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Showing posts with label Bengali. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bengali. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Kaalpurush - Bengali film, I've been looking for and found on Induna



Kaalpurush was released in 2005 and won the National Award for Best Film. However, it took several years for this film to be released officially on dvd. I've been looking for it everywhere. Thank goodness I found it on Induna, which I blogged about.

Bengali films are more serious and arty than other Indian cinema that I've seen. Or so it seems like. Even though I bought Kaalpurush several months ago, I didn't watch it right away. I wanted to be in the right mindset to watch, what I mean is be in the right mood to watch it, even though I have been wanting to see it for a while. I don't watch many Bengali films. It's already hard enough for me to find Tamil and Telugu films, imagine me trying to get Bengali films!



After watching it the first time, I wasn't sure whether or not to like it. The film definitely has a good,  meaningful storyline. Yet, the pace was very slow. The performances are top-notch, don't get me wrong. Kaalpurush is just one of those films that you will appreciate for its storyline, but cannot watch over and over again. I wanted to like it more, so I gave it a second viewing.



Kaalpurush focuses on a father-son relationship that once was there but is gone. The film shows in different timeframes of both the father and son's stories of what happened to the father-son relationship.



Mithun Chakraborty plays the father, Ashwini.



From the beginning of the film, he is shown watching over his son Sumonto (Rahul Bose) and his family.



He really wants to talk to Sumonto but is afraid. He hasn't seen him in so many years after the misunderstanding and miscommunication of what happened in the past.



I'm a bit biase because I adore Mithin and watched his earlier films. However, I'm used to watching his masala-filled Bollywood films and have never seen him in anything "serious." Therefore, I was very excited to watch him.



It was very endearing to see an older Mithun in a fatherly role. In his recent Bollywood roles, he usually plays a villian and/or just in a supporting cast. Arguably, one can say he also has a supporting role in Kaalpurush, as well. However, his character is one of the main focus of the film.



Rahul Bose & Sameera Reddy play the married couple, Sumonto & Supriya.



Sumonto (Rahul Bose) is in a loveless marriage with Supriya (Sameera Reddy) and their two children. On top of that, he has a dead-end job. He often wonders about his father (Mithin Chakraborty) who he used to adore.



Rahul Bose is one of my inexplicable crushes. I've often wondered why he isn't as well-known in Bollywood, but I've learn that he steers away from masala-type of films. The few Bollywood films that he's been in, I enjoyed watching him. His acting is amazing and is no different in Kaalpurush. I mainly watched the film for Sameera and was stoked Rahul was opposite her. A lot of people have praised Sameera in her role but it was Rahul who carried the film.



Supriya (Sameera Reddy) is married to Sumonto (Rahul Bose) and a school teacher. She is definitely a high achiever and wants to better herself, even if that means ignoring her husband and children.



As I mentioned before, I mainly wanted to watch Kaalpurush for Sameera. I've heard nothing but great things about Sameera's performance. Although I do think it is Sameera's best acting till date, Kaalpursh is still Rahul Bose's film all the way. Playing the cold, emotionless woman, Sameera took it to another level from her glamorous, dolled-up looks in Bollywood.



Laboni Sarkar plays the mother, Putul. Sudipta Chakraborty plays the ex-lover of Ashwini, Asha.



Putul knew about her husband's ex-lover, but he chose to marry her instead. Little did she know that she will finally get to meet her one day.



Laboni Sarkar is just so motherly. I don't even know if that is a good ajective but I just love her look. As a wife and mother, I do know how she would feel if I was in her position to ever face the "other" woman who you know your husband was so deeply, madly in love with. She doesn't have a big role but was a pleasure to see her.



Everyone wants to hate the "other" woman, the ex-flame. But can you really fault her for wondering why the man-of-your-dreams just simply left and went away without you knowing? She got the chance to see him again and talk it out.



Sudipta Chakraborty is beautiful. Why did the "other" woman have to be so gorgeous? Me thinks just for insecurity purposes. Just like Laboni, Sudipta doesn't have a huge role either.



So you think you know the rest of the story? I'll leave it at that. Don't wanna spoil anything. The flashbacks show little Sumonto and his parents.



Little Sumonto used to accompany his father when he's out with his patients. Yes, his father was a doctor. Of course, something dramatic happened causing Sumonto and his father not to talk anymore.



Many years will pass, Sumunto and his father, Ashwini, will finally meet again, discussing what happened, how they are doing.



Will it be too late?



The strongest relationship in the film is definitely between Sumonto and his kids. He loves his kids so much. One of my favorite scene is when his daughter is drawing on his back, while he is holding his son on the bed.









Even though there was a brief cooking scene, I captured it. I mentioned in my Punnagai Desam review, how rare it is for me to see this in Indian cinema.







I thank Eagle & Shemaroo for finally getting Kaalpurush out on dvd.





However, must you put BOTH of the logos throughout the film?









Another complaint I have with the dvd is the poor quality and dark visual look.





After watching Kaalpurush more than once, did I like it? Yes and no. It may not appeal to a lot of people. However, it is worth a watch for the storyline and acting. Even though it is very slow-paced, there are several arty symbolic signs shown throughout the film. Definitely, it will be appreciated to film critics who want to look more pass masala-type of films.


Friday, February 6, 2009

Bipasha Basu upcoming Bengali movie "Afterword"

More information on this film here!
Okay, for those who have complained that Bips is just a sexy avatar and only had Corporate which showed her acting ability, which I totally disagree (I know, me being the die-hard Bips fan). Get ready for her Bengali movie, Afterword, which originally was titled Shawb Choritro Kalponik. Not only does Bips look stunning but looks like another movie that will shut people up with her sexy image.


The story of Shawb Choritro Kalponik, penned by Ghosh himself, is about Radhika, the character Bipasha has portrayed in the film. Radhika is an ordinary Bengali housewife who has lived away from her home state for some time. She comes back to Kolkata after her husband Indranil goes missing, in search of her roots as she is basically from Kolkata. Indranil was professionally an engineer but a poet by choice. Radhika is introduced to Shekhar, a photographer, when she comes to Kolkata. Her search for her roots is also a search for little slices of her husband she did not know that she tries to discover through his poetry. The film thus, is soaked with the romance and the lyricism of poetry. The film follows Radhika on her journey that transcends the geographical boundaries of going from one city to another, to enter into an introspective journey to re-discover herself within the city she once belonged to, an emotional journey to trace the finer nuances and shades of her relationship with her husband, and an investigative journey into things about her husband she did not know about. Shawb Choritro Kalponik is more of a metaphorical journey of all these journeys put together. Prosenjit plays Indranil and Jishu Sengupta plays Shekhar. She begins to understand him through his writings, including his dream muse who does not exist except in Indranil’s imagination and his poetry and discovers him all over again. Shawb Charitro Kalpanik shows how Radhika discovers his imaginary muse from his poems who spurred him on to write poetry. Pauli Dam plays this role.

Source

Check out the trailer. Looks really interesting!


Saturday, October 11, 2008

Brick Lane - UK Bengali film based on book

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I finally got to see this movie. When I heard about the movie back in June premiering in Atlanta, I thought I'll read the book. Unable to go to the premiere, I read the book anyways. Sadly, I was not in love with the book. I had to make myself finish it. Reminds me when I read The Namesake --- I read it because I knew there will be a movie based on it. The book was just mediocre, to me, which made me enjoy the movie more. Same incident for me with the book/movie -- Brick Lane.

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Movie starts off with flashbacks. Beautiful, colorful Bangladesh (but actually filmed in India). Two sisters having fun. Later to find out that tragedy hits their family. The oldest sister Nazneen has an arranged marriage and is sent off to London marrying an older, rich Bengali man.

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Nazneen, her husband Chanu, and two daughters live in Brick Lane in London. Taken from Wikipedia -
Brick Lane (Bangla: ব্রিক লেন) is a long street in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, in the East End of London. The street runs from Bethnal Green in the north, passes through Spitalfields and is linked to Whitecahpel High Street to the south by the short stretch of Osborn Street. Today, it is the heart of the city's Sylheti Bangladeshi community, and is sometimes known as Banglatown.

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Nazneen struggles to find a true identity to her life. She yearns to go back home to visit her sister but is torn between what the life that she later establishes in London. Just being a good wife and mother with no voice, doesn't help her at all. Frequently, she thinks back to her childhood memories and the mistake her mother made, will she continue on that path and lead her past childhood to her two daughters?

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Nazneen's family. Since she and her daughters are females, they don't have much of a voice in the family. Chanu, right or wrong, makes the decisions in the household. Often he spends his time away from home leaving Nazneen, bored at home. When Nazneen finally ends up working at home, he becomes envious yet doesn't say much. However, he quitely and deceitfully finds a way for Nazneen's earning to pay for his selfish-bad habits. The oldest daughter sees her mother's frustrations and fights with her mother on why her mother doesn't open up against her father.

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Karim is the hot delivery guy. He delivers materials to Brick Lane for women who stay home and sew materials. Nazreen notices him and wonders what he does. When she finally ends up staying home and working, he delivers for her too. Both are attracted and drawn towards each other. Nazreen wants that feeling of love that is missing from her arrange marriage. Since Karim can get almost any women he wants, with Nazreen she gives him that feeling of the innocent, Bengali girl from the village.

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Tannishtha Chatterjee reminds me a bit of Nandita Das with her natural beauty. She plays well in her part as the confused, torn, confused Bengali woman in London.

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Karim Christopher Simpson is soooo good looking that I didn't pay attention to his acting. I couldn't help it. His accent is so sexy. Interesting, I looked him up finding out he has no desi heritage at all. Taken from IMDB - Although he often plays Anglo-Indian roles, Christopher is not Indian. His father is Irish, his mother Greek-Rwandan.

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Sautish Kaushik is really good. His acting was my favorite in the film. The two daughters doesn't have much on-screen time but the oldest had a very significant role telling her mother to speak up against her father.

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Overall, Brick Lane is worth a watch. I wasn't wowed by the film or anything.