows off Shah Rukh ´The human´ (not taking anything away from his lovely meek and obedient son portrayal).

Rani (the unquestionable numero uno) after ´Veer-Zaara´, ´Black´ and ´Paheli´ is head and shoulders above the the next competitors and the gap now gets quite pronounced and big.

Anupam is good in a role that he has essayed many times. Juhi as the silent sufferer is effective and Shetty as her husband hardly has anything to do but makes up for it by his screen presence. Rajpal Yadav (as the old day ´courier´) is hillarious and after ´Waqt-The Race Against Time´ and now ´Paheli´ , it is obvious that he has displaced Johny Lever as Bollywood´s top comedian. Aditi Govitrikar looks beautiful and is adequate. Amitabh´s short appearance comes as a surprise and he is as good as he has been for the last 35 years. Naseer and Ratna Shah liven up the proceeding with their tongue-in-cheek narration (as puppet voices) from time to time.

´Paheli´ belongs to that genre of filmmaking that has not been attempted before. With such big stars and with a weak script/screenplay and an inept director it could easily have become comical, but full marks to Sandhya Gokhale´s flawless screenplay and Amol Palekar´s wonderful direction, ´Paheli´ becomes an engrossing tale, (this time on celluloid ) the kinds of which we must have heard from our grandparents.

All in all ´Paheli´ that already has a table profit and has been sold for a reasonable price (except to the Bombay distributors) will prove to be a safe and profitable venture for its distributors specially after the good multiplex start .


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PostPosted: Fri Jun 24, 2005 10:54 pm 
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For those interested..., Mani Kaul's version of Duvidha was raved by Satyajit Ray in his book "Our Films, Their Films" for its narrative strategy and use of sound. It will be interesting to see how this one matches up with the other one. i respect Amol Palekhar, but i suspect the use of commerical elements will overshadow his style .

Anyone know if Duvidha is available on DVD/VCD/VHS ( BTW i snagged a copy of Garam Hawa at a local Indian store - looking forward to seeing it :) )


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PostPosted: Sat Jun 25, 2005 12:25 am 
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dvdisoil wrote:
For those interested..., Mani Kaul's version of Duvidha was raved by Satyajit Ray in his book "Our Films, Their Films" for its narrative strategy and use of sound. It will be interesting to see how this one matches up with the other one. i respect Amol Palekhar, but i suspect the use of commerical elements will overshadow his style .

Anyone know if Duvidha is available on DVD/VCD/VHS ( BTW i snagged a copy of Garam Hawa at a local Indian store - looking forward to seeing it :) )


Let us all know if you find such a copy....doubt it very much....although if you have access to the Archives Society in Pune you may get to see a copy......

Talking about GARM HAWA also watch SOOKHA (by the same maker MS Sathyu) if you get a chance....wonderful little nugget


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PostPosted: Sat Jun 25, 2005 12:45 pm 
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Caught PAHELI last night.....very nice premise....but extremely poor execution in my mind....extremely poor writing (credited to Sandhya Gokhale, Amol Palekar's current wife)......the husband and wife team have been making a mess of extremely good subjects....they did the same with ANAHAT.....just when that seemed to get interesting they chickened out and ended it.....

Either I completely dont get the wavelength Palekar wants to tell his stories on or i still have a long way to go before I begin appreciating avant garde cinema.....

Cinematography is astounding....Ravi Chandran is the man. But you know making people and frames look pretty actually takes away from the story unfolding...if people and places are so beautiful then where's the suffering? To me it was out of place....I would have preferred the cinematography to be more depictive of the mood of the story...but thats me as of this moment as I vent ! That could change in a couple of hours :-)

Frankly I dont think there anything extraordinary about the acting....SRK was suave as the ghost and pretty idiotically repetitive (bad dialogue writing again!)....I think Palekar has lost it...he has made great movies in the past (ANKAHEE written by Kamlesh Pandey a real star in his times). There are simply too many plot holes that one cannot comprehend. As an audience you want to be able to go on a fantasy trip, but you feel cheated in the end....

When Gulzar was used to write lyrics, could they not have used him for the dialog work as well...

PAHELI is not going to work with any sort of audience for it left me confused at what the director ultimately wanted to say.....watch at your own peril ! Maybe i am your average joe with not the IQ to appreciate high brow stuff.....but thats ok...i am going to turn back to my DVD of AMAR AKBAR ANTHONY to get an entertainment high!


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PostPosted: Sat Jun 25, 2005 4:56 pm 
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or watch garam hawa to see what a good film is all about!
with no hype, no rani, no chandran, no multi million cinema work no srk etc etc


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PostPosted: Sat Jun 25, 2005 7:41 pm 
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Aarkayne wrote:
Either I completely dont get the wavelength Palekar wants to tell his stories on or i still have a long way to go before I begin appreciating avant garde cinema.....


Can you elaborate ? - is the subject or the style that is avant garde-ish

Aarkayne wrote:
Cinematography is astounding....Ravi Chandran is the man. But you know making people and frames look pretty actually takes away from the story unfolding...if people and places are so beautiful then where's the suffering?


That’s what I felt happened to BLACK . People now seem to be more concerned about "how" they tell a story instead of "why" they tell them - something that can only work on a superficial aesthetic level.

I will probably see Paheli on DVD - don’t feel like driving 40 miles to see it !


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