Thursday, June 6, 2013

Movie Review: Shootout at Wadala

Guns and virile poses

Bollywood gangster flicks are a dime a dozen these days. Only a handful of them manage to stand out. Shootout at Wadala nearly does. But for all its stylistic vim and vigour, it falls prey to a propensity for excess.

The film delivers an overwhelming surfeit of everything – blood-soaked action sequences, glorified machismo, no-holds-barred cuss words, and raunchy item numbers.

As the cops and gangsters gun for each other with bullets and punch lines all through its two-and-a-half-hour runtime, Shootout at Wadala throws in as many as three item songs, including one by Sunny Leone, who, not surprisingly, leaves nothing to the imagination.

Overload is the name of the game for co-writer and director Sanjay Gupta, so he gives you two more of the same musical routine post-interval, with Priyanka Chopra (Babli badmaash) and Sophie Chaudhry (Aala re aala) doing the honours.

But all said and done, the making of Shootout at Wadala, which traces the rise and fall of mafia don Manya Surve, is marked by a degree of visual and technical panache that is difficult to miss.

Aided by his cinematographers (Sameer Arya and Sanjay F Gupta) and production designer (Sunil Nigvekar), the director recreates the 1970s and 1980s Mumbai ambience to great effect.

A large part of Surve’s story – that of a young man who was sucked into a life of crime when he was wrongfully jailed for a murder he did not commit – comes from a journalistic account of the period (Dongri to Dubai: Six Decades of the Mumbai Mafia) by S. Hussain Zaidi.

The heightened fictionalization of the life and times of the most dreaded of Mumbai’s crime lords gives Shootout at Wadala a dramatic edge that might have had a greater impact had the director opted for more restraint.

A few of the performances are outstanding. Anil Kapoor, playing ACP Afaaque Bhagran, Surve’s tormentor, is consistently effective, while Manoj Bajpayee wades into the character of Zubair Imtiaz Haskar (modelled on Dawood Ibrahim) with visible delight. Unfortunately, neither Kapoor nor Bajpayee is the fulcrum of the film.

That onerous role is apportioned to John Abraham. He has a wide range of emotions to convey as he interprets the larger-than-life figure of Manya Surve from his college days in the early 1970s all the way up to his death in a police encounter in 1982. It is too tall an order for the actor. While he puts in a game effort, he isn’t quite able to evoke the requisite air of menace.              

Shootout in Wadala certainly isn’t in the league of Parinda or Satya, but it is no worse than the film that it is a follow-up to, Shootout at Lokhandwala. Notwithstanding its excessive reliance on violence and expletives, it is watchable for the most part.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

B-town's blue-eyed boy

Ranbir Kapoor is not only a star girls drool over, but is also an actor whom critics wait to watch. Pratishtha Malhotra chatted up with this superstar in the making who was recently in Delhi for a charity football match of Actors Vs Cricketers about his past successes and his next big flick with his ex flame...

You’ve been taking out a lot of time to practise for the All Stars Football Club. Is football your favourite sport?

Yes, football is my favourite sport. I love it. In fact, I think everyone should play at least one sport. I have been playing the game since my school days. I carry a football with me all the time and play with my crew. I feel that the infrastructure in Delhi is much better than that in Mumbai. There isn't any good football stadium there. I wish the authorities take up the issue and give the city a world class football stadium.

Who do you think is the toughest competitor in the match?

I think Dhoni, Virat and Suresh Raina.

Who is the best footballer in the Actors’ team?

 I’d like to believe it’s me! (smiles). There is Leander Paes, Arjun Kapoor, Marc Robinson, Dino Morea, Shabbir Ahluwalia, Karan Waahi Varun Dhawan and Aditya Roy Kapoor. All these guys are very good.

In your upcoming film, Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani (YJHD), your character says that one should get married and have kids at 30. Do you personally propagate this thought?
I am also 30 and I am not married yet! My milk teeth have also not fallen yet (winks). I think we should not give deadlines to marriage. Jab pyaar hota hai toh shaadi hogi, jab shaadi hogi toh fir bachche honge (When one falls in love, marriage will happen and so will kids). So I think everything is a natural progression. This is I think Ayan’s (Director of YJHD) teaching to me. When I got to know him four years back, I was in a hurry to get married and have children and he used to tell me to relax. He’d tell me ‘you’re just starting out your career. Meet people, live your life a bit and then get married.’ And because I listen to him so much, I am also saying this dialogue in the film. I don’t know if it’s the right thinking or not. Agar chaar saal baad bache nahi hue mere toh main isko pakdunga! (If after four years, I don’t have kids, I’ll catch hold of him). Until now, things are all going fine…

Your character is called Bunny. And even in your other films, you’ve never had the typical ‘hero-like’ names… there was Jordan, Barfi and now Bunny… Do you think it makes the character distinct?
 The directors and writers think of the name for my character. I don’t interfere and say I want something like Barfi, and then Ladoo and then Jhandubaam etc (smiles). But I think I am lucky. Names like these, which are a little quirky stay with you and the fact that you can recall my name is good. Bunny is nice too. It’s a cute name. Perhaps Ayan thinks that my teeth look like Bugs Bunny’s teeth. I have nothing to do with this.

This is your second film with Deepika Padukone and during Bachna Ae Haseeno you two were dating. Were there any awkward moments during the shoot of Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani? Did you notice any changes in her as an actor?
Not at all! When Deepika and I worked together about four years back, it was our second film. We were very new and were still finding ourselves as actors. Today when I work with Deepika, I am really amazed and can proudly say that she’s fantastic in the film. I’ve seen her grow as an actor with her experience and her intelligence. It’s amazing to work with co-stars like her because it only makes your job easier. When you have such a pretty actress with such a pretty smile, you automatically can act like you’re in love. It’s not hard to act being in love with her. And I don’t think there was any awkwardness. We both were really passionate about this film and we both are really nervous for Ayan. He’s a friend and he’s worked so hard on this film so we thought we should just bring out the best of our talent in the movie. And well, we’ll blame it on Ayan if it doesn’t work (winks).

You must be very hopeful of Deepika and you being able to mesmerise the audience one more time like you guys did in Bachna Ae Haseeno…
The right answer is that the chemistry of two characters depends on how the characters are written, on the scenes in the film and what they share. What Deepika and I can bring is hardwork and honesty to the script. And, well, Deepika and I share a great chemistry, biology and physics and hopefully that translates on screen (smiles). So when you see it, you guys will feel the love because the simple philosophy of this film is that asli khushi vo hoti hai jo batai ja sake (Real happiness is that which can be expressed). The film is about friendship, love and about growing up. It’s about all the things that all of us somewhere have seen in our lives.

Is it easier to act a role like you have in Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani after doing tough roles like in Barfi and Rockstar?
 I think those films are far easier than a Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani because in those films you have a character and you know how he talks and walks and what kind of clothes he wears. But when you play urban characters like in YJHD, it somewhere reflects your own personality. It’s very hard to actually bring that character on screen because you have to be real, be yourself and you have to be spontaneous. You don’t have any crutches for support. I think YJHD has been a really hard character for me…I still haven’t understood that character; only Ayan has. But I enjoyed myself. You know, sometimes it’s good to break away and play characters like this.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles
IIPM’s Management Consulting Arm-Planman Consulting
Professor Arindam Chaudhuri – A Man For The Society….
IIPM: Indian Institute of Planning and Management
IIPM makes business education truly global
Management Guru Arindam Chaudhuri
Rajita Chaudhuri-The New Age Woman

ExecutiveMBA

Monday, June 3, 2013

What a Budget sirji

No new taxes have come as a big relief to the middle class reeling under pressure 

The UP Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav presented his second budget – full of hope and optimism, and laid the foundations of future growth that UP aspires for under the leadership of its youngest-ever CM.

No new taxes have been levied in the state budget giving a much-deserved respite to the middle class that has otherwise been reeling under the pressure of rising energy and food prices.

The budget has managed to limit the fiscal deficit and to notionally bring it down to 2.94 percent - well within the responsible limit of 3 percent. It is targeted to go down further. This increase in the budget size of 10.5 percent to Rs 2,21,201.19 crore has been made possible without increasing the incidence of taxation through targeted efficiencies and is expected to be achieved through growth of 20 percent in the collection of trade tax, excise, vehicle tax, and 17 percent in in stamp duty.

The budget is focused on the key factors of mahilayein, gareeb, nujavan, kisan and Musalman. The CM in his budget speech stressed on the importance of overall development of UP and the need to transform the state into ‘uttam pradesh’. He proposes to achieve it by growing at a rate of 8.5 percent .

The budget extended the educational incentives offered in the first edition to women. The state government has decided to provide free education upto graduation for women. This addresses the urgent need to educate and empower women for societal transformation. For education, many new colleges, medical colleges, engineering colleges and agricultural universities have been announced. Forty-one districts will get new Model Rajkiya Sahsiksha Mahavidyalayas (degree colleges). Siddhartanagar, and Allahabad, the yesteryear’s ‘Oxford of the East’ get a new university each. An IIIT is planned in PPP mode and the Gorakhpur Engineering College will be strengthened on the lines of IIT Roorkee. A total of 21 new ITI’s are also proposed. New centres of excellence will come up in established universities. A new Sports University will come up in Aligarh.The total outlay for education is about Rs.32,886 crore, which is almost one-sixth of the total budget outlay.

In India, statistical data establishes significant complementarity between public and private investment, also witnessed in other economies like US, UK, Japan for example. Thus capital investment by the government must be emphasized. The CM has laid great emphasis on capital expenditure by making a budgetary allocation of Rs 53,308 crore. This represents a 21.5 percent increase over the previous year and is the highest ever such jump in UP. Similarly investment earmarked for infrastructure is proposed to shoot up by 25 percent. This trend is best represented in the fact that Plan budget is proposed to grow at 19 percent vis-à-vis non Plan budget growth capped at 7.1 percent.

A significant portion of this expenditure is allocated to 219 newly-launched schemes, besides increasing investments in critical infrastructure like security, water, roads and bridges. Money has also been allocated for proposed four-lane connectivity of all district headquarters to the capital, Lucknow, while strengthening the within village road network. Many PPP infrastructure projects are purported to kick start investment revival through its forward and backward linkages with other industry sectors.

An important highlight of this budget has been the green signal to the Lucknow Metro Project – an Urban Rapid Mass Transportation System – that has the people of Lucknow and the state very excited. It is proposed to be funded via a series of innovative models like increased FSI and FAR charges on land sold in its vicinity, commercialization of land resource, identifying land banks and generating revenue to be kept aside for the metro project. Other support will also be sought as necessary.  A SPV will be floated for the project.

Infrastructure seemed to be the flavour of the day. The budget, apart from Metro, also laid out schemes for integrated village development (Lohiya Grams), housing for the poor, four 4-lane state highway projects, six 4-lane state highways, construction of 259 new bridges, a northern peripheral road in Ghaziabad, creation of infrastructure in panchayat areas and development of new airports. Another ambitious infrastructure project connecting Lucknow to Agra with a green field eight-way expressway was also announced. This would connect with the Agra-Noida Yamuna expressway, thus bringing Lucknow and Delhi closer.

Read more.....

Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles
IIPM’s Management Consulting Arm-Planman Consulting
Professor Arindam Chaudhuri – A Man For The Society….
IIPM: Indian Institute of Planning and Management
IIPM makes business education truly global
Management Guru Arindam Chaudhuri
Rajita Chaudhuri-The New Age Woman

ExecutiveMBA