First up, the music's by A.R. Rahman, and for all the good publicity he's
getting for his work on Danny Boyle's Slumdog Millionaire, I just had to
experience yet another piece of his musical magic on a film, besides one
that I've watched much earlier this year in Jodhaa Akbar. One just cannot
imagine how his musical talent will be put to good use in a film which looks
and feels like Memento, and this being the next best thing. "Guzarish" is a
track used in the trailer, and it is currently my new ear worm.

Yes, Bollywood's version naturally comes with built-in song and dance, which
for once I would have thought looked quite out of place in the movie, if not
for A.R. Rahman's score and music.


http://twitchfilm.net/site/view/review-of-ghajini/

Review of GHAJINIPosted by
Stefan<http://twitchfilm.net/site/authors/Stefan/> at
7:32am.Posted in Film & DVD
Reviews<http://twitchfilm.net/site/archive/film-dvd-reviews/>
 , Thriller <http://twitchfilm.net/site/categories/category/thriller/>,
Drama <http://twitchfilm.net/site/categories/category/drama/>,
Action<http://twitchfilm.net/site/categories/category/action/>
, Asia <http://twitchfilm.net/site/categories/category/asia/>.

The tattoos on the body, the Polaroid snaps, the notes scattered around the
house, and the smoking gun evidence? Short term memory loss, happening every
15 minutes. If this doesn't seem like Christopher Nolan's masterpiece
Memento, then I don't know what does. Written and directed by A.R.
Murugadoss, I don't see much of a nod of acknowledgement to Nolan's work,
and falls back on the fact that this is a Hindi remake of Murugadoss' own
Tamil movie of the same name Ghajini, produced in 2005 (Nolan's was in
2000), which joins the ranks of films having their titles named after the
chief villain.

In any case this isn't the first time that we see very obvious similarities
in premise and characters being adopted for Bollywood's own productions, and
the shot-in-Singapore Krrish comes to mind as well, as they had the entire
setting of John Woo's Paycheck incorporated into that film. But of course in
any version some merits could be found, but I believe some form of
acknowledgement would be in order, other than, in this case, a quick flash
of a very wordy disclaimer aboutGhajini being gleaned from various short
stories and material (and another paragraph which I missed given the fine
print, and short duration on screen, but I'm pretty sure no mention of
Memento).

Well, there are some reasons why I chose to watch this. First up, the
music's by A.R. Rahman, and for all the good publicity he's getting for his
work on Danny Boyle's Slumdog Millionaire, I just had to experience yet
another piece of his musical magic on a film, besides one that I've watched
much earlier this year in Jodhaa Akbar. One just cannot imagine how his
musical talent will be put to good use in a film which looks and feels like
Memento, and this being the next best thing. "Guzarish" is a track used in
the trailer, and it is currently my new ear worm.

Another reason is of course, Aamir Khan. Yet another prolific actor with a
penchant for perfection, it was interesting to see how his take on the
protagonist's short term memory loss, would rival that of Guy Pearce's. I'm
embarrassed to say I've only seen him in action in Lagaan, so this would be
yet another opportunity to witness his ability which can be measured against
a benchmark. But don't expect the same though, because Pearce's version was
more of a thinking man who questions and second guesses himself, while
Khan's version was in two parts to serve the story, one as a raging hulk
monster who tears through his opponents with savage violence fueled by anger
and hatred, coupled with the hurt he experienced and recalled (Hulk
producers take note, in case Edward Norton decides against any more sequels,
look in the direction of Aamir Khan), while the other as mild-mannered
Sanjay Singhania, CEO of a telecommunications company in Mumbai.

Yes, Bollywood's version naturally comes with built-in song and dance, which
for once I would have thought looked quite out of place in the movie, if not
for A.R. Rahman's score and music. While half of the movie might be seen as
a copy of Memento's premise and character, the other half served more to
allow the audience to share the pain with Sanjay. Nolan's version had you
experience the frustrating condition of the syndrome through its narrative
presentation, but this one junks the reverse chronology, and plays it out
flat and builds a rich back story for Sanjay, so much so that you'll root
for him as he goes on his rampage of revenge. You'll find yourself
entrenched in the romance between Sanjay and his lady love Kalpana (the
stunning Asin Thottumkal, who reprises her role from the 2005 version as
well), who's a model awaiting her big break, and a girl with a genuinely
good heart. The plot never fails to give her numerous moments to showcase
her good nature, and it's no surprise why anyone would not fall in love with
her instantly. Factor in plenty of lovey-dovey moments of comedy and pursuit
(under the guise of a different identity, like Shah Rukh Khan's Rab Ne Bana
Di Jodi) which makes it perfect for a date movie, but with hindsight that
you know this love is doomed from the moment it began, which actually makes
it quite sad to watch the events unfold since you know what will eventually
happen to her.

Ghajini doesn't adopt or try to adopt those very cerebral mind-f* moments
from Memento, but as I mentioned plays it out more like a straight forward
action thriller, with a handful of inevitable moments of watching our
protagonist get taken advantaged of because of his condition. No other
structural styles are used besides flashbacks, where the purpose of two
characters in the movie are to read the diary of events so that it could be
translated visually onto the screen. However you'll still be kept in the
dark for some time as to why the designated thugs of Ghajini (Pradeep Rawat,
who also reprised his role in this remake) would want to exact their mettle
onto Sanjay and Kalpana, and you'll be held in suspense for almost 2 hours
before the reasons get shown.

I can only imagine the flak that this film might receive because of having
to adapt, and not properly acknowledge perhaps that it's not original
material, save for the romantic spin on it. But if you would look past those
ramifications and treat this like a re-imagining of Memento in more
straight-forward terms, that this would still serve as an entertaining
thriller done Bollywood style.
-- 
-A
http://viewsnmuse.blogspot.com

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