Tuesday 1 January 2008

Grounded Stars

Gentlemen, keep your wet hankies aside. Ladies please swipe your nose on the sleeve.

I’m attempting to do something which no human or banker has done before: an unfavourable review of taare zameen par (tzp)

Please lift your jaw and put the eyeballs back into their socket. No, I’m not an insensitive freak, nor was I born in a lovely teachers-supportive family-encouraging system utopia. I fail to understand why are people going ga ga or in this case waaah waaah over tzp.

I went to see tzp with my flatmate Nik, and you couldn’t find two more sensitive guys than us in Bangalore. I mean Nik once helped a blind man cross the road, forcibly, thirteen years back. So, naturally we were hoping for a moving, touching experience. Like we usually do.

Aamir Khan, who obviously had made up his mind to make everyone cry, had us at the ticket window only. At 300 bucks a ticket, the two of us were left tearjerked. But then God gently reminded us that getting tickets for a new release on the first weekend without booking at PVR in Bangalore is the kind of miracle that would have given Mother Teresa sainthood.

Now, as two broke, shaken and faith-in-god-restored men sat in the cinema hall, AK unleashed his first weapon. He took soo loong ,over one and half hours, to establish an important, but obvious-in-five-minutes-of-the-movie, fact: ‘dyslexic child’, that by the end of the first half I was dyspeptic.

Thankfully the film picked up very well in the second half with some good songs and performances to match. But soon AK was at it again. He had already given us the exaggerated stereotype of the pushing father and wailing mother. And further reinforced them with the hairy Hindi teacher, accented English teacher and brawny sports teacher to it. The scene where AK tries to convince the Principal of the child’s special abilities by quoting Oscar Wilde is so corny, you have to see it to believe it.

Be that as it may, people were busy sniffling whimpering and sobbing all over. Now, I believe there’s a simple explanation for that. I mean how hard can it be to make moms, moms-to-be, wives, girlfriends and metrosexual men to cry. Just put a struggling child up there and make him cry in every conceivable pain and position. So, the kid cries in his bedroom then a quick sob in the school, one kneeling down on the bed and even while running on the basketball ground. One of these is bound to tickle your ancestral monkey instincts and soon you follow suit.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m all for crying in movies. When Rajesh Khanna sang a song heaving up and down on his dying elephant’s belly in Haathi Mere Saathi, I cried my eyeballs out. Or when in ‘Kishan Kanhaiya’, Shilpa Sharodkar did that….No wait, that was a different.

Ahem…well. Now that this post has firmly established me as a sexist insensitive imbecile. I would urge you to watch Polish film director Kuzwipo Polsjki’s ‘Ustyer jOkrma de childe’ before forming your opinion. Chances are you will not be able to sit through the movie, simply because it does'nt exist. You are also requested to not take my opinion seriously as I suffer from film-dyslexia. But more on that later.

9 comments:

Life of Mi said...

TDV - The film is long
GJ - Agree!!

TDV - The film is full of exaggerated stereotypes
GJ - Agree. But they have to be exaggerated to make the movie commercial (I am all for commercial) and stereotypes or not - the main characters (father /mother) are fairly real

TDV - Did not like the movie
GJ - Will probably go again to watch it.

My Comment is becoming a blog post. Like the humor touch though.

तुषार वर्मा said...

umm no, i liked the movie. but i dont understand the hype around it.

vijay said...

you are correct about the cliché in movie. what can be more stereotype than the hero (boy) in spite of all the shortcomings comes up the curve and the teacher's who used to detest him start singing his song. The way they talk to his parents and the way his parents were ignorant about his progress was kindda funny.

Anonymous said...

oh, you're not alone. i did an unfavorable review of this movie on my blog. got a hell lot of unfavorable comments :)

Unknown said...

I think that it is tendencies of some and not all to act opposite purposefully so as to be different.
If everyone says mallika is hot they would say ..she exposes a lot yaar..
bawley chore that is what makes mallika hot .. if she is covered in a blanket.. (not yours) than will u call her hot.. nah
and for guys like me who like to undress by eyes only.. then for them creating hype for her sexiness will only lead her to do movies like myth and show others that what they assume "them" to be like .. is not a myth.. they are infact real

same case is with TZP
this is one such movies which has depicted most of guys i kno.. i kno they are not dyslexic but do u need to be dyslexic to not njoy studies..
again nah bawle..
Hype should be created for movies like these so that the parents dont pressurize guys like me and others to study a lot and keep ourselves busy in rat race
I think rather than thinkin abt how this movie has been made and how each plot has been handled... u shd see the motive behind the movie..
the motive is those who dont want to be in a race .. dont want to study so much that all wud say he has been a topper.. those who like to njoy life.. shd be given the opportunity to njoy it and mould their life on their own thoughts and not like every kid has to be a doctor or software engr.. oops sorry now parents dont say that u shd be s/w engr...

now i shd stop.. is se jyada to hamne kabhi papers main nahi likha.. itna likhta to pass na ho jaata ... hehehe

Unknown said...

I completely disagree with the post and comments. None of it was exaggerated. C'mon... how were the parents supposed to know Ishaan is dyslexic? I have been in a boarding all my life and could identify with most of it. Sigh. I didn't know I would come across someone who didn't like TZP. Your loss... entirely.

Quaintzy Patchez said...

I watched tzp today.. i know i'm pretty late.. but well.. you're not the only person suffering from film dyslexia.. :|

Cheers

Quaintzy Patchez said...

and since i watched it at 50 times less the price, didn't quite crying.. hope to put up a post on this.. wish me luck! seeya!

Smoochy said...

Two aspects of a film make it bad, good or great:
- how it is made (visuals, soundtrack, dialogue, acting etc...)
- what it is about (story, message, plot etc...)

Some movies do both very well, and end up doing very well at the BO - like RDB, Munnabhai, Chak De, and recently A Wednesday.

Others leave something to be desired. Recent example - Mumbai Meri Jaan: great idea, poorly executed. Rock On, and Oye Lucky...: both, imho, very well made films, but the plot/storyline left me rather cold.

TZP - was a great idea without a question. The characters and the situations shown were very real, and the makers deserve to be applauded for their idea and intentions. But Tush and I are probably in the minority that felt the movie could have, and should have been made much better. For starters, it should have been much shorter and less predictable. Some of the messages could have been delivered in a more subtle or poignant manner, leaving us with something to think about, in stead of being driven home as laboriously as they were. That's probably why we felt a little disappointed, and the disappointment was compounded by all the hype.

Just thought i should clarify, for those who seem disappointed in us, and are raving on about 'the idea and intent' of the movie.