Skip to main content

Bollywood Newz: Ghajini's review: violence before terrorism

When a seething Aamir Khan rams an iron pipe through a man’s stomach in the first few minutes of the film, you get an idea of what’s coming (in the original Tamil version, there’s apparently a tap attached to the pipe and when hero Surya turns it on blood comes dripping out) in the next three hours.

Aamir Khan plays a revenge-crazed lover in Ghajini
Aamir Khan plays a revenge-crazed lover in Ghajini
It seems only fitting that 2008’s biggest film will likely be a violent one. Yet, it’s an oddly comforting violence. Nobody wants to blow up the big city, religion doesn’t matter here and nobody’s heard of suicide bombers. It’s the violence of a time before terrorism. It’s a world where villains wear gold chains, kidnap little girls, bribe the police and kill innocent people who get in their way. A world that we had almost forgotten thanks to the new wave of urban terror that has swept our cities in recent years and, especially, in the year gone by.
Plus it’s got Tamil punch.
Villains are pitchers who swing iron rods that look more menacing than any you’ve seen in Bollywood. The hero has a Superfist (and an oversculpted, tattooed body) that can fell multiple scary-looking villains who attack him all at once.
Ghajini is a near faithful copy of the 2005 Tamil film though a Tamil critic I saw it with pointed out that in the original the villain had a double role and the climactic fight sequence was shot in a swimming pool, not a basti. And, she added, Surya was way hotter than Aamir Khan could ever hope to be.

Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi has a skinny plot
Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi has a skinny plot
Khan plays industrialist Sanjay Singhania who, for reasons best understood in Chennai, wears all his formal short-sleeved shirts with the sleeves rolled up. He meets Kalpana (played by Asin), a struggling model who chatters her way through life, helping everyone who needs her help. Thanks to a funny mix-up, the two become friends and then fall in love.
But this is a revenge story of a grief-stricken man (who also suffers from short-term memory loss, a fact that lead villain Ghajini, played by Pradeep Rawat, finds highly amusing), so you already know this film is not going to end happily ever after. Ghajini is a tense, edge-of-your-seat, pit-of-your-stomach gripping masala film.
Aamir plays a revenge-crazed lover convincingly, Asin is great as everyone’s roadside saviour and Rawat is a villain plucked straight out of 1990s Indian cinema.
So, who did 2008 belong to then? Aamir Khan or Shah Rukh Khan? I would say Abhay Deol or Imran Khan actually, but if I had to pick between Ghajini and Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi it would have to be the former.
Rab Ne... was an inane movie with a skinny plot that only confirmed that for Shah Rukh Khan, acting equals contorting his facial muscles (even if he looks cute hugging a tiffin); Ghajini is great old-fashioned Tamil pulp.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Vivek Oberoi: I am a Tamilian

  Vivek Oberoi:-  I am a Tamilian Vivek Oberoi has said he has great affinity for Tamil Nadu Movies and that he makes sure that he visits his grand-parents in Chennai regularly. Vivek Oberoi in an interview to Tamil media earlier had said ‘Naanum Thamizhkarandhan’ (means ‘ I am also a Tamilian ’). Vivek Oberoi earned the good will of Tamil Nadu people when he adopted a Tamil Nadu village devastated by the killer Tsunami in 2004. Vivek’s next two big films have a solid Tamil connection. The immediate ‘ Prince ’ is being dubbed and released in Tamil on April 9. The following ‘ Raktha Charithra ’ by Ram Gopal Varma in which Suriya is also playing an important role is a multi lingual and that too will be released as a direct Tamil version. The most highlighting factor about these films is that Vivek Oberoi will speak Tamil himself for the dubbing. When Suriya and Vikram are learning Hindi for their Bollywood debuts, Vivek Oberoi comes to Kollywood already knowing Tamil. For More

Rani Mukherjee's sexy in her bikini

Bollywood Actress Rani Mukherjee's sexy in her bikini In Dil Bole Hadippa Believe it or not, but the whole ‘bikini top ‘n’ skimpy shorts’ avatar in short — flaunting Rani Mukerji’s hot new bod wasn’t her idea. Not even the producer or director had anything to do with it. After she realised how much she had toned up (to play a male cricketer in Dil Bole Hadippa!), Rani just happened to discuss this idea with her designer friend Manish Malhotra. And from there on it was Manish’s game plan, after all, he’s transformed many a Bollywood girl in to glam queens. He suggested that it would be a pity to waste such a well-toned body by not showing it off. That’s how the idea of a special song was born. And is she looking hot? Talk about her ‘shapely’ success, and Rani says, “Believe me, I didn’t starve at all. I love my food, especially rice and sweets. There was no way I was giving up all that. So, I just worked out harder and was occasionally allowed my ‘cheat’ meals of rice, sweets, etc.

Bollywood: John Abraham’s Slum Connection

Bollywood New Movie Slumdog Millionaire has definitely made the slums of Mumbai a little popular. Perhaps this is why they are so welcoming to every director who wants to make a film on their lifestyle. John Abraham’s fortcoming film Hook Ya Crook is also one of those films shot in the Chikalwadi Chawl of Mumbai. This film is directed by David Dhawan and John Abraham playes a cricketer who resides in the chawl. In a song John and Genelia D’Souza dance to a tapori-ish number with the typical tapori dance steps. The residents of the slum were delighted to see the stars around and cheered for the unit as they worked. John Abraham added to their delight by giving them autographs and taking pictures with them.