No its not with arr. Its actually something else. Read between the lines in
his review. You will get your answer.

On Fri, Feb 15, 2008 at 11:12 PM, neena kochhar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:

>   Hmmn....I wonder if he had a fallout with ARR for Tehzeeb and is now
> venting his displeasure with JA!
>
>
> *Gomzy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>* wrote:
>
>  He made Fiza and the horrendous Tehzeeb.
> Anyways you cant expect more from a person who gave Kabhi Kushi Kabhi Gham
> 5/5 !!
>
>
>
> On 2/15/08, neena kochhar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >   is he not he same guy who made a not so successful Fiza or mission
> > kashmir or both?
> >
> > *Anil Nair <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>* wrote:
> >
> >  For this man though hardly ..any INDIAN movie is hardly ever
> > impressive ..so not much to read into
> >
> > http://www.hindustantimes.com/StoryPage/FullcoverageStoryPage.aspx?
> > id=64210ad8-ad75-4bc3-a608-
> > 228999fc3774jodhaaakbarmoviespecial_Special&&Headline=Review%
> > 3aEM+Jodhaa+Akbar%2fEM
> >
> > Jodhaa Akbar
> > Cast: Hrithik Roshan, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, Sonu Sood, Poonam Sinha
> > Direction: Ashutosh Gowariker
> > Rating: **
> >
> > Dig this. No eat meat on Monday, so the royal Rajput bride serves
> > technicolour gattas, navratan pillauf and cabbage kofta curries.
> > Emperor loves. Hey, now every Monday is firmed as an eggless,
> > chickenless day. There's no allusion at all to the Rajput partiality
> > to red meat (laal maas). After all, it's so cool to go veggie. Veal,
> > well, veal.
> >
> > Please, what is Ashutosh Gowariker's Jodhaa Akbar trying to serve
> > anyway? A romance dopiaza? Mughlai history biryani? Secularism sushi?
> > Chandeliers-e-Azam? Battle Stroganoff? Absolutely no answers to that,
> > except that you're as disappointed as a guest who came away without a
> > morsel from a wedding banquet. Sad.
> >
> > As you know, the romance is between Shahenshah Akbar (from the look
> > of things here, a bachelor at 30) and Jodhaaji (not exactly in the
> > prime of her youth either). She is coerced into a marriage with the
> > Mughal but won't allow him his conjugal rights till she feels up to
> > it from her `dil'. Frowns she like Kill Bill.
> >
> > Till that belated Dil-Day occurs, they sword fence, she a crouching
> > dragonette, he a patient tiger. Never mind, if her swashbuckling
> > skills aren't ever re-employed by the script. Misunderstandings and a
> > patch-up later, the regal couple at last share common pillows-`n'-
> > quilt. Takliya really.
> >
> > Vis-à-vis history, you learn about Rajputana kings who either acceded
> > to Mughal supremacy or hatched plots culminating in battles starring
> > scabbards, cannon balls, bows-arrows and helmets. Sorry but you're
> > not sure which soldier is fighting whom and why. The body count rises
> > to Ramboesque proportions; the displeased emperor banishes a mulla
> > and good `ole lieutenant Bairam Khan to Mecca forthwith.
> > Surprisingly, the mulla looks as if he were being sent to Siberia. Is
> > this history?
> >
> > Secularism is conveyed through such gestures as Akbar allowing Jodhaa
> > her own temple space and approval of A R Rahman-composed bhajans. No
> > mention of the emperor's foundation of the all-religion-embracing Din-
> > e-Ilahi faith. Moreover, how relevant is it to address the issue of
> > Hindu tolerance of the minority today, instead of vice versa?
> >
> > Sufism is touched upon by a clap-a-hand-here-clap-a-hand-there
> > qawwali in the course of which the emperor is zapped by a sky light,
> > causing him to break into a jolly jig with the qawwals.
> > Unintentionally funny. Did Akbar ever boogie woogie?
> >
> > For a tribute to Mughal-e-Azam, a fluttering palace eunuch is
> > recalled and durbar cliches abound like "Hukam ki taamil ho."
> > Inevitably, flighty handmaidens clasp secrets to their bosom,
> > eavesdroppers lounge around at jharokas. And the venomous Nigar
> > Sultana is supplanted by a diabolical daai, or Ila Arun, playing the
> > role as if she were a harridan from Harry Potter.
> >
> > On the plus side, Nitin Desai's sets and plush pageantry are eye
> > filling. So is the elaborate picturisation of the Marhaba song in the
> > style of the drum-stacked Chandralekha of yore.
> >
> > The Shahenshah's mum, Poonam Sinha, is so benign that it hurts. So
> > does one of her Eiffel Tower-tall hats. What a balancing act! In
> > fact, the headgear displayed here – from Aladdin Cave turbans to
> > those qawwals' upturned ice-cream cones -- are a gas.
> >
> > The action set pieces – involving a rather senior citizen elephant
> > and the Troy-like one-to-one combat finale -- are sound and fury
> > amounting to nothing. Amitabh Bachchan's voice-over commentary is
> > stale. Kiran Deohan's cinematography is conventional and Ballu
> > Saluja's editing is rather old-fashioned, what with the 1950s-style
> > wipes. The length of three hours-20 minutes is a punishment.
> >
> > On the plus side, Nitin Desai's sets and plush pageantry are eye
> > filling. So is the elaborate picturisation of the Marhaba song in the
> > style of the drum-stacked Chandralekha of yore. Still, like it or not
> > Gowariker – normally a fine, conscientious director – has
> > miscalculated the technical logistics and emotional content of a
> > period piece. Crucial detailing isn't the virtue here. The child
> > actors playing the eponymous pair have coal black eyes which
> > magically turn cat light on adulthood.
> >
> > Of the cast, Sonu Sood in a strongly written part fits the bill. But
> > Hrithik Roshan is a major let down. His Urdu diction is laboured, his
> > physical presence unequal to the role, and far too frequently he
> > blinks his eyes like a neon sign gone out of order. The imperial gaze
> > and carriage are conspicuous by their absence.
> >
> > Relatively, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan is more convincing. She carries
> > off difficult scenes with unexpected fluidity, her eyes conveying the
> > pleasure as well as the pain of a woman oscillating between love and
> > rancour.
> >
> > Bottomline: Toss a coin, whether you want to buy a ticket for Jodhaa
> > AkBORE.. or not.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >  ------------------------------
> > Support the World Aids Awareness campaign this month with Yahoo! for
> > Good<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/mailuk/taglines/isp/control/*http://us.rd.yahoo.com/evt=51947/*http://uk.promotions.yahoo.com/forgood/>
> >
>
>
> ------------------------------
> Sent from 
> Yahoo!<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/mailuk/taglines/isp/control/*http://us.rd.yahoo.com/evt=51949/*http://uk.docs.yahoo.com/mail/winter07.html>-
>  a smarter inbox.
> 
>

Reply via email to