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Would you see an effect heavy film like DUS in a sub-standard theatre
Yes, if ticket price is low 20%  20%  [ 2 ]
No Way 80%  80%  [ 8 ]
May Be, if no other choice and time to kill 0%  0%  [ 0 ]
Yes as long as we do get Indian atmosphere with Samosa and Chaat 0%  0%  [ 0 ]
Total votes : 10
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 08, 2005 3:36 pm 
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Wow, finally some distributor of Bollywood films realized where a 'heavy on effects' film deserves to be shown.

In Toronto Dus is screening in 3 multiplexes that all are Dolby Digital. At least one, Square One is THX certified. 2nd; Silver City mostly all are THX certified. Hopefully Eglington Town Centre too is THX??

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http://www.cinemaclock.com/aw/cmva.aw?p ... bmit=Go%21

Week of Friday 8/07 through Thursday 14/07/2005


"Dus"

Playing this week at:

Eglinton Town Centre (Cineplex Odeon)
1901 Eglinton Ave East, Scarborough
Every day: 12:20, 3:30, 7:15, 10:15

Silvercity Brampton (Famous Players)
Hwy 410 & Bovaird Drive, Brampton
Every day: 12:00, 4:00, 8:15

Square One (Cineplex Odeon)
100 City Centre Drive, Mississauga
Every day: 12:10, 3:45, 7:05, 10:25

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

http://www.indiafm.com/reviews/05/dus/index.shtml

Excerpts:

Dus

By Taran Adarsh, July 08th, 2005 - 1400 hrs IST


Terrorists, bombs n bullets, anti-terrorist squads… Haven't we seen all this and more before? Post 9/11, film-makers across the globe have tried to depict mass-killings and atrocities by terrorist groups and how anti-terrorist squads put up a fight to diffuse the crisis.

Director Anubhav Sinha tries to camouflage the defect [lackluster screenplay] with stylish execution, great music, hair-raising stunts, eye-filling visuals,

DUS is modeled on the lines of a Hollywood flick. You realize you're all set to watch a slick flick at the very outset [the film begins with the stylish and snazzy 'Dus Bahane']. The sequence thereafter -- the squad diffusing a bomb placed in a vehicle -- is expertly executed.

Sanjay Dutt, Abhishek Bachchan, Zayed Khan and Shilpa Shetty work for the anti-terrorist cell. We're told that a representative of the squad [Esha Deol] would guide them in Canada, but she doesn't really contribute in taking the story forward. On the contrary, you find Abhishek and Esha exchanging lovey-dovey looks.

Anubhav Sinha has concentrated more on giving the film a slick look than narrating a gripping story and this fact reverberates at several points in the film. There's no denying that DUS bears the stamp of an upmarket product all through, but how one wishes the director and the writers would've ensured that the film has a power-packed screenplay to offer as well.

Suniel Shetty is okay, while Zayed Khan passes muster. Amongst girls, Shilpa Shetty is the best of the lot. Her stunt [at the start of the film] is awesome. Esha Deol wears a blank look. Dia Mirza and Raima Sen get minimal scope.

On the whole, DUS has an impressive star cast, the hit tracks ['Dus Bahane' and 'Deedar De'] and vibrant action as its trump card.

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

Well , a Bollywood Masala film, heavy on effects and presented in THX Dolby Theatre is good enough for a trip to Toronto. Despite, mostyly negative review that I didn't include in the above excerpts from Taran Adarsh's review.


Last edited by rana on Fri Jul 08, 2005 5:03 pm, edited 3 times in total.

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 Post subject: Dus is full-on timepass
PostPosted: Fri Jul 08, 2005 4:12 pm 
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Dus is full-on timepass

Raja Sen | July 08, 2005 19:15 IST


Dus is a film riding high on self-confidence.

Anubhav Sinha, the director, has thrown together a big budget and an edgy background score – take a bow, Ranjit Barot – with a high-flying ensemble cast, sure his film will work.

Abhishek Bachchan shows off panache gathered over the last two years, a look of ease that only comes with success. Sanjay Dutt has always had the John Wayne swagger. And Shilpa, Shilpa, Shilpa – Lord, this lady kicks a** just so superbly.

The film begins with the ultra-stylised Hey Now, Hey Now track, a catchy, music video introduction to the cast of the film. Abhishek preens self-indulgently, playing the camera with unbelievable gusto. Even as the others show up, making their calculatedly cool screen appearances, the stalls whistle the loudest for the small B. This man has arrived, and, as his assuredly wicked grin proves, he knows it.



Then come a fleet of Bentleys, and we see the men – Sanjay, Suniel Shetty, Zayed Khan and Abhishek – walk out, all in immaculate black suits, shades wrapped tightly around eyes. Reservoir Dus? But wasn't that Kaante? Fear not, this isn't. These dudes aren't bank-robbers, they're cops, albeit in designer -- sartorial, not spy-foiling -- gear.

The film looks good.

Which is now a Bollywood standard: even the most mediocre film looks slick. But Dus is different, more John Woo than Ramu's Factory, made with an eye to be nothing but cool. The script is secondary, the logic is redundant, and realism is anything but that. Dus is about nothing but attitude, and, to be fair, the film has quite a bit of that.

The lads and lass are part of the Indian government's anti-terrorist cell, an outfit that functions in a peculiarly dark office building, and seems to be operational only between three and four in the morning. They start by going on a bomb diffusing mission, and we soon realise the group dynamics – Dutt leads the squad, younger brother Abhishek is the Most Valuable Policeman, and Zayed Khan is the slightly geeky explosives expert. And Shilpa Shetty, well, she is Lara Croft.

The plot of the film is dashed simple – or is it? A terrorist no one really knows, has planned something big in Canada, in 10 days. What, it isn't known. All they have is a name – Jaamwal – and a few clues from assorted secret agents from faraway lands – Sanjay Dutt mouths the word 'Bulgarian' a couple of times in an attempt to get some secret-agent cred. Finally, the gang lands up in Canada, which is the assumed locale for the big finale.

Like it's Hollywood counterparts – all those inane blockbusters starring Jean Claude Van Damne, or anything with Ben Affleck wielding a gun – Dus is unassumingly bereft of realism. In Dus, Delhi has a visible coastline at the AIIMS flyover, Hummers bounce in the air when shot at, and the home minister's office resembles a particularly radical advertising agency. All is wild, and all is for effect.

For the first half of the film, this effect is well achieved. Popcorn is munched contentedly as the action simmers along, double-quick. There are points where the script slags, but the film's pace doesn't really dip. The film is insubstantial yet streamlined. There is drama, minus detailing: Zayed tries his hand at a bomb with great heroics, but the explosive's timer doesn't really tick lethally away, staying conveniently stagnant. Still, the masala's there, and packaged well.

Download Dus ringtones!

But it falters. The buildup crackles nicely, yet the culmination is clumsy. The climaxes are weak, and the film increasingly comes unspooled in the second half. The ensemble cast is great for the pre-dhamaka preparation and the post-boom glare-filled conversation, not to mention the midstream laughs – it's just that the bangs they're aiming for, the high action moments peter out into tame whimpers.

The acting is good, for the most part, except the script lets it down near the end. The film races snappily along to a predictable plot, but the audience laps it up because it looks so 'cool.' Abhishek Bachchan, as mentioned, is cooler than ice, and has moments in the film where he just freezes you with his remarkable attitude.

And to thaw you, there's Shilpa. Increasingly hotter with each film, Shilpa Shetty is probably the sexiest woman in the Indian film industry. In this film, she does an Angelina Jolie to supreme effect, making you wonder how the anti-terrorist cell can function with even the slightest efficiency if she's strolling around within ogling range. She does a pretty fabulous (almost) martial arts kick, and comes off with great poise. Of course, one does spend a lot of time forgetting the script and plotholes, staring dreamily at the bat-tattoo peeking through from just above her tailbone. Guess it's only fitting that a film of this name deserves this perfect 10.

Sanjay Dutt is a wee bit too old for the swagger, and totally comes undone at the film's climax. Suniel Shetty could have totally been cut out of the film. Raima Sen plays his wife, an unimaginably irritating character, the perfect muse for homicide. There's an annoying amount of filler, like a redundant love angle between Abhishek and an inexplicable Esha Deol.

Needless to say, Pankaj Kapoor lives up to his incredibly stellar reputation, and steals every scene he's in, seemingly without even trying.

Dhoom didn't dilute it's nothing-but-cool attitude with melodramatic sentiment. The masala was unadulterated. This is where Dus loses the plot. The film is meant to be ludicrous, visual, well packaged nothing. Adding typically overdone Bollywood emotion to it just doesn't work. The film's climax is a total letdown, though it must be mentioned that the director has optimistically left sequel-room. Gyarah, anyone?

This is full-on time-pass, sure. A racy actioner free of common sense, full of frilly thrills. And, as Mumbai parlance has it, 'total paisa vasool'.

It could have been (collegian accent) 'awesome', but ends up being awe-somewhat.



*** rana you might add to your Thread Heading..reviews! :idea:


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PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2005 10:30 am 
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http://www.boxofficeindia.com/

BOX OFFICE UPDATE-9th July 15.00 IST

Dus takes an earth shattering opening all over. The film has recorded the best first day in the history of Indian cinema. A,B and C centres are all record breaking.

This weeks Dus has proved that despite the changing audience if you want that extraordinary opening all over its still superhit music coupled with action that gets the job done.Add emotions to this and you probably have a blockbuster but sadly Dus is lacking in emotions so therefore the reports are mixed. If the film can sustain this momentum it could collect around 15 crore in its first week. The trade expected a great opening but this mind boggling opening has come as a pleasant surprise. If the film can sustain this momentum it could collect around 15 crore in its first week.


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PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2005 5:32 pm 
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rana wrote:
Dus takes an earth shattering opening all over. The film has recorded the best first day in the history of Indian cinema. A,B and C centres are all record breaking.


:shock:

I had no idea there was such hype around this film. Was the music really that popular? I thought it kind of sucked.

EDIT: Okay fine, upon second listening, "Dus Bahane" and "Deedar De" are kind of catchy. But the rest of the soundtrack is "eeeeh".


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PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2005 6:08 pm 
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kamran wrote:
rana wrote:
Dus takes an earth shattering opening all over. The film has recorded the best first day in the history of Indian cinema. A,B and C centres are all record breaking.


:shock:

I had no idea there was such hype around this film. Was the music really that popular? I thought it kind of sucked.

EDIT: Okay fine, upon second listening, "Dus Bahane" and "Deedar De" are kind of catchy. But the rest of the soundtrack is "eeeeh".


Music was TOPPING CHARTS! it is same wave like Mussafir, DHOOM, KAAL kinda stuff!! Imho, kinda fit with this kinda style heavy superficial film, that tend to do very well in India!!

Camera tricks, Color Tricks, Bike tricks, Hollywood copied scenes, with Babe tricks!! Highly Stylized Crooks, Criminals etc!!
as viewers dont get to see HOLLYWOOD enmasses!


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PostPosted: Fri Jul 15, 2005 4:32 pm 
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Dus
Producer: Nitin Manmohan
Director: Anubhav Sinha
Starring: Sanjay Dutt, Abhishek Bachchan, Suniel Shetty, Zayed Khan, Shilpa Shetty, Esha Deol, Diya Mirza
Music:Vishal-Shekhar
Lyrics: Pancchi Jalonvi

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Genre: Action Suspense Thriller Drama
Recommended Audience: Parental Guidance
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Released on: July 08, 2005
Approximate Running Time: 2.5 Hours Reviewed by: Surjyakiran Das
Reviewer's Rating: 5.5 out of 10
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cumulative Rating: 8.03 out of 10
Rated by: 17 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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Given the financial success of Anubhav Sinha´s first few small films, it was only a matter of time before he attempted a larger scale motion picture such as "Dus." Here, the former music video director works for the first time on a truly grand canvas, with A-listers filling his film´s cast, and production values rivaling those of many Hollywood films. Unfortunately, however, the film´s larger than life look and feel is its only real asset; Sinha´s new film, as the saying goes, is full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

The investigation of a plot to assassinate the Indian Prime Minister sends two Indian anti-terrorist experts (Abhishek Bachchan, Zayed Khan) to Calgary, Canada (God knows why they chose Calgary of all places; perhaps to cut production costs?) Along with a veteran agent on the case (Esha Deol) and a disturbed police officer (Suneil Shetty), they set out to track down one of the world´s most dangerous terrorists (Gulshan Grover). Eventually, they also enlist the help of one of the terrorists´ defected associates (Pankaj Kapur).

Meanwhile, other agents operating in India (Sanjay Dutt, Shilpa Shetty) work to uncover a conspiracy within the Indian government to conceal the identity of the terrorists. In the process, the agents discover that members of their own elite team may be working for the terrorists.

Nearly every sequence in Sinha’s film can be classified as inane, illogical, or typical; either the plot devices are entirely unnecessary, they don´t make sense, or they have been done to death before. Would government agents really shack up in the private home of a seemingly psychotic police officer with an important witness in an international terrorist case? Would professional agents take time out to flirt and develop a romance, as Abhishek and Esha´s characters do, during a major terrorist crisis? Would they just let a key witness in the case (Pankaj Kapur) go without taking an official statement or giving any sort of debriefing? The situations in the film are so often absurd, that the characters seem more like they´re playing an elaborate game of “dress-up” and “cops-and-robbers” than they are actually trying to avert a legitimate crisis.

Sinha and his technicians attempt to cover up the plot´s deficiencies with a lot of smoke and mirrors, but are only somewhat successful. While the film´s cinematography, stunts, and score do a pretty good job of distracting audiences from its storyline, the editing leaves a lot to be desired. Sequences building up the central conflict in the story are sped through, while irritating, unnecessary subplots (Suneil Shetty, Raima Sen track and Zayed, Diya Mirza track) seem to wear on for an eternity. And while it is generally accepted in the filmmaking fraternity that great editing should be so seamless that it goes unnoticed, “Dus´s” editing makes a point to constantly draw attention to itself with awkwardly placed digital zooms, overdone slow motion shots, and jarring insert shots (such as the strange "character statistics" shots at the beginning of the film, that appear to have been lifted from a PlayStation game).

Despite the presence of so many stars in the films´ roster, only a select few of the performers manage to leave a lasting impression. Shilpa Shetty is the show stealer, easily contributing the most exciting, inspired, and stylish performance in the film. Such a bold role for a female character is seldom seen in Indian films, and Shetty strikes the perfect balance between sweetness and strength. Given her stellar work here, one sure wishes to see more of this exceptionally talented actress as her profile improves within the industry. Sanjay Dutt stands out as well, bringing a sort of world-weary realism to his character and uplifting many otherwise uninteresting sequences in the film. The film also benefits from an excellent turn by Abhishek Bachchan. “Dus” features Abhishek the star; his character suffers from horrible writing, but Bachchan Jr. exudes such an effortless style and grace that audiences can´t resist rooting for him.

The others in the cast range from average to poor. Zayed Khan´s cocky routine works, but his longing lover boy falls flat. He shares zero chemistry with Diya Mirza, who is completely wooden. Esha Deol hams in typical fashion, as does Raima Sen. Even Pankaj Kapur, well known for a number of outstanding performances, is quite awful in this film. His overacting is often unbearable and also renders the "twist" concerning his character quite predictable. The worst performance, however, is easily Suneil Shetty’s. Despite his tenure in the industry, Shetty still seems to think that there is little more to acting than loud screaming, exaggerated physical gestures, and affected facial contortions.

Special mention should be made of the outstanding music videos in the film. The soundtrack to the film is wildly popular, and rightfully so. The title track, “Dus Bahane,” is one of the best tracks of the year and its picturisation at the beginning of the film lives up to the expectations set by the song. Likewise, the shaadi song, “Chaam Se,” is well-done and the item number “Deedar De” (with Latin model Mayte Garcia) is the absolute best in recent times.

Far from a perfect ten, “Dus” has its moments, but they don’t quite add up to a satisfying experience. Shilpa Shetty’s done a fantastic job, Sanjay Dutt and Abhishek Bachchan contribute spades to the style of the film, and some of the songs and stunts manage to excite, but Sinha’s first big film has little else to offer. Hopefully, the young director has paid greater attention to the storyline of his next film, “Tathastu;” “Dus” is the greatest proof that without a solid script, all the stars and stunts in the world can’t save a film from mediocrity.


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PostPosted: Sat Jul 16, 2005 4:45 pm 
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Watched this last nite at Eglinton -- its a good movie I'd give the songs 4/5 --- would not enjoy this movie at Woodside -- this def. needed to be played at a "proper" theatre 8) :laugh:


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PostPosted: Sat Jul 16, 2005 9:35 pm 
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_rb_ wrote:
Watched this last nite at Eglinton -- its a good movie I'd give the songs 4/5 --- would not enjoy this movie at Woodside -- this def. needed to be played at a "proper" theatre 8) :laugh:


From DUGGU to THUGGU!! 8) :wink: :lol:


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PostPosted: Sun Jul 17, 2005 2:59 am 
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arsh wrote:
_rb_ wrote:
Watched this last nite at Eglinton -- its a good movie I'd give the songs 4/5 --- would not enjoy this movie at Woodside -- this def. needed to be played at a "proper" theatre 8) :laugh:


From DUGGU to THUGGU!! 8) :wink: :lol:


:roll: Thuggu? :keh:


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