"The greatest compliment an artist can get is the acknowledgement that his work inspired another human being.", observes Black, the protagonist of Orhan Pamuk's much acclaimed novel, "My name is Red". It is with these words that i wish to break my silence from this seemingly permanent hiatus from review writing. After watching Synecdoche,... i felt such a sudden of gush of words that it was impossible not to pick up a piece of paper and write about this movie. Charlie Kauffman's panache for exploring the human psyche once again takes the front seat in his directorial debut, as he gives form to Shakespeare's "All the world's a stage" on celluloid.
Synecdoche,.. is about a playwright, Caden Cotard (played by the ever-dependable Phillip Seymour Hoffman) who is undergoing a mid-life crisis both at work and at home. His workaday life is punctuated by frequent bouts of quirky medical complications that leaves him with the belief that he is dying. After his wife decides to leave him to pursue her career as a miniaturist painter with his daughter, he decides to direct his full attention into making a magnum opus using the money he received by winning a "genius" grant. The film then follows his spiralling obsession to make his play bigger and closer to reality and how this obsession engulfs his whole life.
Self-indulgent in parts, occasionally pretentious, yet so hauntingly original, Synecdoche is an exhibition of a master who has created a masterpiece and yet decides to improvise it with little metaphors. Besides leaving behind metaphors, Kauffman has also managed to maintain the enigma of film, almost reminding us that life doesn't give us all the answers. Some things are just meant to be enjoyed not analysed.
Dark, quriky, and full of surprises, Synecdoche is like an orange seed, just when you thought you picked it up, it slips. Kauffman's hasn't just created a concept, he has created an entirely new form of expressionistic cinema, one which starts off like a tiny snowball rolling from the top of the mountain, it gathers pace, endlessly improvising itself and when it is in conceptual "free-fall", it unfurls itself in its limitless brilliance and yet hides within itself like a giant matroshka doll.
Synecdoche,.. is not a film meant for a sunday afternoon. It demands a little discipline on the viewer's part and for a film of its calibre, it is worth it. This writer has atleast half a dozen great things to tell about this movie but nothing can describe a masterpiece than the piece itself.
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Wake Up S!d – Breezy and Beautiful
Hey everyone, long time new post. And the movie may be a little old but I guess it’s never too late to write a review. Guess the dearth of good hindi (or even tamil) movies and coupled with my indolent attitude has made this blog virtually inactive. So here we go.
George Orwell said “The best book is one which tells what we already know”. Well, it works for movies too. And “Wake Up Sid” is a fine example of that. Dharma Productions (known for their maudlin “masterpieces” in Hindi Cinema) have, surprisingly taken a breezier, more cheerful and “definitely frugal on the glycerin department” recipe for a two-and-something hour coming-of-age flick that speaks from the heart.
Sid is your everyday rich kid with an idyllic life who thinks the answer to anything is the swish of a credit card. He is happy, lives life by the moment and is at heart just a child- immature, overconfident, and arrogant. But when reality comes knocking the door one day, he is left gasping. What eventually happens is what forms the rest of the story.
Playing the rich kid to perfection is Ranbir Kapoor. Armed with his cartoonish t-shirt and his boyish enthusiasm he is sure to bowl you over. Certainly one of the best performances of the year!! Konkana Sen Sharma is all bong beauty and wit. Her character had to balance between the mature and the not-so-mature and brings a lot to the table in terms of her character. The fact that the lead pair’s age difference is barely a hindrance in the plot is evidence of the evolving maturity of the Indian audience.
The stand out aspect of the movie, however, is definitely the screenplay. Replete with convincing devices and fine touches, Ayan Mukherji’s debut is very dil se and tells you coming-of-age need not involve joining the army and dying for the country. Art direction is brilliant and gives a very off-beat hip look to the city of Mumbai. There are no hues of grey in Mumbai here, its all graffiti and spray-can art. Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy’s mellifluous tunes do no harm to the proceedings either.
Overall, Wake Up S!d is a fine exhibition of modern Indian cinema. It may be angrezi in expression but its certainly Hindi at heart. Here is Bollywood’s instruction manual for “coming-of-age” flicks. Let the copying begin!!
Rating: 4.5/5
George Orwell said “The best book is one which tells what we already know”. Well, it works for movies too. And “Wake Up Sid” is a fine example of that. Dharma Productions (known for their maudlin “masterpieces” in Hindi Cinema) have, surprisingly taken a breezier, more cheerful and “definitely frugal on the glycerin department” recipe for a two-and-something hour coming-of-age flick that speaks from the heart.
Sid is your everyday rich kid with an idyllic life who thinks the answer to anything is the swish of a credit card. He is happy, lives life by the moment and is at heart just a child- immature, overconfident, and arrogant. But when reality comes knocking the door one day, he is left gasping. What eventually happens is what forms the rest of the story.
Playing the rich kid to perfection is Ranbir Kapoor. Armed with his cartoonish t-shirt and his boyish enthusiasm he is sure to bowl you over. Certainly one of the best performances of the year!! Konkana Sen Sharma is all bong beauty and wit. Her character had to balance between the mature and the not-so-mature and brings a lot to the table in terms of her character. The fact that the lead pair’s age difference is barely a hindrance in the plot is evidence of the evolving maturity of the Indian audience.
The stand out aspect of the movie, however, is definitely the screenplay. Replete with convincing devices and fine touches, Ayan Mukherji’s debut is very dil se and tells you coming-of-age need not involve joining the army and dying for the country. Art direction is brilliant and gives a very off-beat hip look to the city of Mumbai. There are no hues of grey in Mumbai here, its all graffiti and spray-can art. Shankar-Ehsaan-Loy’s mellifluous tunes do no harm to the proceedings either.
Overall, Wake Up S!d is a fine exhibition of modern Indian cinema. It may be angrezi in expression but its certainly Hindi at heart. Here is Bollywood’s instruction manual for “coming-of-age” flicks. Let the copying begin!!
Rating: 4.5/5
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