The A-Team


It is not the first movie about a team of supercool soldiers – and it is definitely not the most last. Neither is it worthy of any other praise such as most innovative or most cerebral. But what The A-Team is, is a great action movie with awesome one-liners and even better sequences which make you want to do a wolf-whistle ! The best is the flying tank – its worth watching the movie for that sequence alone !

The movie is about a team of 4 maverick soldiers – Captain ‘Hannibal’ (Liam Neeson), Lt ‘Face’ (Bradley Cooper), Bosco and mad-as-a-hatter pilot Murdock – who do really crazy special ops for the army. From the opening chase scene, their credentials and lunacy is established and the movie never lets you down from there. Their craziness, camaraderie and good cheer is infectious – and you can make out that the four actors are having a lot of fun.

For the alpha-team in the movie however, things don’t go so smooth and soon they are framed for something they didn’t do. Dismissed from the army and incarcerated in prison, they must get back together to prove their innocence and expose the villains. The plot is as hackneyed as they come, but the scriptwriters have mixed the stunts with the story in perfect measure. So every 3 minutes you have one kickass stunt or some cool explosions – or usually both.

Most other big budget explosion fests (like the terrible Transformers 2) concentrate on creating spectacular setpieces, but fail to involve the viewer in the rest of the movie. The A-Team however draws you into these four guys – the cigar-chewing Captain, the dimpled-smile womanizer ‘Face’, the hotrod-worshipping Bosco and the nutcase pilot keep an impossible banter going. Especially Murdock and Bosco – its just impossible not to laugh at their antics. And which is why the A-team is a recommended fun watch

Sure its not for the cerebral types – but if you are looking for some harmless fun, this is definitely the movie to watch.


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Movies to look out for this week

The A-Team [IMDB]

A group of Iraq War veterans looks to clear their name with the U.S. military, who suspect the four men of committing a crime for which they were framed

Cast: Liam Neeson, Bradley Cooper, Jessica Biel

Direction: Joe Carnahan



Toy Story 3 [IMDB]

Woody, Buzz, and the rest of their toy-box friends are dumped in a day-care center after their owner, Andy, departs for college

Cast: Tom Hanks (voice), Tim Allen (voice), Joan Cusack (voice)

Direction: Lee Unkrich


Edge of Darkness [IMDB]

As homicide detective Thomas Craven investigates the death of his activist daughter, he uncovers not only her secret life, but a corporate cover-up and government collusion that attracts an agent tasked with cleaning up the evidence

Cast: Mel Gibson, Ray Winstone
Direction: Martin Campbell


Krantiveer : The Revolution [IMDB]

Mehul Kumar remakes his 1994 hit Nana Patekar starrer with 4 newcomers and a Rang De Basanti/Phir Bhi Dil Hai Hindustani type script

Cast: Harsh Rajput, Jahan Bloch, Sameer Aftab

Direction: Mehul Kumar

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Raavan


When the team from the fabulous 2007 movie Guru come together once again – director Mani Ratnam, Abhishek and Aishwarya – you start looking forward to another fantastic piece of cinema. Atleast I was. And then word comes that its an adaptation of Ramayana – knowing Mani Ratnam’s calibre, it just adds to the expectations - you cant wait to see his take on the epic. But as we saw two weeks back, Indian mythologicals do not lend themselves very easily to adaptation.
(Maybe we should just leave the adaptations to Vishal Bhardwaj and his school of filmmakers)

While a stellar star cast and a great cinematographer might be the strong points of the movie, the lacklustre screenplay is the weakest point – and the reason why the movie disappoints. The script never rises up to a Mani Ratnam level of cinema – it seems more like what a fresh film school graduate might write. We get the fact that SP Dev is Ram, Beera is Raavan and Ragini is Seeta – but we all have read/seen the Ramayana. Where is the thinking that makes it different from the stock Ramayana story ? Where is the magic Mani Ratnam touch ?

The only tinkering the director has made to the story is to add a bit of gray in all the three lead characters. Dev is not always morally upright, Beera has a genuine grievance and Ragini has a change of heart towards Beera. But this little ‘mirch-masala’ is not enough to spice up this otherwise boring story. Some of the literal adaptation is painful – like Dev asking Ragini to take a polygraph test!! There are little deviations here and there – like Govinda’s portrayal of Hanuman – which show flashes of what the movie could have been. But alas, the rest of the story is dull, insipid and boring. Not once in the movie do you sit up and start thinking “wow, this is really interesting”

The focus being on Raavan, Beera’s character gets a lot of screentime initially. The makers attempted to make it a maverick character – which called for a manic unpredictable performance. Unfortunately, Abhishek Bachhan is not up to the job. I found the whole crazy eye movements and the “jhika jhika” talk completely unconvincing and a put off. Vikram, who plays SP Dev comes across more passionate actor – but his role as a hard-as-nails police officer lent him only a few facial expressions to play with. I think he would make a better Beera in the tamil version. Aishwarya does Ragini reasonably well – she doesn’t emote and act all that well yet, but she looks beautiful throughout the movie.

And you do have to marvel at the numerous times she falls/tumbles in the movie. She must have picked up a LOT of bruises while doing the movie.

The litany of complaints just goes on and on. The music of the movie is very un-Rahman like. Meaning it sucked ! Apart from Behne De and Beera, the rest of the songs are bad. And the director insists on shooting only the bad songs in full !! And you might have heard that the visuals of the forests etc are breathtaking and it’s worth watching the movie for it - I didn’t think they were that good in the first place. Also, as wife put it – if beautiful forest scenery is what you want to see, you are better off watching National Geographic. The makers also fail in the detailing. Initially the location is implied to be somewhere in Madhya Pradesh, but then there are Kannada coracle boats used in some scenes. And there is a marriage sequence shown in what appears to be Rajasthan – all the women are dressed in bandhini sarees !

The only positive highlight of the movie I can think of is the climatic fighting sequence on a bridge. Both Abhishek and Vikram show real passion in the fight – and it’s picturised superbly. The ending is the only real deviation from the stock Ramayana story – but even that fails to excite..

Raavan is then a failure on all counts – it’s not engaging, the acting is unconvincing and the music is disappointing. It is not the worst movie on an absolute scale definitely – just that the expectations were raised too high and it failed to meet them spectacularly.


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Movies to look out for this week


Raavan [IMDB]

A bandit leader kidnaps the wife of the policeman who killed his sister, but later falls in love with her. A modern day Ramayan

Cast: Abhishek Bachchan, Aishwarya Rai, Vikram, Govinda

Direction: Mani Ratnam


Spread [IMDB]

A sex comedy centered on a serial womanizer and his jilted lover

Cast: Ashton Kutcher, Anne Heche

Direction: David Mackenzie



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Movies to look out for this week

Robin Hood [IMDB]

The story of an archer in the army of Richard Coeur de Lion who fights against the Norman invaders and becomes the legendary hero known as Robin Hood

Cast: Russel Crowe, Cate Blanchett, Mark Strong

Direction: Ridley Scott


Sex and the City 2 [IMDB]

While wrestling with the pressures of life, love, and work in Manhattan, Carrie, Miranda, and Charlotte join Samantha for a trip to Morocco, where Samantha's ex is filming a new movie

Cast: Sarah Jessica Parker, Kristin Davis, Kim Catrall
Direction: Michael Patrick King


The Karate Kid [IMDB]

Work causes a single mother to move to China with her young son; in his new home, the boy embraces kung fu, taught to him by a master

Cast: Jackie Chan, Jaden Smith

Direction: Harald Zwart


Ek Second .... Jo Zindagi Badal De [IMDB]

Remake of 1998 movie Sliding Doors, it shows two parallel lives of Rashi - one who misses a train by a few seconds and the other one who catches it

Cast: Jackie Shroff, Manisha Koirala, Rozza Catalano

Direction: Partho Ghosh

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Shutter Island


Martin Scorcese once again delivers a gripping movie that is difficult to take eyes off. Intense, and scary in parts, Shutter Island takes an old story and makes it into a good movie – a sort of a guide to junior directors as to how a thriller should be executed. The only times you might take your eyes off the screen is if you are one of the easily-scared – because a few sequences seem right out of a horror movie. The pace wears off a bit towards the end, but the overall experience is still good.

The director actor combination of Scorcese-Di Caprio is formidable (Departed, Aviator) and they don’t disappoint here as well. Leonardo Di Caprio does great in the role of a suspicious US Marshal – who along with his partner Mark Ruffalo – is investigating the escape of a murder convict from a hospital of the criminally insane. The mental asylum-prison set on an island in the outer Boston Harbor – and the only way to escape is through a boat.

Soon after their arrival, a cyclone lashes the island – complicating matters with an already enigmatic hospital staff – led by the inscrutable Ben Kingley. Di Caprio has his own personal demons to battle as well – how he fares in his quest is the story of Shutter Island.

While the treatment of the story is exemplary – making you question any and everything – as a thriller should, the end could have been a little tighter. Maybe even an alternative ending could have been used. But the director makes up for it by ending the movie on an enigmatic note – the last dialogue from Di Caprio could mean a number of things – its for the viewer to decide

The somewhat weak ending (and an old story) robs the otherwise excellent movie of some of it sheen. Shutter Island may not be one of the director’s greatest works, but its still a very enjoyable watch – definitely better than the over-hyped Raajneeti.

3 star
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Raajneeti


Prakash Jha’s name usually evokes images from the hard-hitting Gangaajal (and the underrated but equally hard-hitting Apaharan) – which shows a very realistic image of the Northern heartland – a man who has his pulse of the ‘cowbelt’. Both these movies, apart from mirroring the socio-political scenario of Bihar/UP, were impressive for the strong roots in reality. No flashy stars, no foreign locales – but the movies had a soul in them. So in his latest magnum opus, choc-a-bloc with big stars (Ajay Devgan, Ranbir Kapoor, Katrina Kaif etc), you expect nothing less than awesome.

And for a while, he does hold your interest – esp in the frenetic first 20-30 min where the entire political first family of an unnamed state is introduced. There are two brothers, Bhanu Pratap the ex-CM and the Chandra Pratap the organizer. Bhanu’s son is Manoj Bajpai and Chandra Pratap’s sons are Arjun Rampal and Ranbir. Both the elder sons have an eye firmly on that party president and hence the CM’s seat. So when Bhanu Pratap falls ill, all hell breaks loose in the family. What begins as a Machiavellian game between the two warring factions, explodes into a full scale war in the second half.

For a while, the Mahabharat structure of the story seems very interesting – there is a clear Karna, Duryodhana, Yudhisthir and Arjun. A Krishna substitute Brij Gopal is there – and so is a paralysed Dhritarashtra. There is also a Godfather twist to the story in – Sonny and Michael Corleone. But soon the novelty wears off and you start getting restless at the pace of the movie. The movie reaches a peak interest level just before the intermission. Unfortunately, after that the movie literally crashes and burns.

What works for the movie is the interesting Mahabharat setup in politics, the real-life chess game played by both sides. Acting is decent all around except the usual suspect – Katrina Kaif, who is terrible in the first half - and debutante Nihila Trikha in the second half. Arjun Rampal is a little inconsistent – he does the role well overall, but I couldn’t shake off the nagging feeling that a more earthy actor like Kay Kay Menon or Atul Kulkarni would have suited the role more.

Things that don’t work for this movie are quite a few
- The length : At a little over 3 hours, the movie drags on at a lot of places. Esp in the latter half, where there were a lot of groans from the audience for “khatam kar”
- The screenplay : from a crawling but still sensible first half, the story becomes a literal ‘yudh’ in the second half, racking up a ludicrous body count. Realistic, my ass !!
- The dialogues : they are plain ridiculous. Using the Mahabharat analogy is cool – using the same dialogues is not! The movie is full of arcane shudh-hindi dialogues that will be completely Greek to the generation born after the tv serial. When was the last time you heard the statement “tum mere jeshtha putra ho” – or the term “aadarneey karyakari adhyaksh mahoday” 5 times in 2 min? I am sure even Mulayam Singh uses the term General Secretary in his daily life rather than “party mahasachiv”

So Raajneeti, despite the filmmaker’s reputation and taking inspiration from various stories like the Mahabharat, the Godfather and Sonia Gandhi’s own life - turns out to be as unrealistic as, say, Madhur Bhandarkar’s Fashion. The usage of pure Sanskrit-ised hindi in today’s times is just silly and the sequence of events in the second half make the entire movie appear quite harebrained. I mean if killing off multiple CM candidates is so easy to get away with, why bother with using any politics in the first place ? Just hire an army of goons and assault the bugger anywhere.

So a thumbs down for Raajneeti and a recommendation to catch something else this weekend – I hear Shutter Island has a great rating on IMDB ...



PS : Four out of Prakash Jha's last five movies - Raajneeti, Apaharan, Gangaajal, and Dil Kya Kare (1999) - all have Ajay Devgan in the lead
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Movies to look out for this week

Raajneeti [IMDB]

Prakash Jha combines elements of Mahabharat and The Godfather in this story about Indian politics

Cast: Ranbir Kapoor, Katrina Kaif, Ajay Devgan, Manoj Bajpai, Nana Patekar, Arjun Rampal

Direction: Prakash Jha


Shutter Island [IMDB]

Drama is set in 1954, U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels is investigating the disappearance of a murderess who escaped from a hospital for the criminally insane and is presumed to be hiding on the remote Shutter Island

Cast: Leonardo Di Caprio, Ben Kingsley
Direction: Martin Scorcese


A Nightmare on Elm Street [IMDB]

A re-imagining of the horror icon Freddy Krueger, a serial-killer who wields a glove with four blades embedded in the fingers and kills people in their dreams, resulting in their real death in reality.

Cast: Jackie Earle Haley, Kyle Gallner
Direction: Samuel Bayer

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Prince of Persia : The Sands of Time


Prince of Persia : The Sand of Time is immensely enjoyable movie. Neither a classic, nor pathbreaking – but packed with the right bits of visuals, action, performance and CGI – it is movie pulsating with energy. From the time Dastan is a young street urchin in the Nasaf, to becoming a prince of Persia and then to a fugitive – the movie sets a swift pace. The lead pair of Jake Gyllenhaal and Gemma Arterton have a good chemistry between themselves. And the story isn’t entirely predictable.

The action sequences were nicely shot – especially the parkour scenes - the chase sequences over rooftops and climbing fort walls with the help of arrows. Maybe it could have used a few more laughs – but then it would have slowed down the narrative.

You should consider watching this movie if you enjoyed the fantasy-action genre - like 300, say. It is missing the blood and gore - it’s a Disney production after all - but its similar fun. The plot is not too stupid (there are a couple of surprises there), the pace is frenetic, the actors are pretty decent and Alfred Molina manages to evoke laughs too. A perfect summer holiday movie – and I will definitely catch the sequel whenever it comes out.


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