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Monday 28 March 2016

HIndie Awards 2016: Best Actor [Male] in A Supporting Role [Drama]




Best Actor [Male]

in a

Supporting Role [Drama]

 

 

As with any year, the male supporting character in drama especially is littered with some fine actors and fine performances. Some make the cut, others just barely miss out. Below are the men, that just couldn't hold on till the end but deserve a mention; 

Anupam Kher and Danny Dezongpa for Baby: One brought some much needed straight faced levity while the other added a smidgen of surprising gravitas to the film, giving the Khiladi Kumar a run for his money. 

Ashish Vidyarthi for Rahasya: He wasn't part of the better of the two murder case based on reality films this year, but he was the better of two; echoing a range that has been lost since years for this underrated actor. 

Kumud Mishra for Badlapur: A former nominee in the parallel category, Mishra is a riot to watch in subtle bits but an interesting study in his final mad blowout. 

Darshan Kumar for NH10: Simmering as the villain of the piece, in a relentless pursuit he is lost; but when the film pauses for moments, Kumar manages to leave a mark. 

Kay Kay Menon and Karan Johar for Bombay Velvet: Returning to the fold of Anurag Kashyap, Menon is effective in doses as the cop on the tail of every crime. Overlooking the real and paparazzi image of Johar is difficult as the character evokes many shades of it, but in an objective sense Johar adds a nice touch to the pizazz of Bombay Velvet with some dark levity and creative emotional moments.

Rajkumar Rao for Humari Adhuri Kahaani: While his brash persona grates at times, Rao is the only saving grace of this dud film when he is left to play with his emotions. 

Sanjay Mishra for Masaan: See Ensemble Post

Rajat Kapoor for Drishyam: An apt support for Tabu, Kapoor stifled by bad dialogue still manages to turn around and be an unheard voice of reason; particularly making a statement in the final scene. 

Prakash Belawadi for Talvar: See Ensemble Post

Adil Hussain for Main aur Charles: Playing the Main in Main aur Charles, he is particularly genius in his delivery of dialogue and adds a great deadpan and dramatic point in conflict of Hooda's charismatic Charles. 

That's quite a list, with some actors who are stalwarts. So the five chosen then must be really superb. 

The HIndie Award for Best Actor [Male] in A Supporting Role [Drama], nominees are...

HIndie Awards 2016: Best Actor [Female] in A Supporting Role [Comedy/Romantic]



Best Actor [Female] 

in a 

Supporting Role [Comedy/Romantic]

 

 

It hasn't been that great a year in terms of quantity, but the quality has sure been out of this world. 

Yes there is quite a few performances in the same film that shine, or the same expected actors that leave a mark. But that mark is like one great big whollop that just immerses the viewer into the film. 

Before that, take a look at those punches that were just a little to light;

Seema Pahwa for Dum Laga Ke Haisha: A former nominee, she doesn't get to do as much this time round but in this film, she's equally hilarious when she opportunity strikes.

Zarina Wahab and Anushka Sharma for Dil Dhadakne Do: Mention in Ensemble Cast


That's it...yeah!

Anyways here are the nominees for the HIndie Award for Best Actor [Female] in A Supporting Role [Comedy/Romantic]...


HIndie Awards 2016: Best Actor [Male] in A Supporting Role [Comedy/Romantic]




Best Actor [Male]

in a 

Supporting Role [Comedy/Romantic]

 

 

The funny men of the business created an all out riot this year with some returning favorites and some newbies to shine. One star came back after a decade of mediocrity to prove that he still is a stalwart actor while the other four character actors built to their stellar resumes. 

However a few men missed out by a whisker; 

Amitabh Bachchan for Shamitabh: Utilizing his famous baritone for a film that is a meta dissection of the grand Bachchan voice and its importance in Hindi cinema history, Mr. Bachchan as ever with R. Balki, is at the top of his game. 

Sanjay Mishra for Dum Laga Ke Haisha: Playing the patriarch once more but with a slight twist, Mishra is slowly growing from strength to strength. 

Jimmy Shergill and Mohammad Zeeshan Ayub for Tanu Weds Manu Returns: Two genuine actors that add genuine moments of comedy with some genuine chemistry between their confrontations. 

Rajiv Gupta for Guddu Rangeela: As the antakshri playing dim witted cop with some slow comic timing, Gupta is a riot among other things in the tepid revenge comedy. 

Gulshan Grover for Kaun Kitne Panee Mein: The other half of the patriarch, in spades Grover echoes his much more serious and villainous side without ever going full blown over the top but always retaining a touch of humor

Shadab Kamal for Meeruthiya Gangsters: The beer bottle head bashing lunatic is an interesting silent comedic force, constantly mucking up when the pint sized fella builds a hulk sized rage. 


So there they are, and here they are; the nominees for HIndie Award Best Actor [Male] in A Supporting Role [Comedy/Romantic]...


HIndie Awards 2016: Best Actor [Female] in A Supporting Role [Drama]




Best Actor [Female]

in a

Supporting Role [Drama]

 

 

We are finally here, the section most people adore; the actors awards. This year has seen a mixed bag of winners at major Indian Awards, particularly in the acting category as usual with some shock winners in the supporting category as well. Though not that shocking. 

One of my biggest gripes is the number of times, some awards shows give one award to two people, it devalues the system of nominees and award winners greatly. 

Anyways, overlooking my gripes. Some of the key moments last year, in the evolution of progression in cinema came both from the outside and inside of film, from women. 

The much lauded speech on equality by Oscar winner Patricia Arquette, began a landslide into probing into the issues of equality for women in the cinema structure both in Hollywood and back home. 

Also, slowly but surely; Hindi cinema probed further in their focus on female oriented stories, but that also doesn't mean that certain male dominated or overall star dominated films; didn't have meaty roles for not just supporting men but women to chew on. 

The five below made staggering strides with the little time they had on screen, these other few just ran late to make the cut; 

Tapsee Panu for Baby: So she really doesn't get to act per se, but Panu is so brilliant in her subversive damsel in distress sequence, she deserves this mention. 

Huma Qureshi and Divya Dutta for Badlapur: The duo are great highlights in a film that doesn't do the women characteristic justice in great fashion. 

Raveena Tandon for Bombay Velvet: Ok so she barely has a character, but she's so fantastic as the jazz singer, she completely overshadows Anushka Sharma in a matter of minutes.  

Shweta Tripathi for Masaan: See Ensemble Cast

Shefali Shah for Brothers: The only good thing in this tepid remake, Shah is brilliant in understanding the pitch of melodrama and echoing it as best as she can

Ridhima Sud for Kajarya: I haven't seen this one yet, but heard some great things about the two performances. Sud would have been for supporting. 

So those three are it, now let's move onto the nominees for HIndie Award for Best Actor [Female] in a Supporting Role [Drama]...


Friday 25 March 2016

HIndie Awards 2016: Best Breakthrough Director




Best Breakthrough Director



My oh My, what a year it has been for young directors...so much so, that one nominee was just not enough. In fact, the situation is such that a couple of them on the fringes missed out in a big way [which I list below later]. 

Another thing to note is that any of these five especially the winner could have actually replaced any of the other five nominated for Best Director this year, they're that damn good. However, these five do not get to do that due to the new rule set. 

Anyways, before we jump right in; here are those directors that missed the cut and why...


Chaitanya Tamhane for Court: Not for the lack of trying, but how many more awards can Tamhane win? So along with his fellow directorial nominees [barring SS Rajamouli, the veteran], he misses the cut here because then it wouldn't be a competition at all. He just deserves the mention once more. 


Harshavardhan Kulkarni for Hunterrr: Tackling a quirky and lambasted subject in such a fashion, you can't help but be interested and invested through and through. The directorial touches are not too flashy and maybe a bit to subtle to possibly rate or analyze.


Sharat Katariya for Dum Laga Ke Haisha: He makes a few missteps no doubt there, with dull patches taking out the film that reigns on a certain acceptable energy level; yet Katariya manages to helm one of the finest films of the last year. 


And now onto the nominees for the HIndie Award for Best Breakthrough Director...



Navdeep Singh for NH10


Starting his career with the underrated Manorama: Six Feet Under [inspired by Roman Polanski's Chinatown], Singh didn't get the upheaval he was probably looking for with one hell of a noir film.

Tackling with bravery, another new genre in Hindi Cinema with this rooted Slasher Thriller, Singh reaches another level. Though the film is inspired by the Michael Fassbender starer Eden Lake, NH10 has a depth unwarranted from the genre film due to its Indian sensibilities.

The film tackles the subject of a lawless Gurgaon, the city in perpetual limbo; with one side seeing rapid development and the other facing a tragic regressive trajectory. The film based around honor killings turns south for its protagonist Meera [Sharma] when she and her husband collide against nefarious elements including their leader on the verge of murdering his own sister and her lover.

It's brutal, vicious, paints a stark and harsh honest picture of society. It never lets the protagonist rest nor come off as a one sided light of goodness, nor does it delve into labels of backward class violence and regressive or feminist actions.

Singh tightens the reigns of his film as best as he can, though the climax does go overboard. It becomes a showcase for the director, to present what he can bring to the table in terms of new content to an ever changing cinema. It also helps that he is able to push his leading star; Anushka Sharma, to her career best.




Neeraj Ghaywan for Masaan


Tackling weighty issues of Patriarchy, Casteism, Fate, Loss, Depression and Redemption amidst the backdrop of one tattered love story and another just blossoming;

Neeraj Ghaywan makes one hell of a statement. It's not easy, Masaan is a film that follows two threads among other smaller plot points.

To put it poetically, Ghaywan's efforts in Masaan are like diving right into the banks of the Ganga river in Benaras [where ironically the film is shot as well] and trying to purify it back to its original state.

In essence Ghaywan weaves these two narrative strands together to provide an emotional catharsis amidst his commentary on certain issues that affect small town India.

The icing on the cake;

He brings out the best of his young team along with himself; allowing the young performers to shine through including Avinash Arun, Richa Chadda, Shweta Tripathi and Vicky Kaushal. As well as leaving a stamp of his own, without a yet distinguishable style that happily doesn't conform to any of his mentors own.




Prawaal Raman for Main aur Charles


More of a comeback then a breakthrough, Raman finally finds his footing with a film that lets his vision fly. Prawaal Raman takes on the story of iconic serial killer Charles Sobraj [Hooda] from the eyes of the man hunting him for years on end Amod Kanth [Hussain].

It gives his film a purpose, setting it around one major sequence around Sobraj's colorful criminal life while peppering it with montages of his other conquests. It's an interesting character study that allows the viewer to see a cold and detached look into the mind of Sobraj while also adhering to a stylistic charm of the setting through the lens of the character.

At the same time Raman's choices allow it to be slightly low key, as the hazy view of the world is filtered through the eyes of Kanth rather than the seductive Sobraj himself.

It's a murky edge to the film, that is just as seductive and Raman makes it his own. While at times it grows dull, Raman as a director brings a voice so refined and well documented that his efforts despite causing minor niggles, stand strong and change the game.




Kanu Behl for Titli


Coming from the heart and his own experiences, Kanu Behl's Titli is a stark look into the horrifying effects of patriarchy and toxic masculinity.

He takes it up a notch from his mentor Dibakar Banerjee, to hit deep into the bylanes of Middle Class Delhi and dissect the violent natures of a family burdened by their silent dominant father [played in a meta-hilarious fashion by Behl's own father].

Behl most likely conjures up his own nightmares, playing with some questionable characters who still remain tight and emotional and true when it comes to family. It's a powerful notion that remains on the balance between morality. At the center Behl is able to reflect this semi-true story and open himself out to the world, a reason why film makers make films.




Shonali Bose for Margarita with A Straw


Sensitivity is at times the greatest weapon a filmmaker can have, yet some filmmakers fall into the honey trap of turning sensitivity too sweet and simple. This type of a director is the prime example of why certain undeserving films are much loved by the Academy.

A certain sensitivity requires an edge of reality, thus the equation allows it to become; Humanity. That innate human quality to understand different people, people done wrong by circumstance but people nonetheless. Shonali Bose gained that experience through her understanding of her cousin Malini Chib, who is afflicted with cerebral palsy.

It pushed her to make this infinitely sweet [but not diabetic] and simple coming of age tale of a woman with a natural desire to love and be loved in a condition [of Cerebral Palsy] that in reality has made invisible to her plight.

We can help her with her issues as she is unable to, we can say we understand her as human and a person but we in our infinite wisdom choose to ignore her base desires, thus denouncing her as anything but human. It's a profound thought that Bose subtly runs through her passionate and breezy but emotionally heft film.

It's a wonder of art that she constructs from the heart, without ever begging and pleading for the audience to care. A great director is one that trusts her/his audience because they trust their own work, and Bose does this through and through. 



And the Winner is...



Neeraj Ghaywan for Masaan!


That marks a third huge win for Masaan. Is this a sign of things to come?!


Moving on, now we go to the most popular section of the awards; the staggering 8 main Acting Awards!


Up Next: First up are these five women...A woman embroiled in the investigation of the death of her daughter, while shifting between perspectives. A blind girl discovering love and betrayal in her lovers coming of age. A hard working mother finds acceptance among younger women during the celebration of her friends upcoming wedding. A mother struggling with her own pains as her disable daughter reveals her own sexuality. A sweet voiced Matriarch with a ruthless cold heart...

the HIndie Award for Best Actor [Female] in A Supporting Role [Drama]



'Nuff Said

Aneesh


HIndie Awards 2016: Best Breakthrough Actor [Male]




Best Breakthrough Actor [Male]

Though Radhika Apte had some quality performances this year and a fair bit of quantity, nothing matches the staggering quality produced by Vicky Kaushal in Masaan. 

So let's just dive right into it, the winner for the HIndie Award for Best Breakthrough Actor [Male] is...




Vicky Kaushal as Deepak for Masaan!


Credit where credit is due, his friend and director Neeraj Ghaywan deserves credits for bringing out the best in him, as well as his co-stars for supporting him in this venture. 

Debutante Vicky Kaushal makes an unbelievable impact with his performance in Masaan. He is a near showstopper and definitely its finest bit, with his performance towering over not only the actors around him but being etched so finely that no one else could fill his shoes [and mind you the initial choice was a certain National Award Winning Rajkumar Rao]. 

In one of the most haunting scenes, Kaushal is seen as is with his caste (Dom, deplorable social conditions); crushing the bones of the dead bodies on a funeral pyre [so as they turn to ash much easier] when he hears that these funeral pyres are of a collective on a bus trip gone haywire. Included among those on the bus trip was his love. 

He is distraught, taken down. It's a moment of silence punctuated perfectly by his expression of horror. The next we see him, he is completely breaking down; ruing his fate. In that moment, an actor can slip but all we see is Deepak completely brought down to his lowest. 

In the uneasy moments of his developing relationship; Kaushal is excellent, fidgeting, nervous and even his outburst regarding their caste differences is genuine. 

Here is an actor that makes a bold statement in his first film and continues it forward in his second. 

Yes!

I have seen Zubaan and Kaushal is no mere fluke, his next performance in fact heralds his coming and also indicates that he is here to be a mainstay in the HIndie Awards to come. 


  

Up Next: One was not enough so now we have five and what a five!...the HIndie Award for Best Breakthrough Director


'Nuff Said

Aneesh

HIndie Awards 2016: Best Breakthrough Actor [Female]




Best Breakthrough Actor [Female]

Though having made her debut quite long ago, this particular winner had a break out year in the industry with five massive releases among other superb performances in small films to regional films and beyond. 

Her current film; Parched, is making the rounds of festivals to great acclaim and she is catching on like wildfire.

Here is the HIndie Award winner for Best Breakthrough Actor [Female]...




Radhika Apte

as 
(Kanchan/Koko, Tripti Gokhale, Phaguniya, Paro, Rija
and
Ahalya)

for

Badlapur, Hunterrr, Manjhi: The Mountain Man, Kaun Kitne Panee Mein, X: Past is Present
and
Ahalya



So let's begin because this is one hell of a list, however it's not all about quantity only but some damn fine quality performances from the actor.

As Koko in Badlapur, Apte's character is probably the only genuine person caught in the quagmire of this revenge tale that Raghu [Dhawan] concocts. It's a thankless role but one played with an energy and determination that allows Apte to convey a heartbreaking innocence as the toxicity of these men in her life consumes her. She's evocative and despite the high brow sequences she is placed in, she brings a notch of class to it.

https://seriouslytalib.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/radhika.jpg

In Tripti, Apte gets to go quite a bit loose when possible. One of the key moments of the dry comedy is as Mandar [Devaiah] and her discuss the idea of an open marriage. Spoilers; it's a dream sequence from Mandar's perspective [of course] and as the equivalent of a male fantasy; Apte is a bundle of fun. It presents a side of her unseen and signifies that if given the chance in a full blown comedy, she could shine. Of her performance overall; she is natural as the sophisticated women straddling her own issues of commitment and finally realistically transforming as Mandar's revelations come to the fore. It's her best of the lot here among the feature films.

In Manjhi we spend a rare few minutes with Apte, but her genuine spirited effort allows her to echo through the plot. Her turn though limited is so charming and her presence is so affable that it justifies the passion with which Manjhi [Siddiqui] conquers the mountain for her.

Kaun Kitne Panee Mein doesn't let its lovebirds much time as it does their patriarchs but in those fleeting moments once again Apte rises above her predicament. She shoulders much of the chemistry of the film, not only providing a good ensemble performance but also elevating that of her co-star Kunal Kapoor.

In X: Past is Present, Apte makes two appearances. The first is in her own short with Rajat Kapoor's K. In Rajshree Ojha's piece of the anthology [one of the better ones] Apte stands toe to toe with the veteran Rajat in delivering a restrained and well together attached showing on a dense point. Apte returns as a flash later as well, showing both character and actor etch an impact on the film.

http://images.indianexpress.com/2015/02/radhikaapte-badlapur.jpg

While Hunterrr is her best performance on the feature film level, it's not her best performance of last year overall;

Instead it is in Sujoy Ghosh's short thriller, Ahalya. Her turn as the mythological character is transcendent. The role is changed to that of a seductress rather than an innocent woman and it makes all the difference in Apte's performance. She could have just as easily crawled into the skin of the original Ahalya, yet here her wide eyed, sly smile and liquid like body language entrances not only the unsuspecting protagonist but the viewer as well. She molds her performance with such effect that one is captured watching her, stiff as a china doll.


The fact that Apte has secured a massive role opposite the great Rajnikanth for her next, shows she is heading places. She is also the standout lead in the aforementioned Parched and is making different headways everywhere she goes.

Radhika Apte deserves the applause.



Up Next: A young debutante that runs away with one of the finest films of the year, which is no mean feat...The HIndie Award for Best Breakthrough Actor [Male]


'Nuff Said

Aneesh Raikundalia
 

HIndie Awards 2016: Best Ensemble




Best Ensemble




Sholay is one of the most iconic films of all time, because of its action, its dialogues but also because it has a collected cast of some of the finest actors and the biggest stars in the history of Hindi Cinema. Count them;

Dharmendra, Amitabh Bachchan, Sanjeev Kumar, Hema Malini, Jaya Bachchan and Amjad Khan. 

That's just the main cast, we're not even counting; AK Hangal, Sachin, Jagdeep, Leela Mishra, Asrani, Viju Khote and Mac Mohan. 

No wonder the poster reads 'The Greatest Star Cast Assembled Ever!'

This year's Academy Award winning Best Picture might not be everyone's cup of tea, but nobody would bat an eyelid if the Academy was to award it a win for Best Ensemble Cast. After all each stalwart actor is better then the next. 

Whether one likes it or not; stars make a film in some sense but so do real actors and when you have a collective of them to shoulder a narrative, then the film just skyrockets into the stratosphere. Some of the most iconic films of all times have had the most iconic casts. 

These five films are no different, so here are the HIndie Award for Best Ensemble, nominees...




Dil Dhadakne Do

Casting Director: Nandini Shrikent

Cast: Anil Kapoor as Kamal Mehra, Shefali Shah as Neelam Mehra, Priyanka Chopra as Ayesha Sangha nee Mehra, Ranveer Singh as Kabir Mehra, Anushka Sharma as Farah Ali, Rahul Bose as Manav Sangha, Zarina Wahab as Smita Sangha, Vikrant Massey as Rana Khanna, Ridhima Sud as Noorie Sood, Pawan Chopra as Prem Mehra, Ayesha Mishra as Indu Mehra, Parmeet Sethi as Lalit Sood, Dolly Mattdo as Naina Sood, Manoj Pahwa as Vinod Khanna, Preeti Mamgain as Vandana Khanna, Shireesh Sharma as Jamal Hashmi, Divya Seth Shah as Saira Hashmi, Ikhlaque Khan as Amrish Gill with Farhan Akhtar as Sunny Gill and Aamir Khan as Pluto Mehra


Foregoing the fact that Aamir Khan's performance as the doggy Pluto, nearly sinks the ship of this film [though that's a writing and directorial fault as much as it is his voices fault]. Much of the cast in small doses are a riot to see, despite never being characteristically well defined. 

It helps that a lot of the plot revolves around the four pillars of the film. Anushka and Farhan occasionally pop up with roles they could act in their sleep and they perfect them here. Particular stand outs of the supporting cast are; 

Ridhima Sud and Vikrant Massey who make their romantic entanglement breezy, with some fresh chemistry and examples that the young duo could do with their own romantic film. It's a thought film makers. 

Rahul Bose as the annoying loud mouth husband and mommy's boy with a complex is efficient while his snobbish mother Zarina Wahab is a delight in her role and her delivery sharp. 

I'll speak of the trio of individual nominated performances later. Onto Ranveer Singh. He outdoes himself by a margin in Bajirao Mastani but the mad cap Ranveer Singh seen in the paparazzi glare is very much evident here. However he also manages to reel in that persona and channel it into a fun performance that also hits some great emotional beats. 

Singh is just as good as the other three Mehra's who keep this ship steady through some heavy waters. 

In tune with her director's sensibility, Nandini Shrikent collectively brings together one hell of a good looking star cast just what this Dil demands. 




Masaan

Casting Director: Mukesh Chhabra

Cast: Richa Chadda as Devi Pathak, Vicky Kaushal as Deepak, Shweta Tripathi as Shaalu Gupta, Bhupesh Singh as Sikander with Pankaj Tripathi as Sadhya Ji and Sanjay Mishra as Vidyadhar Pathak


A relatively small cast [though not everyone is listed, here] but still an effective ensemble. 

First a big shout out to Bhupesh Singh, who has been a fascinating nameless character actor to watch for years. Here as the elder brother to Kaushal's Deepak, the lazy Sikander is an interesting side character made infinitely worth watching thanks to Singh. He adds a weariness and a hint of jelousy [due to the opportunities affored to his brother, to escape the hell of the Dom castes cremation work]. It adds another layer to the films ideologies and themes and Singh is front and center of it. Plus he and Kaushal do look like brothers, so top notch casting as well.

I'll talk of the two leads later. On the other front, both Chadda and Kaushal have other great supports to their narratives. 

Shweta Tripathi is genuinely sweet and touching as the naive but also head strong and smart Shalu, she might live in her own bubble but she has control of it as well. Having seen her give another astounding performance at the Mumbai Film Festival [in Haraamkhor], it's easy to say; here is an actor with variation to her performances and hence this sort of role isn't her forte or who she is, making her efforts that much more sweeter. 

On Richa's end is Sanjay Mishra, going from strength to strength; the actor excels in another fatherly role with much more subdued dramatic meat that actually doesn't rely on his penchant for humor or his histrionics.

But the supporting stand out is the late entry of Pankaj Tripathi. An oft overlooked dynamite and simply sublime as nefarious characters, here as the sweet and simple Sadhya Ji he takes a complete 360 degree turn. He is in form with his soft delivery and innocent body language that for a moment you step away from the narrative to just follow him. 

Mukesh Chhabra is a veteran of the business and his cast exemplify their characters to a tee, he even knows the best sides that makes a complete whole of a cast. 




Bajirao Mastani

Casting Director: Shruti Mahajan and Parag Mehta

Cast: Ranveer Singh as Peshwa Bajirao Ballal, Deepika Padukone as Mastani, Priyanka Chopra as Kashibai, Tanvi Azmi as Radhabai, Mahesh Manjrekar as Chattrapati Shahu Maharaj, Aditya Pancholi as Panth Prathinidi, Milind Soman as Ambaji Panth, Ayush Tandon as Nana Saheb, Vaibbhav Tatawadi as Chimaji Appa, Yatin Karyekar as Krishna Ji Bhatt with Raza Murad as the Nizam of Deccan and Irrfan Khan as Narrator


It's said that if you're part of a Bhansali film, you better be on your toes. Ranveer Singh and Deepika Padukone are the first repeated couple in Bhansali's films [which all are in essence romantic] and rightly so. He's a task master and the duo are able to match his level of intensity through and through. 

Singh we will discuss later, like his fellow nominees Azmi and Chopra. 

Deepika Padukone like her real life beau barely, just barely loses out on an individual nomination because she was just better in Piku. Even then, Padukone is an illuminated frenzy in Bhansali's magnum opus. She is blisteringly brilliant as the warrior princess, evoking a great strength and power as well as a grace and elegance unlike ever seen. 

She might not be Madhubala in her heyday, but she convincingly wields a sword to battle as well as smolders in her lovers arms or dances in his devotion. 

Rounding out the cast are some miniscule roles played by some real heavyweights. Pancholi brings great menace though it never amounts to anything. Soman is restrained as the friend. Tatawadi shines as the brother frustrated with Bajirao's actions. Karyekar is thrillingly theatrical as need be. While Ayush Tandon leaves a mark as the villain towards the climax. 

Mahajan and Mehta bring together a cast at the top of their games and raring to prove with no doubt why they make this film such a strong contender this year.  




Titli

Casting Director: Atul Mongia

Cast: Shashank Arora as Titli, Shivani Raghuvanshi as Neelu, Ranvir Shorey as Vikram, Amit Sial as Pradeep with Prashant Singh as Prince and Lalit Behl as the Father


This one's for Arora and Raghuvanshi who might not make the breakthrough awards but are really good that they deserve the recognition. Both young actors are on point, taking control of much of the film and pulling through. The disturbing sequence of Titli hammering Neelu's hand to protect her and her money is effective because the actors gain a grasp of reality of the situation. 

Shorey and Sial are however the standouts and rightfully individually nominated. Towering over them is Lalit Behl, his presence is silent but evokes a menace and iron grip or fear at one point in the brother's lives, that is masked by a meek facade. Director Kanu Behl said this film hits close to heart and relies on his own harsh experiences of his childhood with his father. 

Out of spite or guilt, his father Lalit Behl evokes this with a specter like form. 

The cast is then littered with some great small actors who make small impacts when needed. 

An underrated aspect of casting in Hindi film is having a family actually look alike [see the difference between the Mehra] and my god does Atul Mongia nail it on the head.




Talvar

Casting Director: Honey Trehan

Cast: Irrfan Khan as Ashwin Kumar, Konkona Sen Sharma as Nutan Tandon, Neeraj Kabi as Ramesh Tandon, Sohum Shah as Vedant Mishra, Atul Kumar as Paul, Gajaraj Rao as Inspector Dhaniram, Shishir Sharma JK Dixit, Sumit Gulhati as Kanhaiya with Prakash Belawadi as Ramashankar Pillai and Tabu as Reema Kumar


Talvar relies on the prowess of its eyes, Irrfan Khan as Ashwini Kumar. Beyond that it lets Sharma and Kabi play with one scene in different ways to highlight why they are top class actors. Tabu is in a cameo that relies on her and Khan's brilliant chemistry. 

Onto the men that make the film around Khan. Gajaraj Rao is such a delight to watch in those smarmy roles of a man punching above his weight. Atul Kumar as Paul plays a great contrast to Irrfan in every which way, carrying himself with the opposite brilliance that Khan reflects. Shishir Sharma, a damn fine veteran, stands staunch in his role. Sohum Shah is a masterclass actor who is yet to get his due and once again shadows Irrfan in a nice twisted turn. 

Finally Prakash Belawadi is just going from strength to strength, he has some sharp comic timing but is also able to deliver great dramatic punches, holding the words in his tongue with weight. 

Honey Trehan brings together one of the finest cast of thespians assembled to prove the changing view of cinema in India. 



And the Winner is...



Nandini Shrikent and Co. for Dil Dhadakne Do!



Here's a win for Dil Dhadakne Do, it was a tough choice and maybe it might not seem the right one. But somewhere quantity and genuine quality wins out. 

Up Next: She slams it across the park with more than five fascinating performances...The HIndie Award for Best Breakthrough Actor [Female]


'Nuff Said

Aneesh


Tuesday 22 March 2016

HIndie Awards 2016: Best Cinematography



Best Cinematography


Onto a major award for the evening!

Cinematographers are magicians, they are the WORK WIVES of the director and execute his vision to its utmost best. 

Being one of the major awards of the season, let's take a look at former winners and how this stacks up for the nominees today...

Nikos Andritsakis for Ugly, 2015: The previous winner is already a juggernaut of a cinematographer, being a fine winner and a nominee this year once more. Can he pull of a 'Chivo'?
Ajay Bahl for B.A. Pass, 2014: A surprise win among surprise nominees, Bahl's work showed an understanding for the dry base of the film, its erotic nature and also the neon infused noir elements of Old Delhi. 

Nikos Andritsakis for Shanghai, 2013: Another win from Nikos, only slightly beating out the works of Setu [Kahaani] and Ravi Verman [Barfi!].

Carlos Catalan for Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara, 2012: Not resting on his laurels of a beautiful location, Catalan kills it by bringing a profound catharsis to the world the characters inhabit.

Nikos Andritsakis for Love Sex aur Dhokha, 2011: Nikos's first win of three, his first collaboration with Dibakar Banerjee that bore fruit.  

Rajeev Ravi for Dev D, 2010: The first cinematography winner, Rajeev Ravi returns to the fore front this year. 


An interesting thing is that Andritsakis is in a pattern of winning an award once every year. Anyways onto the nominees for the HIndie Award for Best Cinematography...



HIndie Awards 2016: Best Editing




Best Editing


Editing is crucial in bringing together the director's complete and wholesome vision as well as best describing the film itself. At the Academy Awards, an editing win has generally made a statement because it has closely associated itself with victories for both direction and film. 

That tells you all you need to know. 

Champion editors are hard to come by, this one's a marvel altogether; the HIndie Award for Best Editing goes to...




Sreekar Prasad for Talvar!


Perspective is a key in every aspect of cinema, from the visual perspective of a director taken from the written perspective of a writer to the perspectives of different characters on screen. 

In the Rashomon like Talvar, perspective plays a key in unraveling the truth of a case that hits hard at home and reality; the film is based on the Noida Double Murder Case that in one perspective can be seen as tarnished by Media's perceptions of events. 

It's ingrained into the film that the irony of the edit shines bright. In a startling revelation at a screening and interview of the film [that I was personally privy to]; Meghna Gulzar revealed that she had never met Sreekar Prasad or physically worked with him on the film. 

It may seem like inconsequential in a world of online chatting and social network, but such a line of communication can change a film just the slightest that it takes up a whole new meaning altogether. According to Meghna Gulzar at least, it never changed a thing. 

Rather the space afforded to Prasad, likely allowed his edit to make an analytical dissection of the film and allow it to attain that objectivity it has been so rightly praised for despite their being no doubt to the stance Meghna Gulzar has personally taken on the case. 

His edit is sharp, cold and precise as it needs to be. Sreekar Prasad towers over the film like a Doctor at a surgery, without his hands wavering for a second. Perception plays an important role in the film; with it's key 'Day after The Murder' sequence played over and over with different results and reactions. It's a masterfully constructed sequencing of events all culminating in the 'Grand Meeting' finale. 

A good editor knows when to place a cut, the best of them; know when not to. Sreekar Prasad plays on both edges with refined form. Putting together a masterpiece of the ages. 


http://images.indianexpress.com/2016/01/talvar-759.png 


With a huge win and some top prizes to vie for, what does this win herald for Talvar?

It's a definite front runner, but a winner...hard to know...till then...

Up Next: The Magicians weaves their wands and magic sprouts...the HIndie Award for Best Cinematography


'Nuff Said

Aneesh Raikundalia

HIndie Awards 2016: Best Production Design




Best Production Design



Knocking it out of the park once again, let's just get on with it then; shall we?



Vandana Kataria for Detective Byomkesh Bakshy!


Complementing the costuming, Vandana Kataria's work on DBB is a notch above her other much more understated pieces. Her collaborations have bore fruit with Dibakar Banerjee in unexpected ways. 

There's a certain flavor to Gogi Arora's [Rawal] den in Oye Lucky! Lucky Oye! or to the dank dingy room where porn is shot for Joginder [Hashmi] in Shanghai compared to the clean cut and simple home lived in by Krishnan [Deol]. 

All these places evoke a character that makes it easier to breath into them and their world. 

Kataria plays at another level, on a more noticeable platform; a period film with noir elements. Bakshy is refined by her intuitive choice and accurate understanding of detail. Detail is important, it's vastly underrated just as is production design. 

The sets to props to artistic elements in general contain an essence of Kolkata but also play well to the genres it straddles in. Character is intricate and in this case, there's a lot she plays with specifically Dr. Ankul Guha's [Kabi] male hostel standing out as an equally intriguing layout and a spectre like quality that plays finely to the tense finale. 

Vandana Kataria builds the base for a top notch film and this is her wholly deserved reward. 



With two wins, Detective Byomkesh Bakshy! might not be a top contender, but it has left a great impact. 


Up Next: The final cut of the film is the final film!...HIndie Award for Best Editing.


'Nuff Said

Aneesh Raikundalia

Saturday 19 March 2016

HIndie Awards 2016: Best Costume Design



Best Costume Design



As the picture clearly suggests; you know the winner of this one. 

So let's get into it, right away. 

The HIndie Award for Best Costume Design goes to...
Manoshi Nath, Rushi Sharma and Manish Malhotra for Detective Byomkesh Bakshy!


Despite the noir fantasy vibe Banerjee creates of 1940's war time Calcutta, it's an absolute necessity that the costumes of the era remain grounded and authentic. 

Taking their collaborations to the next level; Nath and Sharma bring a palette that highlights the painstaking efforts they've put into the research of the era in order to capture the characters in a truthful setting. It's no joke that this year's academy named costume as an actors second skin, it's a truth. 
In this case it allows the performers to feel an authenticity to their world whether it be wearing the traditional dothi's [loin cloths] or the cotton scarfs, mufflers and even to the diva-esque gowns for femme fatale Angoori. 
Coming to that, the noir vibe is also maintained with the titular character occasionally garbed by a scruffy brown jacket, highlighting that detective nature that most overcoats would give. In retaliation the every man of the film Ajit, his reluctant partner is dressed in the every man dhoti clothes of a Calcutta man from back in the day. 
http://i9.dainikbhaskar.com/thumbnail/680x588/web2images/english.fashion101.in/2015/04/10/byomkeshbakshy1_142864278.jpg
Manish Malhotra then enters the fray to seamlessly stylize this film with his own expertise channeled in a challenging manner for the veteran designer, bringing a much needed pizzazz to the costuming. It's a great offset that helps the film. 
Speaking of collaborations, the costumes authenticity while speaking for themselves also happen to perfectly fit to the background just as the background fits to the film. Showing a well connected understanding between the costume department and the overall art department of the film.
An important understated quality much like this understated part of the film making process, that cannot be denied when there's such wonderful costuming at hand.    



So there you have it, the winner for Best Costume Design. 


Up Next: Which film builds an undeniably true atmosphere of its time and place, the underrated aspect of film making; The HIndie Award for Best Production Design.


'Nuff Said

Aneesh


HIndie Awards 2016: Best VFX





Best VFX



Credit where credit is due, Baahubali had some stunning visuals. While at times the VFX did feel ropey, overall it was a genuine delight to see. The struggles of creating from scratch; a fascinating visually powerful world is no easy task and Baahubali makes great strides for Indian cinema in the Fantasy department however easy it is to spot the vfx in the film. 

Then there's works that require an authentic rebuild of a world long past us. It's not an easier task in any way despite that it has ready made references available through pain staking research for it. 

There's no way to really judge which is better, but one works wonders yet still falls flat by the standards [and budget] set by the other. 

In that case the latter wins, so here is winner of the HIndie Award for Best VFX...



Bombay Velvet, Prana Studios and Team!


With a mix of 3D animation reconstruction of 1960's Bombay and the use of Matte Painting to truly visual recapture exteriors of an iconic coming of age Bombay as well as the shading, coloring, texturing of interior and exteriors to imbue a period like quality to the look of the film. 

Bombay Velvet's VFX is a shining example of the daunting task taken by the below mentioned VFX team in visualizing Anurag Kashyap's vision to a tee. It's no doubt that the film hemorrhaged heavy losses, but with the stunning works these individuals have done together; it is no doubt their efforts require a loud applause. 


Vishal Tyagi ... special effects supervisor
 
Kunal Ahuja ... visual effects supervisor
Praveen Allu ... visual effects artist
Saurabh Arora ... digital compositor
Ananya Bose ... visual effects artist
Rashabh Butani ... compositor
Balachandar Chandrasekaran ... digital compositor
Gyandeep Das ... technical director
Devottam Dutta ... technical director
Pranav Gangapurkar ... visual effects artist
Ankush Gawande ... visual effects artist
Jitesh Naresh Ghase ... technical director
Goutham ... visual effects coordinator
Sandhya Jadhav ... visual effects supervisor / visual effects
Arudra Jaykar ... VFX Creative Director
Samapika Karmakar ... digital roto and paint supervisor: Prana Studio
Praveen Kilaru ... vfx producer
Aditya Kolli ... visual effects compositor
Amit Kumar ... digital compositor: prana studio
Gangaiwar Mahendra ... pipeline engineer
Nirmaljeet Singh Matharu ... texture artist
Anish H. Mulani ... VFX Executive Producer
Ram Mohan Nadam Reddy ... lead compositor
Sreenath Nair ... pipeline engineer
Jayaprakash P.J. ... surfacing artist
Irshad Patel ... digital compositor: Prana Studios (as Patel Irshad)
Shashi Patel ... technical director
Biplab Paul ... compositor
Chetan Rathod ... senior matchmove artist: Prana Animation Studios
Aatur Ravani ... lighting lead: Rhythm & Hues Studios
Vijay Bharath Reddy ... digital compositor
Mehma R. Sachdeva ... visual effects producer
Neville Emerson Samuel ... digital compositor
Viren Shah ... lighting td
Ravi Shekhar ... digital roto and paint supervisor: Prana Studio
Akshay Shrivastava ... vfx production manager
Viral Sompura ... technical director
Balakrishna P. Subaiah ... visual effects supervisor
Priyanka Telang ... matte painter
Narayana Murthy Tirunagari ... prep artist
Jayadev Tiruveaipati ... di colourist
Saujanya Veera ... shading technical director
Wineeth Wilson ... digital compositor 



Up Next: The second skin of a character...HIndie Award for Best Costume Design


'Nuff Said

Aneesh Raikundalia

HIndie Awards 2016: Best Original Score




Best Original Score

 




Not only is it important for a musical score to excavate the deep emotional point of its characters, it is also to accompany and enhance the emotional crux of a situation for the audience, without being manipulative or overbearing on the scene itself. 

Jumping slightly ahead, into the future, let's consider; Neerja. The 2016 film has already created furor thanks to its beautiful handling of a very emotionally stirring subject. It is so far, the best film of the year. 

Without spoiling the ending for the unaware and uninformed audiences, let me just say this; 

The last half an hour of the film is punctuated by a rousing but subtle score that sweeps the audience away in a torrent of gushing watery eyes. This moment of catharsis and heartbreak is well earned because the score never overwhelms you but rather sticks to being true to the emotions it projects. 

That's the mark of a good ORIGINAL score and don't be surprised to see Neerja feature on this list [and many] next year. 


For now, let's move onto the wonders of this year, the nominees for the HIndie Award for Best Original Score are...




Sanchit Balhara for Bajirao Mastani

The 'Bajirao War Cry' becomes the theme of the film, adding a high energy level to a film that is not naturally about that sort of a war, rather an internal battle to dignify the essence of idea and love. No one can deny it's a stirring call to arms, but it very much captures the film. 

Of course with such a high level performance at its center, this allows much of the subtle musical themes to become more profound, particularly the haunting and pain driven wails as Bajirao travels through the stormy sea [of his minds and those around him] to get to his beloved Mastani. 

Balhara is a relative unknown who steps into the sphere of a Sanjay Leela Bhansali vision and makes it his own, with a taste for refined tunes that equally aid and offset the melodrama with ease. This is how a melodramatic score is made, by going subtle and smooth; becoming a part of the film rather than killing it. 




Various Artists for Detective Byomkesh Bakshy!

Essentially DBB! doesn't necessarily rely on a score but rather some pieces of different genres of music from different players. 

At the forefront is Sneha Khanwalkar whose taste and understanding of varied musical pieces creates an intriguing flavor for the film. Rock anthems are the meat of the music that create a spark with the contrast to the setting and much more somber mood of the film. 

It's an eclectic choice that takes time to get used to but eventually gives DBB! an interesting feel that most noir/period films don't have. 




Aditya Trivedi for Main aur Charles

Taking a cue from its titular character, Main aur Charles has a viper like quality to its music. Striking and seductive, Aditya Trivedi adds touches of retro highs and lucid lows with the music that sinks between capturing an era but also an essence of the man the film portrays. 

There's dark tones imbibed with trances that capture just like the silver tongued Charles. The theme of Charles is thus distinctively his own and a testament to the complex deconstruction the music does of such a fascinating character. 

There's no demonic rises or furious paces in the music to craft the thrills and chills. Rather Trivedi's focus on the low key is a sign of what the film is actually about and an enhancer of it as well; it keeps tabs on Charles, just as Charles does on the hunt highlighting the character driven narrative of the film. The music is the magnifying glass that brings clarity to this odd character study with utmost effect.




Bruno Coulais and Indian Ocean for Masaan

Indian Ocean while also composing the tracks for the film, are also responsible for the score along with Bruno Coulais.

It might sound weird to say so [especially considering their name], but the musical score of the film if to be visually felt, feels like the calm, spiritual yet murky holy river of Banaras where the film is aptly set. There's a serene quality to the romantic track that runs through one side of the films story and there's a romantic quality to the painfully tranquil music that runs through the other end. 

In turn the music becomes a thematic reflection of the film in itself as the rivers meet, the two protagonists meet and the music meets in a poetic brilliance. Bruno and Ocean fly away beautifully with this one. 




Amit Trivedi for Bombay Velvet

A complete soundtrack victory for Bombay Velvet does not only rely on the songs but the exhilarating score as well. 

The masterpiece of Bombay Velvet is no doubt it's action packed finale shootout as a machine gun wielding Johnny Balraj lays waste to the bad guys in his bid to save his girl. 

The score that accompanies it?

On a whole other level!

The jazz tunes are a wonder, each of the three main pieces of the score hitting their own enriching crescendo's with glory. It's an altogether enticing musical piece that does end up stealing the show from the film but also floating it a notch higher than it probably deserves. 



And the Winner is...



Amit Trivedi for Bombay Velvet!


There goes, so far we are done with the musical set of awards with a win a piece for Masaan and Bombay Velvet. Next onto the technical awards. 


Up Next: The dazzling visuals are sometimes difficult to find and capture on canavas, sometimes they need to be truly painted in and this team of painters do it exceptionally well...The HIndie Award for Best VFX


'Nuff Said

Aneesh Raikundalia