First Day First Show | Alia Bhatt interview, Berlinale 2024 highlights

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Around Tinsel Town

>> Berlinale 2024 highlights

The 74th edition of the Berlin International Film Festival (known as Berlinale) was held from February 15 to 24. Here are a few highlights from the star-studded festival:

> Cillian Murphy shoulders a society’s shame in festival opener ‘Small Things Like These’

> Mexican-U.S. drama ‘La Cocina’ finds love and loneliness in New York kitchen

> ‘My Favourite Cake’ Iranian directors say they were ‘forbidden’ to join Berlin premiere

> Sebastian Stan: Wearing prosthetics for ‘Different Man’ was ‘eye opening’

> Telugu star Allu Arjun hints at ‘Pushpa 3’

> Gael Garcia Bernal explores mind vs body in sci-fi ‘Another End’

> Anna Ben, Soori’s ‘Kottukkaali’ premieres at fest

.> Martin Scorsese ponders switch from gangsters to Jesus

> Lena Dunham and Stephen Fry connect with their Jewish heritage in ‘Treasure’

>> BAFTA 2024 highlights: ‘Oppenheimer,’ ‘Poor Things’ win big

The 77th British Academy Film Awards was held in London on Sunday. The event saw the Atom bomb epic ‘Oppenheimer’ win seven prizes, including best picture, director and actor, cementing its front-runner status for the Oscars next month. Gothic fantasy ‘Poor Things’ took five prizes and Holocaust drama ‘The Zone of Interest’ won three.

Here are a few highlights from the event:

> Here’s the complete list of winners

> Matthew Perry to be honoured at TV awards after academy faces backlash

> Deepika Padukone presents Jonathan Glazer with award for Best Film not in the English language

>> Prime Video, Sony Pictures Television launch Stream for viewers in India

Prime Video has entered a distribution agreement with Sony Pictures Television (SPT), a division of Sony Pictures Entertainment (SPE), to launch an add-on subscription on the streamer for viewers in India. Sony Pictures – Stream will offer SPE’s movies and shows on Prime Video Channels and its subscribers for an add-on introductory annual subscription of Rs 399.

Bollywood

Shah Rukh Khan, Sandeep Reddy Vanga win at Dadasaheb Phalke International Film Festival Awards 2024

‘Dangal’ child star Suhani Bhatnagar dies at 19; actor Sanya Malhotra pays tribute

Varun Dhawan, Janhvi Kapoor to star in ‘Sunny Sanskari Ki Tulsi Kumari’

Kareena Kapoor Khan, Tabu, Kriti Sanon’s ‘Crew’ to release on this date

Kiara Advani joins the cast of Farhan Akhtar-Ranveer Singh’s ‘Don 3’; Emraan Hashmi denies casting rumours

Triptii Dimri joins Kartik Aaryan’s ‘Bhool Bhulaiyaa 3’

Actor Vidya Balan complains of attempts to impersonate her to cheat people; FIR registered

Onir’s ‘Pine Cone’ to be screened at the BFI Flare: London LGBTQIA+ Film Festival

Rohit Saraf, Pashmina Roshan’s romantic drama ‘Ishq Vishk Rebound’ release date announced

‘Anupamaa’ actor Rituraj Singh dies at 59

Hollywood

‘Barbie’, Taylor Swift win big at People’s Choice Awards 2024; Jeremy Renner graces stage post accident

Jason Reitman and Hollywood’s most prominent directors buy beloved Village Theatre in Los Angeles

Negligence or scapegoating? Trial of ‘Rust’ armorer begins in fatal shooting by Alec Baldwin

Christopher Nolan open to making a horror film if it’s an ‘exceptional idea’

Martin Scorsese to appear as Dante Alighieri’s mentor in ‘In the Hands of Dante’

HBO renews ‘True Detective’ for Season 5

‘John Wick’ spinoff ‘Ballerina’ pushed to 2025

Sam Mendes to direct four Beatles films, one for each band member

Glen Powell to headline Hulu comedy series ‘Chad Powers’

Asif Kapadia to direct Prime Video doc on Roger Federer

Gareth Edwards to direct new ‘Jurassic World’ film

Regional cinema

First look of ‘Raayan,’ Dhanush’s 50th film, out; SJ Suryaj, Selvaraghavan join cast

Jr NTR’s ‘Devara: Part 1’ release pushed to October

Actor Trisha sends defamation notice to former AIADMK functionary A.V. Raju

Prithviraj Sukumaran-Blessy’s ‘The Goat Life’ gets a new release date

‘Kaatera’ hit combination Darshan-Tharun Sudhir to collaborate again

Gautham Menon’s ‘Joshua Imai Pol Kaakha’ gets a new release date

Riteish Deshmukh to direct and act in a film on Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj

First look poster of Vineeth Sreenivasan’s ‘Oru Jaathi Jaathakam’ out

Mammootty’s ‘Turbo’ wraps up production

Prakash Raj to present Kannada festival hit ‘Photo’

‘Bangalore Days’ director Anjali Menon joins hands with KRG Studios for her next

World cinema

Tom Cruise to star in Alejandro Iñárritu’s new film

‘Poor Things’ director Yorgos Lanthimos to helm remake of Korean fantasy comedy ‘Save the Green Planet’

French actors denounce abuse by directors when they were teenagers in new #MeToo step

Bong Joon-ho’s ‘Mickey 17’, starring Robert Pattinson, gets new release date

‘Suzume’, ‘Your Name’ producer Koichiro Ito arrested on child pornography charges

Trailers

Cate Blanchett and crew go on an epic adventure in trailer of lavish video-game adaptation ‘Borderlands’

R Madhavan, Ajay Devgn clash in trailer of the diabolical horror-thriller ‘Shaitaan’

‘Operation Valentine’ trailer shows Varun Tej in combat mode

Trailer of Alex Garland’s ‘Civil War’ depicts a fractured America in the throes of a fresh civil war

Sidharth Malhotra grounds hi-jackers in teaser of action thriller ‘Yodha’

Trailer of ‘Shirley’ shows Regina King play the fearless and fierce Shirley Chisholm

Arun Vijay is intensity personified in teaser of director Bala’s actioner ‘Vanangaan’

Essential reading

1) Alia Bhatt on why she entered the world of ‘Poacher’ and her love for wildlife

>> Along with Richie Mehta, Roshan Mathew and Dibyendu Bhattacharya, she talks about how the web series is entertaining yet relevant

2) Varun Tej on ‘Operation Valentine’: War-based films are rare in Telugu

>> The actor also addresses comparisons with ‘Fighter’ and his learnings from a decade in cinema 

3) Jayaprakash Radhakrishnan on tackling a queer romance in ‘Kaadhal Enbadhu Podhuudamai’

>> The filmmaker, whose film focuses on a queer relationship between two women, explains why romance seems to be a common theme in his films

4) ‘Bramayugam’ director Rahul Sadasivan: Creating a believable setting was important

>> The filmmaker talks about the filmmaking process and how veteran actor Mammootty surprised him with his performance

5) Unveiling the shift: Tamil cinema and its tryst with multi-starrers

>> The influence of pan-Indian films, the rise of OTTs, and upcoming star films highlight the evolving landscape of multi-starrers in the Tamil film industry

6) Chennai gets a 360-degree immersive dome theatre

>> At India’s first 360-degree super immersive dome theatre, Sun Dance by Casagrand, characters and locations come to life

What to watch

1) Yami Gautam steers an explainer on the government’s Kashmir policy in ‘Article 370’

Read the full review here

2) Varun Grover’s directorial debut, ‘All India Rank,’ is delicate but familiar

Read the full review here

3) With ‘Manjummel Boys,’ Chidambaram pulls off an immaculately-crafted survival thriller

Read the full review here

4) ‘Sundaram Master’ is an imperfect but earnest indie film that makes a plea to live a little more consciously

Read the full review here

5) Park Min-young and Song Ha-yoon are the stars of ‘Marry My Husband,’ a chaotic revenge thriller

Read the full review here

6) Milana Nagaraj, Pruthvi Ambaar are wasted in ‘For Regn,’ a shallow relationship drama

Read the full review here

7) ‘The New Look’ is as beautiful as it is meandering and morose

Read the full review here

8) Jodie Foster and Issa López revitalise an iconic show with a new perspective in ‘True Detective: Night Country’

Read the full review here

9) Rangayana Raghu, Gopalkrishna Deshpande power a clever crime drama in ‘Shakhahaari’

Read the full review here

10) ‘Bob Marley: One Love’ is an opaque biopic elevated by Kingsley Ben-Adir’s performance

Read the full review here

11) Russell Crowe has a blast in ‘Land of Bad,’ a mostly-engaging actioner

Read the full review here

12) Surya Vasishta presents a gentle, interesting take on life and ambitions in ‘Saramsha’

Read the full review here

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‘Article 370’ Review: Yami Gautam-starrer Is High on Action, Low on Nuance

Article 370 ends with a choice pick of headlines, showing Kashmir as a Utopia after the abrogation of Article 370 that accorded special status to Jammu & Kashmir. This neatly ties up the politics of the entire film and the half-hearted attempt at nuance. 

A still from Article 370.

The film, at first, is led by two women – intelligence officer Zooni Haksar (Yami Gautam Dhar) and the joint secretary in the Prime Minister’s office Rajeshwari (Priya Mani). They both believe that abrogation of Article 370 will solve all of Kashmir’s problems – we never get any acknowledgment of actual dissent; everything is easily conflated with terrorism and ‘misguided youth’ (something like the Palestinian intifada could happen here, a character warns, with little to no effort to actually delve into what that means). 

The word ‘stone-pelter’ is frequently thrown around and accusations of them being ‘paid’ come soon after. But this is, after all, a fictional film as the disclaimer tells you. That is probably why a journalist can fearlessly question the ruling party without any fear of repercussions (India ranked 161 of 180 in 2023 in the Press Freedom Index). 

A still from Article 370.

There is one scene where an elderly man asks Zooni to not punish the entirety of Kashmir for the actions of a few – an interesting commentary against collective punishment rears its head only to get lost in the rest of the film’s politics. To its credit, the film frequently points out that civilians shouldn’t be harmed – that their safety is paramount. Whatever the ground reality be, the sentiment is sound. 

But, I digress. Zooni is as you would expect her to be in the political-action-thriller genre – she flouts her superior’s orders and carries out a raid that ends in the encounter of a militant Burhan Wani. His death triggers violence in the valley but the only thing Zooni regrets doing is ‘returning the body’. You would think that at this point we would get glimpses of the people of Jammu & Kashmir – well, keep wishing.

A still from Article 370.

Rajeshwari meets Zooni and believes that she is the best person to lead the mission to ensure that the abrogation of Article 370 does not lead to unrest in the valley. She does, of course, have personal stakes in the abrogation – she blames the special status provision for the lack of investigation into a scam that led to her father’s death. Does the film try to examine how this makes her a non-objective narrator? 

A still from Article 370.

Article 370’s strength doesn’t come from an understanding of its subject. Instead, it comes from the way the film is made. Seeing two women in power navigate what is clearly a high-stakes mission is interesting – it also helps that both actors are clearly giving their best. The film, directed by Aditya Suhas Jambhale, gives its female characters their due – they are given the space to be the heroes of their own story (for the most part). 

There is no space for them to rely on their male counterparts or unnecessary segues into love stories – they’re just incredibly powerful women on a mission. Like the film’s producer Aditya Dhar’s directorial Uri, Article 370 is well-made, the hammy background score aside. It makes the paperwork seem as interesting as the action sequences, the camera constantly on the move to properly capture it all. 

A still from Article 370.

Considering that the film is clearly a celebration of the Article 370 abrogation, there is little to no stakes to worry about though (and stakes are something you wish to see in a ‘fictional film’ such as this). When Zooni and her team enter rooms, armed and ready, no matter how many guns blaze and no matter how many shells litter the floor, you know who will emerge victorious. 

A librarian who views two people with skepticism will obviously keep taking them at their word…right? It all feels too convenient even as the background score pushes you to sit at the edge of your seat. Mostly, the film’s dialogues are devoid of the jingoism we’ve come to expect from the genre if the past few films have been any indication. The acting too, holds the film together.

Yami Gautam’s character Zooni, a Kashmiri Pandit, has her own emotional connection to the valley. As part of the mission, she now also has professional stakes there. The way the actor balances these two aspects of her character is commendable.

Through her, the film does attempt to take a look at the merits and demerits of back-channel diplomacy. Article 370 also doesn’t go down the route of using double agents for shock value – instead it attempts to look at the mechanism. Separatist movements are touched upon and local political leadership is questioned but this questioning lens never shifts to Delhi. But it is still one of the other few instances where the film uses nuance. 

A still from Article 370.

Once lookalikes of the Prime Minister and the Home Minister (mostly unnamed characters played by Arun Govil and Kiran Karmakar respectively) enter the screen, we find out who the real heroes of the film are. The hero worship is evident, the hagiography is imminent. To the film’s credit, the journalist Brinda Ghosh (Iravati Harshe) constantly questions the government’s decisions regarding Kashmir on prime-time (maybe the film is actually fiction huh?). She brings up human rights violations and civilian injuries from pellet guns to point out a few things.

She and the Opposition leader even get the chance to criticise the internet shutdowns in the valley, questioning where acts such as that fall in the fabric of a democracy. 

After recreating the horrific events of the Pulwama attack, an angered Zooni rushes into another intelligence operative’s office to question him about his methods. The film hints at oversight from within the intelligence ranks playing a part in the security breach. 

A still from Article 370.

There are parts in the film where it tries to dabble in complexity – from the way the character of Khawar Ali (Arjun) is written to providing moments of introspection to Zooni’s ally in the mission. 

But all of it is bulldozed by the hero worship. Even as the journalist continues to question the government’s methods, she soon becomes a character to be outsmarted for the greater good. Even as the Opposition gets a voice in the Rajya Sabha (swiftly pointing out that everyone but Kashmir is represented in the Parliament while decisions about their lives are being taken), it is clear whose side the audience is supposed to take. 

The Home Minister (in the film, of course) is given the one-liners and the punches – they’re on the winning side. Everything else is just details. 

A still from Article 370.

Article 370 does borrow heavily from real-life events (it is already clearly milking the ‘any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental’ bit to its limit). The film also has a reference to a harrowing incident from 2017 where a Kashmiri man was tied to the front of an Indian Army Jeep as a human shield. In Article 370, the man is a double agent and Zooni later soothes the officer’s conscience by assuring him that he did no wrong. 

Ah, the film’s release is probably just a coincidence isn’t it? It’s all a convenient coincidence…perhaps.

Food for thought: Have we as a country, the home to Bollywood (and now a brilliant pan-Indian pantheon of cinema), really reached a place where we think films are ‘just watched for fun’? Have we forgotten that Indian cinema was the place where filmmakers would make films about dissent, rising poverty, the cruelty of the feudal system – all because cinema matters? Can we view a film like Article 370 and ignore its messaging? Think, ponder. 

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Article 370 Movie Review: ARTICLE 370 is a gripping tale

February 23, 2024 Article 370 https://www.bollywoodhungama.com/movie/article-370/critic-review/ ARTICLE 370 is a gripping tale

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ARTICLE 370 is a gripping tale en

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Article 370 Review {3.5/5} & Review Rating

Star Cast: Yami Gautam Dhar, Priya Mani, Vaibhav Tatwawadi, Skand Thakur

Article 370 Movie Review
Article 370 Movie Review: ARTICLE 370 is a gripping tale

Director: Aditya Suhas Jambhale

Synopsis:
ARTICLE 370 is the story of two women who changed history. On July 8, 2016, Zooni Haksar (Yami Gautam Dhar) of the Intelligence Division finds out crucial information that a dreaded terrorist, Burhan (Shivam Khajuria), is hiding in Kokernag, Kashmir. She asks her senior, Khawar Ali (Raj Arjun), for permission but he instructs her to wait. Zooni chooses not to and executes the operation with the help of CRPF officer Yash Chauhan (Vaibhav Tatwawadi) and his team. Burhan is killed and it angers a section of political leaders. They provoke the youth, leading to violence in the Valley. The Intelligence Division suspends Zooni for not following orders. She is shifted to Delhi where she goes into depression. A year later, Rajeshwari Swaminathan (Priya Mani), of the PMO, approaches Zooni and invites her to lead a team in the National Investigative Agency (NIA) in Srinagar. Zooni accepts the offer though she makes it clear that all their efforts would not lead to any concrete result as long as Article 370 exists. The Union Government soon breaks the alliance with Parveena Andrabi (Divya Seth Shah) in Kashmir. They also impose President’s Rule, thus ensuring that leaders of different political parties don’t unite to form a coalition. Rajeshwari soon confesses to Zooni that the Centre plans to revoke Article 370. But they need to find a way to do so legally and at the same time, ensure that Peace is not disturbed in the Valley. What happens next forms the rest of the film.

Article 370 Movie Story Review:
Aditya Dhar and Monal Thaakar’s story, inspired by true events, is exciting. Everyone is aware that Article 370 was abrogated but no one knows how it was carried out. Aditya Dhar, Aditya Suhas Jambhale, Arjun Dhawan and Monal Thaakar’s screenplay (additional screenplay by Aarsh Vora) is gripping. The writing becomes a bit technical in places but the writers compensate for it with some entertaining and thrilling moments. Aditya Dhar, Aditya Suhas Jambhale, Arjun Dhawan and Monal Thaakar’s dialogues are powerful and clapworthy.

Aditya Suhas Jambhale’s direction is captivating. The film is 160 minutes long but doesn’t get boring or lengthy as a lot is happening every minute. The makers adopt a no-nonsense and realistic approach and it gives the film a nice touch. The first half doesn’t pack a punch, as intended, but post-interval, the film gets much better. The scene where Zooni interrogates Yakub Shaikh (Sumit Kaul) will be loved by the masses. The episode on how a crucial piece of information was deleted from a legal document is quite a shocker. Two tracks run simultaneously in the climax and both are entertaining and captivating.

On the flipside, though the makers have tried their best to simplify the narrative, a few details might be difficult to decipher. Hence, those expecting it to be a conventional entertainer might be a bit disappointed. Secondly, in places, the film gives a feeling of being one-sided and not covering all elements of the story. For instance, Article 370 was revoked for the betterment of the people of Kashmir. However, the aam junta and their hardships are never focused in the film, except for the scene of a sarpanch (Middat Ullah Khan). Lastly, the assassination attempt in the climax is nail-biting but it also raises the question of whether it actually happened in real.

Article 370 | Official Trailer | Yami Gautam Dhar, Priyamani | Jio Studios | B62 Studios

Article 370 Movie Performances: 
Yami Gautam Dhar yet again delivers a power-packed performance. In fact, this is her most accomplished performance. She is quite convincing in the action and interrogating scenes but watch out for her in the emotional scenes. The manner in which she delivers the monologue in the first half gives goosebumps. Priya Mani keeps her act restrained, as per the character requirement and is apt for the part. Vaibhav Tatwawadi is quite likeable. Raj Arjun and Skand Thakur (Wasim Abbasi) lend able support. Sumit Kaul, Salahuddin Jalal (Raj Zutshi) and Rajiv Kumar (Shamsher Abdali) leave a huge mark. Divya Seth Shah and Irawati Harshe Mayadev (Brinda Kaul) are decent. Kiran Karmarkar (Home Minister) is superb and takes the entertainment quotient of the film many notches higher. Asit Redij (Opposition leader Rohit Thapar), too, puts his best foot forward. Arun Govil (Prime Minister) is okay and it seemed like he was trying too hard. Janya Khandpur (Sabia), Middat Ullah Khan, Mohan Agashe (Jagmohan Patil) and Ashwini Koul (Zakir Naikoo) are fair.

Article 370 Movie Music and other technical aspects:
Shashwat Sachdev’s music doesn’t register. Ideally, ARTICLE 370 should have been a song-less film. But Shashwat Sachdev’s background score is kickass and very different from the usual BGMs.

Siddharth Vasani’s cinematography is breathtaking and uncomplicated in action scenes. Sujeet Subhash Sawant and Sriram Kanan Iyengar’s production design is rich. Veera Kapur Ee’s costumes are realistic yet stylish. Parvez Shaikh’s action is not gory at all. Identical Brains’s VFX is acceptable. Shivkumar V Panicker’s editing is smooth.

Article 370 Movie Conclusion:
On the whole, ARTICLE 370 is a gripping tale that attempts to depict an important chapter of India’s history in an entertaining and simple manner. At the box office, the topic of the film and the trailer has caught attention. Moreover, the film releases on a day when tickets are available for just Rs. 99. As a result, it can open strongly and emerge successful at the box office in the long run, provided it enjoys a good word of mouth.

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