Melodrama and clichés rule in Bollywood?s 'Shorgul' - كوكو هندية

ryan

العودة   ryan > مواضيع منقولة من مواقع اخرى > موقع اجنبي > كوكو هندية

إضافة رد
 
أدوات الموضوع انواع عرض الموضوع
  #1  
قديم 07-01-2016, 05:34 PM
ahlam1399 ahlam1399 غير متواجد حالياً
Administrator
 
تاريخ التسجيل: Sep 2012
المشاركات: 3,727,761
افتراضي Melodrama and clichés rule in Bollywood?s 'Shorgul'

MUMBAI: Director duo P Singh and Jitendra Tiwari’s “Shorgul” (cacophony) is a supposed exploration of the 2013 Muzaffarnagar riots and the reasons behind it. It would be too much to expect a nuanced, honest film that attempts to look at mob mentality and the socio-political reasons that lead to communal riots, but the film doesn’t achieve even 10 percent of its objective.

Melodrama and clichés rule in this 130-minute film and you even hear a character talk about “insaniyat ka dharm (the religion of humanity), a phrase that you thought belonged to the 80s. In the world of “Shorgul”, everything is black and white – the villain will give you a nasty snarl in his very first scene, and the hero will smile beatifically at the camera while romancing the coy leading lady. There is ** room for doubt.

The lady in question is Zainab (Suha Gezen), a wide-eyed and giggly college student who is betrothed to Salim (Hiten Tejwani) and completely oblivious to the fact that her childhood friend Raghu is madly in love with her. Things become complicated when Salim’s cousin Mustaqeem (Ejaz Khan), who has just moved from Gujarat and is convinced that his religion is under attack, enters the picture.

One thing leads to a**ther, and soon the whole town is burning and there are sword-wielding mobs running through the streets. Zainab, who is seen as the root cause of the riots, becomes a hunted woman and seeks refuge with Raghu’s father, an influential farmer leader who she considers a father figure. But against a toothless police force and politicians on both sides engineering violence, even he can**t do much.

“Shorgul” is too busy splashing fake blood on its characters to give you any real insight. In the end, it plays out like a Prakash Jha movie. It paints politicians as the main villains, which is easier than accounting for historical and social reasons for communal strife.

Of the cast, Hiten Tejwani and Ashutosh Rana (as Choudhary, the farmer leader) are a pleasure to watch and they bring a sense of reassuring calm to the proceedings. Jimmy Shergill plays Ranjeet Som, a dapper politician who has national ambitions and uses the riots to further his agenda.

While the intentions may have been in the right place, the real voice of “Shorgul” is lost in Melodrama and fake blood. (Movie review by shilpa Jamkhandikar)

Melodrama clichés rule Bollywood?s 'Shorgul'

أكثر...

كلمات البحث

العاب ، برامج ، سيارات ، هاكات ، استايلات


رد مع اقتباس
إضافة رد


تعليمات المشاركة
لا تستطيع إضافة مواضيع جديدة
لا تستطيع الرد على المواضيع
لا تستطيع إرفاق ملفات
لا تستطيع تعديل مشاركاتك

BB code is متاحة
كود [IMG] متاحة
كود HTML معطلة

الانتقال السريع


الساعة الآن 02:44 PM


Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. TranZ By Almuhajir
This Forum used Arshfny Mod by islam servant