First Day First Show | Kannada cinema roundtable, ‘Priscilla’ review

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Around tinsel town

Netflix releases first-ever viewership engagement report

Rana Naidu, the Hindi-Telugu crime series starring Rana Daggubati and Venkatesh, is the most viewed Indian title globally on Netflix, according to viewership figures disclosed for the first time by the streamer. Netflix disclosed rankings based on hour views for 18,000 titles. Meanwhile, the streaming giant bowed down to censorship and stopped streaming uncut Indian films globally.

Brahmaputra Valley Film Festival returns to celebrate cinema from the Northeast

The 8th edition of the Brahmaputra Valley Film Festival kick-started on Thursday with a grand opening ceremony at the Jyoti Chitrabon Film Studio in Guwahati, Assam. The festival began with a special screening of the Hindi crime drama Kooki, directed by Pranab Deka. It will end on December 17 with the screening of Footprints on Water starring Adil Hussain and directed by Nathalia Syam.

Bollywood

Shah Rukh Khan’s ‘Jawan’ is most searched Indian film on Google in 2023

Actor Shreyas Talpade suffers heart attack after ‘Welcome to the Jungle’ shoot, undergoes angioplasty

Shah Rukh Khan tops UK’s 2023 South Asian celebrity list

Wamiqa Gabbi begins shooting for her film with Varun Dhawan

Disney+ Hotstar announces Raveena Tandon’s series ‘Karmma Calling’

Vidyut Jammwal’s sports action film ‘Crakk’ to release in theatres on this date

‘Killer Soup’, starring Manoj Bajpayee and Konkona Sensharma, gets premiere date

Hollywood

‘Barbie’ leads Golden Globes nominations with 9, ‘Oppenheimer’ follows closely

Greta Gerwig to serve as jury president at 2024 Cannes Film Festival

Andre Braugher, Emmy-winning actor starred in ‘Homicide’ and ‘Brooklyn Nine-Nine’, dies at 61

Trevor Noah to host the 2024 Grammy Awards for the fourth year in a row

‘Saw XI’ officially announced at Lionsgate; to release on September 27, 2024

Christian Bale, Bradley Cooper reunite for spy thriller ‘Best of Enemies’

Christopher Abbott replaces Ryan Gosling in ‘Wolf Man

‘Good Omens’ renewed for Season 3

A24 and Kojima Productions to adapt live-action ‘Death Stranding’ movie

Charlize Theron, Daniel Craig to star in ‘Two For The Money’

Regional

‘Vettaiyan’ is the title of Rajinikanth’s ‘Thalaivar 170’ with TJ Gnanavel

Soori and Anna Ben’s ‘Kottukkaali’ to be the first Tamil film to premiere at Berlin International Film Festival

Clint Eastwood promises to watch ‘Jigarthanda Double X’; Karthik Subbaraj and team react

Vignesh Shivan and Pradeep Ranganathan team up for ‘LIC’

Samantha Ruth Prabhu launches production house Tralala Moving Pictures

Dhanush wraps up ‘D 50’, his second directorial

Actor Redin Kingsley marries television actor Sangeetha V

Biju Menon, Asif Ali’s next with Jis Joy titled ‘Thalaivan’

Documentary on ‘Naatu Naatu’ lyricist Chandrabose wins award

Adivi Shesh and Shruti Haasan team up for an action drama

Siddhu Jonnalagadda-Bommarillu Bhaskar’s ‘SVCC 37’ goes on floors

Siddharth to voice the alien in Sivakarthikeyan’s ‘Ayalaan’

International Film Festival of Kerala (IFFK)

Amid IFFK, open revolt in Kerala State Chalachitra Academy against chairman Ranjith

Prasanna Vithanage’s ‘Paradise’ lands as an unexpected punch in the gut

Shalini Ushadevi uses a sci-fi setting to explore the changing shades of a relationship in ‘Ennennum’

Don Palathara’s ‘Family’ clinically uncovers the hidden dark spots in an idyllic community

After-effects of Pinochet’s dictatorship still being felt, says Chilean filmmaker

It took a small village to make Jayant Digambar Somalkar’s ‘Sthal’

‘Terrestrial Verses’ shows ordinary Iranians navigate repression in daily lives

Being recognised for taking the next right step is a genuine honour, says Kenyan filmmaker Wanuri Kahiu

Trailers

In ‘Civil War’ trailer, Kristen Dunst roams a fractured America

Mohanlal, Jeethu Joseph promise a riveting legal thriller in ‘Neru’ trailer

‘Curry & Cyanide – The Jolly Joseph Case’ documentary trailer throws light on the Koodathayi murders

Ryan Reynolds and Cailey Fleming save imaginary creatures in John Krasinski’s ‘IF’ trailer

In ‘Dry Dry’ trailer, Jitendra Kumar leads a comic satire on alcoholism

‘Kho Gaye Hum Kahan’ trailer promises a tale of friendship and social media

New in Streaming

New on Netflix this December: Zack Snyder’s Rebel Moon – Part One: A Child of Fire, a space opera film, coming-of-age drama Kho Gaye Hum Kahan, Trevor Noah’s comedy special Trevor Noah: Where Was I, and more.

Coming to Apple TV+: Henry Cavill, Dua Lipa starrer Argylle, Ben Mendelsohn, Juliette Binoche starrer The New Look, Mark Wahlberg’s action comedy The Family Plan, and more

New on Amazon Prime Video this week: The Telugu investigative crime series Vyooham, the docuseries on Hindi TV and film industry, First Act, Second season of Reacher, and more.

New on Disney+ Hotstar in December: Season 2 of Marvel’s superhero series What if…?, live-action series based on books by Rick Riordan, Percy Jackson and the Olympians, and more.

Essential reading

1) ‘The Archies’ and India: Whose nostalgia is it?

>> If Zoya Akhtar’s film, an adaptation of the American comic book series, is supposed to be a rose-tinted view of a bygone era, it still begs the question of whose history is being celebrated

2) The Hindu’s Kannada cinema roundtable: Nithin Krishnamurthy, Rukmini Vasanth, Sindhu Sreenivasa Murthy and Shashank Soghal on their achievements this year

>> The four artistes open up on their respective films, their changing perception of the Kannada film industry, and how world cinema has shaped their filmmaking sensibilities

3) BVFF festival director Tanushree Hazarika on how BVFF is a valley of hope for cinematic voices from the Northeast

>> She talks about the new developments from this year’s festival and how a bunch of small steps end up making a huge positive impact

4) Malayalam film ‘Jananam 1947, Pranayam Thudarunnu,’ is a heartwarming story of love in the sunset years

>> Abhijit Asokan’s film is a story about the craving for companionship experienced by two senior citizens

5) Ji Chang Wook and Shin Hae Sun on their chemistry in ‘Welcome To Samdal-ri’

>> The actors talk about doing a warm and relaxing romantic comedy, their love for Rajkumar Hirani’s ‘3 Idiots’, and what K-content’s global explosion means for performers

6) Walk down memory lane with ‘The Archies’

>> If you are from a generation that read the Archie comics, then the props in ‘The Archies’ film are bound to make you nostalgic

7) Leelavathi, a star of 1960s who paved the way for many women to follow

>> The legendary Kannada actress’s screen chemistry with thespian Dr. Rajkumar is one of the high points in the history of Kannada cinema

8) Visually-challenged Ashtaman Pillai makes his debut as a playback singer in Malayalam cinema

>> He has sung the track ‘Choodarum’ from Cheena Trophy, composed by Sooraj Santhosh and Varkey

9) An account from the 54th International Film Festival of India

>> A look at the kind of films which where shown at the festival and the political, social and economic themes these movies touched upon

What to watch

1) ‘Priscilla’ is Sofia Coppola’s giddy swirl through the dream and nightmare of celebrity

Read the full review here

2) ‘Fight Club’, starring Vijay Kumar, is all style and very little substance

Read the full review here

3) ‘Kannagi’ is a middling emotional tale about four women

Read the full review here

4) Mark Wahlberg’s ‘The Family Plan’ derails off course all too soon

Read the full review here

5) ‘Reacher’ Season 2 is double the action, twice the fun

Read the full review here

6) ‘Mast Mein Rehne Ka’ is a low-rent delight

Read the full review here

7) Julia Roberts’ ‘Leave the World Behind’ is an apocalyptic chiller that’s leisurely and lethal

Read the full review here

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The Hindu’s Kannada cinema roundtable: Nithin Krishnamurthy, Rukmini Vasanth, Sindhu Sreenivasa Murthy and Shashank Soghal on their achievements this year

“You make your first film only once. You can do it the way you want. Once you get past it, you get into the business aspect of cinema, and that’s when the artistic side begins to die. There are chances of you losing your innocence,” says director Nithin Krishnamurthy, during The Hindu’s Kannada cinema roundtable. It is with this innocence that all the participants of the roundtable — Nithin (director, Hostel Hudugaru Bekagiddare), Sindhu Sreenivasa Murthy (director, Aachar & Co), Rukmini Vasanth (actor, Sapta Sagaradaache Elloand Shashank Soghal (director, Daredevil Musthafa) — were able to emerge as some of the unique talents from the Kannada film industry in 2023.

Sindhu grew up watching Anant Nag’s ‘Ganesha series’. “The protagonist was a grey character in those films. It was interesting that the hero was not a larger-than-life figure. But I felt the production value of Kannada films could go up, as they lacked aesthetics,” she observes. Sindhu’s Aachar & Co, a family drama set in Bengaluru of the 60s and 70s, was propelled by striking set designs and cinematography. It felt like watching a Wes Anderson film, as observed by critics and cinephiles.

Sindhu Sreenivasa Murthy in ‘Aachar & Co’.

A Wes Anderson touch

“What I enjoyed in Wes Anderson films is that he leaves his stamp in all his works. You watch any film of his, and you know it bears his signature. He puts a lot of attention into the music, costumes, and cinematography. I love that he tries to create a unique experience. Even when it comes to his humour, you don’t see the rolling-on-the-floor laughing type of moments in his films. The comedy is very awkward, and many in-between moments are funny,” she describes.

Nithin, who ensures he watches one film every day, adores Edgar Wright and Upendra. As he aspired to be a filmmaker, he missed genre-specific entertainers in Kannada. 

“I felt filmmakers tried to offer us wholesome entertainers. But we needed more serious entertainers. You can make an entertainer in the violent genre like Quentin Tarantino does,” says Nithin. His idiosyncratic Hostel Hudugaru Bekagiddare, a rip-roaring comedy on what unfolds one night at a hostel, pays homage to all his favourite filmmakers even as it stays interesting with hand-held cinematography and dialogues that sound spontaneous.

A still from ‘Hostel Hudugaru Bekagiddare’.

A still from ‘Hostel Hudugaru Bekagiddare’.
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

Influence of theatre

Shashank is a stage actor and loves watching plays. “You learn the nuances of cinema through theatre,” he says. An avid reader, his Daredevil Musthafa was adapted from Poornachandra Tejaswi’s short story, a college drama with a message of communal harmony. Shashank says that he had a complex over Kannada films during his college days. “My friends would tease me because many remakes were made in Kannada back then. A Cyanide or Lucia would come out rarely. In that sense, I would say I learnt a lot from bad films.”

ALSO READ:A Daredevil story: How a rookie Kannada film team excelled in promotions

Meanwhile, Rukmini is basking in the success of the two-part Sapta Sagaradaache Ello (SSE Side A & Side B). Growing up, She missed watching intense love stories in Kannada. “I didn’t like that the love angle was just part of our films. We would hardly see filmmakers exploring a love story in its entirety.”

Rakshit Shetty and Rukmini Vasanth in ‘Sapta Sagaradaache Ello’ (Side A).

Rakshit Shetty and Rukmini Vasanth in ‘Sapta Sagaradaache Ello’ (Side A).
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

The actress is now busy managing her shoots for three films (An untitled film with Vijay Sethupathi, Bhairathi Ranagal with Shivarajkumar, and Hombale Films’ Bagheera). She describes this phase as a blessed one. “After having no work for three years, I was like “come at me”. I wanted more work. I had to prove myself. I am not letting this busy period overpower me,” she says. 

The Kannada audience would want to see more of Rukmini even as she has just completed her first Tamil film. “I don’t want to limit myself to one language. Also, working in another language has shown me the level of command I am capable of in Kannada. My grasp of Tamil isn’t great. So this is a challenge I want to crack, but at the same time, there is no question of not continuing in my home ground, which is Kannada,” she explains.

Sindhu Sreenivasa Murthy, Shashank Soghal, Rukmini Vasanth and Nithin Krishnamurthy ahead of the roundtable.

Sindhu Sreenivasa Murthy, Shashank Soghal, Rukmini Vasanth and Nithin Krishnamurthy ahead of the roundtable.
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement.

Each of the artistes was part of a distinct film and had to overcome challenges specific to their projects. Sindhu opens up on making a film with an almost all-woman team. “It wasn’t an intentional decision. It started with getting Bindhumalini on board, along with her knowledge of Carnatic music and jazz. Suddenly we realised that it’s almost an all-woman team; Ashwini (Puneeth Rajkumar) ma’am was producing it. We got Hema ma’am as the sound engineer, Inchara Suresh as the costume designer, and Dannilla Correya as our creative producer. I loved the fact that their attention to detail was fantastic. These women were very patient and empathetic human beings as well,” she says.

Politically-relevant theme

Making a film on a politically-relevant theme, Shashank was extremely nervous till the release of Daredevil Musthafa. “The film’s premiere show gave me the chills. I didn’t know how people would react. I didn’t make this film because the story was political. When I read the story, it changed my world view. I just wanted to make an honest film, and eventually, I was happy with how the people of Karnataka responded to it,” he admits.

ALSO READ:Understanding the deliberate pacing of Kannada films ‘Toby’ and ‘SSE (Side A)‘

A stillf from ‘Daredevil Musthafa’.

A stillf from ‘Daredevil Musthafa’.
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

Rukmini adds that she took away many learnings from SSE. “Based on my experience from SSE (Side B), I realised that, unlike in theatre, I don’t need to do the heavy lifting in films. Your cinematographer, the editor, or the music director can push the narrative. When I was shooting for (SSE Side B), my director, Hemanth Rao, realised I was pushing myself a lot. The story is from the male protagonist’s perspective. I had to stay blank in most of the scenes. It’s a difficult task to act with a blank face, because you feel you aren’t doing anything. You have to take the burden off yourself and tell yourself that other aspects of filmmaking will take care of the proceedings.”

Nithin’s film broke the traditional rules of filmmaking. “I was worried that film-goers, who prefer a simple cinema-watching experience, would find it hard to comprehend my movie. But, maybe because of the exposure on films people have through OTT platforms and the fact that they are eager to watch fresh content, they loved my film,” he points out. All four artistes conclude that they are keen to put out quality work consistently to stay relevant in the industry.

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