Exactly, that is what they are aiming for. Maximum hits and there by more
revenue... after all it is a business driven world. What can we do about
that?

 

If you notice this guy, Raja Sen, he thrashes every movie that comes his way
(well, there are exceptions for some super stars, don't want to take any
name) and after some time does the reverse just to prove that the current
movie that he is reviewing is a trash.

 

Nevertheless, they have invented a unique way of generating revenue. Let's
take is sportingly, 'coz it is very difficult to change something...

 

Sai

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Roshan
Sent: 18 June 2010 08:11 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [arr] Raja Sen's Raavan review- Unforgivably boring

 

  

he is merely trying to grab all the attention. He likes to do that. he slams
every movie that comes out.. and if he did really like something, he would
make sure that no layman would ever be able to understand what he writes. it
is good for rediff. and they encourage that. look at the number of comments
he gets every time he writes something. good or bad, but people do comment
on all the reviews he write. 

On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 7:54 PM, Ram Motipally <[email protected]>
wrote:

  

What is bothering is that he seems absolutely trigger happy to label the
movie "boring". Seems like he was looking for reasons to do it.....

 

 

  _____  

From: Sai Theodore <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Fri, June 18, 2010 7:05:58 AM
Subject: Re: [arr] Raja Sen's Raavan review- Unforgivably boring




You can rely on Raja Sen for sure, but take it 180 degrees around... that
worked for me almost 99.99% of the time

On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 4:25 PM, Vinod R Iyer <[email protected]>
wrote:

  

Raja Sen .... This guy cracks me up, everytime !! :) :) .. Some useless
reviews he provides. 

 

Go watch the movie(s) guys .. It's brilliant !

On Fri, Jun 18, 2010 at 1:11 PM, Karthik Subramaniam
<[email protected]> wrote:

  


Raavan is unforgivably boring


June 18, 2010 11:02 IST

Tags: Raavan
<http://search.rediff.com/dirsrch/default.asp?MT=Raavan&search=site> ,
Ratnam <http://search.rediff.com/dirsrch/default.asp?MT=Ratnam&search=site>
, Ram Gopal Varma
<http://search.rediff.com/dirsrch/default.asp?MT=Ram+Gopal+Varma&search=site
> , Bachchan
<http://search.rediff.com/dirsrch/default.asp?MT=Bachchan&search=site> ,
Ragini <http://search.rediff.com/dirsrch/default.asp?MT=Ragini&search=site> 

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Raja Sen reviews Raavan. 

It's eerie how two very different directors with very distinct styles can
gradually start mirroring each other's work. 

Mani Ratnam makes a film every few years, with the slow deliberation of one
obsessed with every detail.

The alarmingly prolific Ram Gopal Varma [ Images
<http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=ram+gopal+varma>  ]
meanwhile seems to follow impulse ahead of scheme. Their diametrically
opposed creative paths crossed in the early 1990s as the two got together
and each is credited for writing the other's 1993 film -- RGV's Gaayam and
Mani's Thiruda Thiruda -- even though Ramu assures that screen-credit
notwithstanding, each man made very much his own film.

And yet, today one seems very much in on-screen pursuit of the other, even
if not blatantly so. Ratnam's last film
<http://www.rediff.com/movies/2007/jan/12guru.htm> Guru ends up in a way
rather like Varma's  <http://www.rediff.com/movies/2005/jun/30sarkar.htm>
Sarkar, both barely-veiled biopics of popular, powerful Indian icons, films
that chose safety over provocation and ended up tame hagiographies.
Massively successful films, naturally.

This time, Ratnam's latest takes a big chunk of larger-than-life Indian
mythology, sloppily swaps antagonist with protagonist, and ends up giving an
earnest Bachchan far too much scenery to chew in far too much spotlight. Oh
yeah, this new Raavan is clearly Mani Ratnam Ki Aag
<http://www.rediff.com/movies/2007/aug/31aag.htm> .

Not that Raavan, starring ace cinematographer Santosh Sivan, is bad to look
at. Not at all, and there are some frames that positively glisten. It's just
ill-conceived, amateurishly adapted, and often too lamentably literal in its
desperate attempts to reference the epic, trying recklessly but daftly to be
contrary for the heck of it.

It's one thing to mask familiar characters with grimy grey, evoking empathy
for the villain and giving the hero some flawed ambiguity, but here Ratnam
falls prey to sensationalism and turns Raavan into a schizophrenic Robin
Hood, and Ram into a bloodthirsty, consistently amoral cop.

The result is painfully one-dimensional, a revenge story devoid of meat,
conflict or, really, surprise: I doubt giving away plot details from the
Ramayana [ Images <http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=ramayana>
] counts as a spoiler. If you think it does, turn away now.

Tough cop Dev (Vikram) discovers that his wife Ragini (Aishwarya Rai [
Images <http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=aishwarya+rai>  ])
has been abducted by feared outlaw Beera (Abhishek Bachchan [ Images
<http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=abhishek+bachchan>  ]). He
sets out to get her back, cutting a bloody trail through the jungle even as
the violent, loony Beera refrains from besmirching Ragini's honour.

It is a concept with fascinating adaptive possibilities, its potential
showing through in stray bursts, like Raavan's sister's wedding brutalised
by the cops to give the film's anti-hero his motive for the kidnap.

That very potential, however, is squandered in the next scene when a young
cop inexplicably grabs the almost-bride by her nose, to underline how
obviously the poor girl is Surpanakha.

In another unimaginable moment nearing the end of the film, the cop asks his
rescued bride if Raavan 'did anything' to her. It's a scene dripping with
awkwardness and hesitation and misunderstanding, and could have been
impactful in a million ways, except the way this film plays it: With the cop
asking his wife to take a polygraph test. I'm not making that up, so
laughably textbook are the script's attempts at metamorphosis.

The dialogue doesn't help things, the film's characters speaking in the
oddly theatrical, surreally simplistic Hindi that can only these days be
described as Priyadarshanese.

A few characters get a chance to break away, like Ravi Kissen [ Images
<http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=ravi+kissen>  ] and Govinda
[ Images <http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=govinda>  ], who
grab it with both hands and emerge as the best things in the film, by far,
while Abhishek Bachchan speaks any which way he chooses, especially when
slapping himself. There is one scene when Bachchan, speaking of burning with
envy, transcends this poor picture and shines on his own, but outside of
that this is a squandered vanity project for the actor.

Aishwarya Rai -- her alabaster skin muddied and bruised, her eye makeup
crucially immaculate -- screeches her way through the proceedings,
contorting her face as if to convince us it has something to do with
histrionics. 

Unfortunately, both that and the aforementioned squealing have more to do
with tortured balloon animals, and there are several ear-splitting occasions
when one wishes Mani'd dispense with the school-level allegory and let that
pretty balloon abruptly pop.

As for Vikram, the National Award-winning actor we all expected great things
from, he gets the rawest deal of the lot, a cardboard cop who scowls, runs
in slow-mo, and models Aviator sunglasses.

The film's first half is choppy and bewildering but tight, while the second
sprawls all over the place, overlong and exhausting. Sivan's frames are
indeed grand, but there isn't one great shot to take away from the film.
Even the world-conquering A R Rahman [ Images
<http://search.rediff.com/imgsrch/default.php?MT=a+r+rahman>  ] can't save
the day, and it's heartbreaking to see the legendary
cinematographer-director-composer trio give us such forgettable song
sequences.

Raavan's deadliest sin, however, isn't in the clumsy dialogue, hammy acting
or lame, oversimplified adaptation. All of that can be forgiven if the tale
engages us, and we never watched Ramanand Sagar's endless television show
for its subtlety. Where Raavan truly and tragically fails us is in taking
one of our greatest epics, and making it unforgivably boring.

It's profoundly sad to see a filmmaker of Ratnam's calibre reduced to this.
Yet hope beats immortal. Perhaps we should just wait till he takes on Shiva.

 
<http://movies.rediff.com/report/2010/jun/18/aseem-chhabra-reviews-raavan.ht
m> Also Read: New Yorker Aseem Chhabra's very different review

Rediff Rating: Error! Filename not specified.




-- 
Have Fun,
Vinod

http://the-other-side-of-mirror.blogspot.com/
http://myworldofmnm.wordpress.com/





 




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