red srk blue srk.
I couldn't stop myself.
tbh i've been creepin on your boxd ratings, since you said you'd be watching lots of indian films, so i knew about quite a few of these reactions before you posted. here's my lil mini rundown:
That's hilarious ...especially because I also keep reading it as "Eega" which I've never seen but know about.
Anyone's welcome to stalk Still, the numeric ratings don't capture the ambivalence of some of my reactions. For example, I genuinely liked most of Highway but dropped it to 6/10 because of its ending. Anaarkali and Yuva also looked better until their last scenes. On the other hand I would have rated Merku Thodarchi Malai two or three points lower if its ending hadn't justified the rest. A medium rating can look like a big "ho-hum" but it's often more nuanced.
Yeah, that reminded me of Ruiz too. I just upped my rating by another star because it's sat so well in my memory the last few weeks. I thought it was a lot stronger on atmosphere than on narrative, but what it does, it does well.
i mean...forced migration is pretty much *the* story of bengal (and bangladesh) in the last century. it's kind of shitty to think they'd want to make like two movies about it in the last century and then politely abstain.Umbugbene wrote: ↑Tue Jun 09, 2020 12:12 pm Paar - A man and his wife are driven by desperate circumstances from their Bihar village to Calcutta. Haven't both Bimal Roy and Satyajit Ray made movies with the same plot? The last scene makes a strong impression, but the rest feels like a rehash of neorealist poverty drama.
Maybe not in the particulars, but I believe there are limits to the effectiveness of rubbing viewers' noses in the hardships of poverty and oppression. You could make movies like that endlessly, but will it open people's eyes any further? Or change society? It's an easy way to approach a critical subject, but I don't think it's the most thoughtful approach. Doesn't it wind up as a form of sentimentality?
the particulars?Umbugbene wrote: ↑Thu Jun 11, 2020 6:14 amMaybe not in the particulars, but I believe there are limits to the effectiveness of rubbing viewers' noses in the hardships of poverty and oppression. You could make movies like that endlessly, but will it open people's eyes any further? Or change society? It's an easy way to approach a critical subject, but I don't think it's the most thoughtful approach. Doesn't it wind up as a form of sentimentality?
i'm being a little mean but i don't think you're saying anything about the movie that could't be gotten from watching it on fast forward. gose was a photojournalist and documentarian (as well as being involved in a bunch of important leftist theater organizations) before being a director, and the film is probably over-stuffed as a kind of documentation of prominent social issues of the time, but i don't know, that kind of aggressive sense of anger is maybe not fashionable (something like raju murugan's gypsy got widely insulted for that just this year) but i think is valuable.Umbugbene wrote: ↑Thu Jun 11, 2020 6:38 am I'm willing to consider that I might have missed something special about Paar. The ending made an impression; the rest of it felt to me like an extremely familiar story without adding anything new. I don't think it's a bad movie; I like it, but within limits.
sir if i didn't want you to post your opinions i'd just pretend to ignore them instead of harassing you openly like thisUmbugbene wrote: ↑Thu Jun 11, 2020 10:40 pm Admittedly my own brief lines above are not proper film criticism either. They're only my impressions... which is why I don't post them on LB. I think I took a nuanced view of each film and tried to see the good in each, but if my opinions bother you so much I'll skip the next installment.