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FOREVER MY GIRL – 2018



“Only the gentle are ever really strong.”
~ James Dean ~


I had posted the trailer of Forever My Girl on my Twitter, Instagram and Facebook long before anyone else had posted anything about it because I had read the book by Heidi McLaughlin and I was awaiting the big screen version with utmost impatience simply because I was craving to see if the book was better or the movie.

I watched it last night, and I must add, with much emphasis, that the movie moved me deeply. In a time where everybody seems to take love for granted and seldom works on it like a sculptor works most lovingly on his marble by giving it the shape and form he so desires, Forever My Girl had several things going for it: innate heartache, binds and bonds of family and friends, feelings and emotions most handsomely handled and expressed, a fine representation of how some relationships stand the test of time and some don’t – it even had god and the church, and despite the critics seeming to have made little of it, I was enormously pleased that it was rather treasured by the public with much enthusiasm, and why not? It contained no violence, no lovemaking, or even profanity for that matter, something we see most meaninglessly woven into the tapestry of a film merely to tempt and titillate the audiences. The movie made you feel that you don’t need to be bohemian to be acceptably fashionable. That there is great meaning in simplicity, and sophisticated simplicity is something that is part of our cultural DNA, and at the end of the day manners, respect and love score over everything else. Adored how nobody is scheming and insulting anybody, and how, with such refined balance, each one is actually responsible for each other’s keeping.

Cinema, the arts, literature or anything to do with humanities does have a rather calming effect on mankind. Watching a violent film, leaves behind a distasteful residue in us. I was reading an article by Jacques Attali called Can Art Do Anything Against Violence? In that he states, and I quote – art softens proprieties. In principle, art represents civilization, beauty, serenity and benevolence. Moreover, in principle, nothing is more soothing than frequenting masterpieces of art. He explains further that societies that reject art are particularly violent. I have always supported this view that if we surround ourselves with negativity or viciousness, it percolates into our system, reaching soon a point of no return, and it is at such times that we need to use mediums like literature, art and film to tell folks whelmed in such throes that life is not something to be spent nurturing the unsavoury. That if you see and surround yourself with the good, there is every chance that the good would manifest itself in your heart and soul and make you a person who will be an epitome of buoyancy. Perhaps I make it sound as easy as picking up a glass of water and gulping it down one’s throat, and for many, I daresay, it is indeed easy to go with the flow, however, those who thrive on independence of thought and above all possess a strong character, would not find themselves beguiled by the trends of the times. They would reject that which they feel is detrimental to their inner and outward growth. As the events unfolded on the screen, it was like watching a charming wedge from the golden age of cinema. I found myself so very absorbed in every scene merely because it brought to itself a novelty one was not accustomed to watching these days. It had such a lovely touch of affection between Liam and Joise, and the very representation of that type of pure love has been absent for a long time, not only on the screen, but also in the lives of people as well. And that is when I wondered why other filmmakers were not making more movies like these when they knew what effect the cinema has on people? That is when I discerned that this was not the problem of the filmmakers per se, but an enigma of the most mammoth kind with the current generation itself – a generation that thrived on instant gratification, and who’s attention span was colossally distrait, for when they saw something that lacked unreal twists and turns in storytelling, a screenplay that grew organically with the story, they were seldom able to differentiate a pebble from a diamond.


I LEARNT / LIKED

That people seldom change until something life changing comes along to change them. Liam has everything, and yet what he yearns for is some ‘real’ love from the ‘real’ people he craves it from.

That children can be smarter than we think they are. In fact they are far too smart for their age when we were their age. It is like they come fitted with an innate antenna in them that works beyond our capacity to understand their mechanics.

That people tend to hide a lot, not to escape their pain, but because they don’t know how to articulate what they are hiding. This is where every Liam needs a Josie. And when I say that, I do not mean only in form of the opposite sex, the aim is that every Liam in us needs someone like Josie to believe in them; to understand that we need to be there for those whom we love most unconditionally when we know that our souls have connected. This is where we have to go back to our life’s drawing boards and rub the parts away where we are each raised with the belief that nobody is indispensable. Such teachings are nothing but a bunch of garbage as there is absolutely no substitute for those who matter to us. Also, how the scar of his childhood would have left Liam so gravely damaged that in being unable to process the pain, he finds himself abandoning what requires mending. This is where we have to understand that people deal with grief in ways that we may not understand. We have to be patient and let the hurt heal. We have to be the anchor and help one another get through the distress regardless of the hardships we face.

How not everything can be made right by money, just as gifts mean nothing in the lives of those who mean the world to us.

How the old duct-taped phone that Liam holds closest to his heart indicates that in life we may become larger than life for the world and have everything we would ever want, but it is these little things that matter: things that we attach importance to by virtue of them being woven into the valves of our heart and soul.

Liam rushing barefoot to the phone store illustrates most marvellously how, when we are in our plainest elements, we care less for anything that the world cares for in us. I loved how when he offers ten thousand dollars to anybody who can fix his phone, the manager of the store offers to fix it for him on the house. This is where I think that the values that we see fading at an alarming rate today are awfully imperative to keeping and preserving the nature of helping our fellow human beings without any strings attached. I loved how Josie tells Liam that there would be nothing between them, and exactly an instant after he hears her say that, Liam asks Josie if he can pick her up from work.

How Liam, who hasn’t been able to produce any riveting music, or written any heart-touching songs because his life appears clouded by the distractions of city life, the drugs, and the flesh, is able to write with much profoundness in an environment that he finds actual comfort in. Many people who crave for celebrity do not realise that celebrity is intoxicating, and it can also consume you in ways that you can rarely fathom, and by the time you realise you want to retract your steps, your feet would have been far dunked in dirt, unless of course providence is benevolent enough and gives you a second chance.


DID NOT LIKE

1/ The parallel drawn on Nicholas Spark’s work to market this movie was lame. Agreed he is a novelist who has made great success by tapping on the pulse of the passions of love and relationships, but his work is dreadfully predictable. If not anything it is weighed down with overdoses of saccharine. The Forever My Girl production house did not have to piggyback on someone else when their product was strong enough on its own.

2/ Here are some (inexcusable) excerpts from the book:

On page 87
“No.” I shake my head to emphasis my point.
It should have been: I shake my head to emphasise my point?

On page 89
I couldn’t really say no since he used buy our beer for us.
Where is the ‘to’ before buy?

Like all else, it seems editing too has taken a nosedive. It is appalling that publishing houses do not take their reputation seriously. Whom are they catering to with such mistakes? Shouldn’t the publishing firms engage experienced editors? How did the writer give her nod to the final draft?


CREW

One must tip one’s hat for the director Bethany Ashton Wolf. She is incredibly in control of her project. Glad she decided on the novel, and then chiselled it into the magnificent screenplay with the writer of the novel, Heidi McLaughlin. The book and the film are strikingly dissimilar. I found the film far more powerful than the book. The book in portions was unpolished and insensitive. It had many trivial characters, was overloaded with the unnecessary usage of profanity, and was jarringly predictable. The movie on the other hand was charming and reflected meaning. It was not merely cinema that was callous. It was something one can watch with school kids to grandparents – and each age group will cherish most deeply the beauty of relationships depicted in it as long as they live.

Right from the etiquettes to the minute details of human nature that Bethany Ashton Wolf has portrayed in her movie makes her one of my favourite directors. I adored how she avoids playing to the gallery who worships effect, and effect, unfortunately, is rather short-lived, because what stays on even when we are long gone is culture and polish, and she is a master raconteur of that polite genre.

Alex Roe is a fine choice for Liam Page not only for his chiselled jawline, lanky structure, expressive eyes, but more so because he enhances his American twang with the refined touch of British finesse. Jessica Rothe as Josie is my favourite. She has a winning smile, strong legs, and a voice to drool over. Convincing and vulnerable, she is as perfect as Josie could get for the big screen. John Benjamin Hickey as Pastor Brian was another role enacted with immense panache by John. He has an alluring screen presence and it is a delight to watch him play his role with utter subtlety. Abby Ryder Fortson as Billy is the niftiest kid around. She essays her role to the perfect T – bold, confident, observant and how a kid actually ought to be – genteel, genuine, and yet having a free soul of her own. Peter Cambor as Sam, Liam’s manager is more like his sounding board. He is like what a good friend is – looking out for you and giving you a smack on the arse when you most need it. Gillian Vigman as Doris, Liam’s publicist enacts her little screen time with verve and ardour. Tyler Riggs as Jake, Josie’s brother is one of the smartest men in the movie. He has an easy-going charm to him not without the unmistakable stamp of defined masculinity that is a hallmark of country life.

The compositions of Brett Boyett sink into your soul. Alex Roe’s vocals are a treat for the melody-crazy music buffs. Duane Manwiller has handled the camera with deftness.


ON A BROADER PERSPECTIVE

When you turn the pages of the newspaper, or scroll across digital screens, you discern the reasons that are common to the ruining of relationships are either downright childish or not worthy of a thought. At such times you wonder whatever can be done to amend the straying attitudes. One of them is surely to do with COMMUNICATION PROBLEMS. You will be alarmed to learn that sexual infidelity is not really the problem causer in most couples, but the lack of communication is. Not thinking he is good enough for Josie, Liam takes a decision based on his own summation without asking her how she feels about him, and when his intention is to do her good, he ends up hurting everybody in the bargain. This behaviour is directly related to an evolutionary problem – men find it difficult to express their emotions since they have been conditioned to be manly, and to be manly is not to admit to your vulnerabilities or come into contact with your innermost feelings. They learn to bottle up their emotions and sink along with the ship even if there were to be a lighthouse in the distance.

LACK OF INTIMACY: When I use the word ‘intimacy’ I am not pointing in the direction of sexual pleasure. Sex is vital in a relationship, but sex is not the core of everything in life. Men need sexual receptivity to feel romantic, and women need romance to be sexually receptive. That has been most beautifully represented in the movie. Liam has his fair share of women as a celebrity, while Josie finds herself so intertwined with Laim and his soul even in his absence that she cannot find someone to make love with for the sake of fulfilling her desires. People forget that intimacy is not merely genital-to-genital contact, but intimacy can be found in hugs, kisses, the need to be touched, fondled, and to feel close to their partners. Relationships can head towards a dead end if we stop paying attention to intimacy.

UNMET EXPECTATIONS: Sometimes small things can create the widest rifts. Be watchful of what triggers a negative reaction in your partner. Liam’s stature renders him to take life easy as he is given everything on a platter. However, when he returns home his father treats him like he is just anybody else around home. He has to wash the dishes and ride the bicycle. I reckon men should be sent to the countryside in order to learn to do their own work, that way a lot of friction would, and could, be avoided between a couple.

I know I could go on and on, but I reckon I shall stop here with a footnote that much as cinematic experiences may drum into our hearts and minds that life is so and so, and we have to live it with such and such philosophies, fact is that life is rarely dramatic – it is a steady rolling forward of events that make us who we are, and it is the people who are around us who bring such events to light, and this is one striking experience watching Forever My Girl left me with. I cannot but think of Susan Sontag here who ruminated in her diary, “Nothing is mysterious, no human relation. Except love.” Or even Rainer Maria Rilke who said, “To love is good, too: love being difficult. For one human being to love another: that is perhaps the most difficult of all our tasks, the ultimate, the last test and proof, the work for which all other work is but preparation.”

PS: If the film were to be made in my side of the world, I envision Ali Zafar essaying Laim and Aditi Rao Hydari as Josie. 



The Good Guy - 2009



First, you can change the style of your clothes, but not the actuality within. You can want to be popular, but there’s no rule to attaining it. The people who get swayed in wanting to please others most often, please none, and end up being alone; the only difference being that in this case, the character of Tommy Fielding played by Scott Porter is a clear case of nature versus nurture and who vanquishes is what you will have to figure when you watch the motion picture.

Second, the laws of attraction follow their own path. No external prod or pressure could add or diminish it when it sets its heart on what it wants. This is what Daniel Seaver (Bryan Greenberg), a formal avionics engineer, the man who is misused for his goodness, and allows people to do so because he knows who he is and doesn’t really need the approval of others for him to etch an image of his own self. I adore the method in which he shows us all a way of life by merely being himself. His character is strong, smart, attractive and infectious. He portrays a perfect gentleman, difference only that he is not in a suit but in tees and jeans. The fact also that he is slightly nervous around women is a bonus because any man, who is genuine, would be. I reckon that many might not identify with him, but guys like him who are slow and steady, are the guys who finally get to where they need to get. Unfortunately, the ones who assume themselves to be smart and gods gift to mankind do not realise that mankind has moved on, and it is ultimately the man with values and some chivalry who gets the woman who is entitled to him.

Third, I don’t understand the inimical American romance with the word ‘fuck’. There are various ways to emphasise on matters of concern than adding that, ‘Fuck!’ - ‘Fucking!’ preceding every other word in every sentence. It spoils even the finest work by the indiscretions of wanting to be, in another American classic word ‘cool’.

Tommy is supposedly made out to be suave, but remotely. Despite his streaks of genuineness, I thought him predictable and stupid. When someone thinks they are indispensible then sadly it is just the beginning of their downfall I suppose.  

Beth Vest (Alexis Bledel) is a sweet, Manhattan bred young woman. Despite her reserved demeanour, she is someone with varied interests. She loves books and has a fine group of unfeigned and sometimes over-enthusiastic friends who meet to discuss everything from politics to Lolita. She loves travelling and treasures the meaningful aspects of life rather than the flake that Tommy’s world so easily consists of. She’s not a stunner in terms of oomph but comfortable to watch nonetheless. The honesty she lends to the character actually adds to the realism merited by the role.  

Sex is the best comforter when in emotional pain, and I was glad Daniel and Beth take their relationship to the next level with charm and rather organically, while at the same time it is deplorable how Tommy uses sex as nothing less than an ego boost. If you ask me, I’d rather turn asexual than bonking women to make a point. It is guys with empty souls who feed their empty inner selves by trying to be convincing make pure jackasses of themselves.  

Cash, the role of the boss played by Andrew McCarthy is something that I disliked. He is cynical and tactless. His usage of the word ‘fuck’ is annoying and his jokes flat. He barely even contributed to the movie and I wonder why he was written in the first place.

Loved the subtleties though, like the woman whom Tommy was two timing with Beth (the one in the red dress), takes off her heart-shaped necklace to denote that their relationship is over and only if you are careful enough, you’ll notice it, else it will escape your eyes.  

In all, I loved the character of Daniel and Bryan has done a splendid job with it. His lines are gems to absorb and reflect, and reminds me much of what Albert Camus once said; that we only know of one duty, and that is to love. That, in a nutshell, is the essence of The Good Guy.

Isi Life Mein - 2010



Jack Palance: “Do you know what the secret of life is? One thing. Just one thing. You stick to that and everything else don’t mean shit.”
Billy Crystal: “Yeah, but what’s that one thing?”
Jack Palance: “That’s what you’ve got to figure out.”

~ From the movie City Slickers

The above so fittingly illustrates the premise of the motion picture Isi Life Mein. To elaborate on it a bit more, I would have to furnish you a quick preview into the present circumstances surrounding the picture. For starters, it is so true that in fiction one discovers the truth that more often than not reality obscures. And to follow that up, I am but appalled at the disinterest of the press to have dealt harshly with a sensitive film that deals with several complex issues, and that too at a calm and collected, but most definitely effective pace. This is where I feel what a weird lot the media is indeed – they embrace rubbish packaged smartly by those who know how to hoodwink people and willingly aid in filling up their coffers while when something worthy comes along they knock it down throwing the public off course.

I don’t care about what others think of it and I also don’t care about what they think of me, but on the whole I quite enjoyed the movie. Certainly, it’s not earth shattering but it’s not a disappointment either. To begin with I wouldn’t oppose the fact that the first half of the film, despite the usage of certain imperative elements that appealed to me such as mention of Shakespeare (The Taming of the Shrew) upon which the play in the movie is based. The mention of The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand was also welcoming considering that youngsters of that age are rather infatuated by the characters in that book. Yet despite all that there was still something vague, weak and loud about the first half. The bunch of boys and girls as Akshay’s friends were tolerable but their issues were sketchy. It is as if they were put there without any reason, especially the matter concerning the slightly overweight chap. Just because somebody thinks of us in a certain way must not make us alter ourselves unless we want to transform from within. Besides, I was not sure what the French-speaking character was put in for since she made no contribution to the film and was utterly annoying. That said the scenes lacked memorable humour as they moved on. The writer should have put in a little more effort since the highlight was the youth. If not anything it would have given her a wide platform to tap into the humorous side and the given the audience some moments to relish. I seriously felt that Akshay as Vivaan had been made to appear a bit too over-enthusiastic – so very unlike his character, unless it had been done deliberately to show how the lad so full of life could express more without the support of words post intermission. Sandeepa Dhar as Rajnandani aka RJ is boring in the first half though she gets a chance to exhibit her onscreen proficiency more evidently in the second and this is where I felt that the second half of the film was actually far deeper than the former.

It would be unfair if I didn’t admit that the double standards we see so rampant in the society, the oppression the women face in the hands of a patriarchal system at home and the misconception that the urban people are hardly as sensitive as the rural folk depicted is laudable. The paradox of how some of us lay blame on the western culture in spoiling us has been beautifully symbolised by the splendid behaviour of some of the characters. I feel no matter how modern in our approach we might become, we are yet very much Indian at heart and you cannot take away our traditions and manners from us irrespective of our outer garb. It’s a marvellous movie about giving shape to your ideas. About working hard to make them a reality. Of not succumbing to peer pressure but making them seeing your point of view backed by substantial proof. Several pertinent and prevailing subjects have been embarked upon and tackled sensitively without making them appear like ‘in your face messages’. For instance the character of RJ’s mother is short, pivotal and very well-defined. I liked the precise manner in which her dialogues have been penned. Her tone is firm without being imposing and how instrumental she is in bringing around her husband without the assistance of cliché or histrionics is noteworthy. Hailing from an intrinsic traditional background the decision of RJ’s father to put the wedding off is a first step to progress cinematically at least. If it changes even a single person, then I think the work of the film is done, not forgetting that it is a welcome break indeed from the melodrama we are so used to watching on screen. I say this because one can take something simple and make a melodrama out of it and then like life, which is but simple, move us with its simplicity, which is what Isi Life Mein does without a murmur. I cherished the scenes where RJ is probing whether Akshay and his former girlfriend had made love. How Akshay deals with the situation was handled competently. The other adorable scenes are how RJ makes her friend wash her mouth for swearing absurdities at a drop of a hat. The scene where Akshay attempts to show RJ the silver lining about pursuing her career as a choreographer but seeks clarity himself is also something I quite appreciated. We’ve all been there before, haven’t we? Where we are the rock for those who mean the world to us and yet depend on them to guide us. 

I am sure that some people would think Akshay’s character is a loser to stand and watch the woman he loves being married away before him and does not even bat an eyelid to express his bleeding heart. While each one is entitled to individual opinions, I think him a true hero. You don’t go about seizing what you think is yours against the displeasure of the family. I found his character respectable, who after knowing that the woman he loved was agreeable for the wedding and stayed with the decisions her family had taken, stuck to himself rather than creating a ruckus which is customarily shown for shock value in movies but is hardly so in real life. He knows that selfishness and defiance only leads to destruction and that love is not about snatching what you want but that its essence lies in seeing the one you love happy. Owing to his age in the film I thought that it was a very smart but subtle reflection of human nature. Cheers to the writer and director for taking that stand rather than trivialising it.
 

To preserve a man alive in the midst of so many chances and hostilities, is as great a miracle as to create him and that’s exactly what I feel of Akshay Oberoi. He has the aptitude to play this charming chap with immense flair and yet you can see that regardless of his Casanova like manner, he is someone who can stir you with a mature performance as well. What is much needed to survive in the industry is ability and stability and on both those grounds I found Akshay efficient and alluring. He puts his facial vocabulary to correct use and it doesn’t take any rocket science to figure that in time he will be a star that will shine in the streetlights of eternity if he keeps his head on his shoulders. Another reason I most admire him for is that unlike the many influential youth of today with firm film backgrounds he could have chosen something really fancy for his debut film and yet he selected to do Isi Life Mein, a simple and sweet movie and we must give him his due for this decision.

Sandeepa Dhar is not great, but an actor you can watch in the role that has been essayed out for her. I felt she is a bit too conscious and tends to add this element of exaggeration to some of the scenes. Looking at it realistically one knows that she is not going to be a Kareena or Katrina but going forward I thought her conventional looks might land her some befitting roles and also result in slightly limiting in the range of roles offered to her. Then again one cannot simply underestimate the audience today and they might simply lap her up much against my opinion on her.

Music by Meet Bros is average although the song Isi Umar Mein by Mohit Chauhan is ridiculously infectious and stayed with me.

What Isi Life Mein has taught me is that living a life is merely not enough and that one must have freedom, sunshine and a little flower to keep us going. What a pity that the bad reviews have robbed the masses of time well spent in the company of people who while having fun themselves also end up teaching you a valuable thing or two about survival. So much for the pathetic press who knows not how to discern between processed garbage and real substance. And I want to tell the public that when we cannot support those whom we really ought to be supporting then why should we pay money to see bad films when we can stay home and see bad television for nothing instead?

PS: After all that, what actually went wrong with the film some would ask? Honestly, a sloppy first half that appeared as if it had been written in a hurry. And an overall poor packaging as well. A tad bit of care could have added that missing zing to the entire film I suppose. Isi Life Mein is a classic case of when most unfortunately bad things happen to good people. However, there is no limiting true talent and once the moonlight lifts, the sun shall soon shine.

BAND BAAJA BAARAAT – 2010



The Quiet Poetry of Unintended Art: On Cinema and the Soul’s Subtle Nourishment

— A meditation on the inexplicable grace of film and its kinship with the quiet verse of everyday life.

 

I have often thought that life, in all its splendour, is also remarkably absurd—a curious range of seemingly aimless episodes, where our words vanish almost as swiftly as they are uttered. And yet, amid the jests and trifles, the endless he-said-she-said of human discourse, something strangely beautiful occurs: we compose a kind of poetry. Not the sort penned with deliberation, but a spontaneous, living verse born of unguarded moments. If we resist the urge to scrutinise it too fiercely—if we let it settle into the soul like sunlight on still water—this poetry begins to shape the very rhythm of our days.

 

This sensation, overwhelming though it is, finds its closest echo for me in cinema. Whether foolish or profound, poetic or prosaic, true or illusory—films speak a language understood not by the mind alone, but by the heart and the senses alike. We do not merely watch them; we breathe them in, chew them over, savour their essence. And when rightly absorbed, they nourish us—imparting not only fashions and moods, but something akin to well-being, even a quiet joy that clings to the spirit like a fragrance long after the final frame has faded.

 

A House Once Glorious: Remembering Yash Raj and the Slow Return of Grace

— A personal reckoning with disillusionment and the cautious rekindling of trust in a faltering cinematic legacy.

 

I cannot now recall the last occasion on which I watched a film bearing the venerable insignia of Yash Raj Films. This absence was not born of any quarrel with the house itself—for what could one hold against a name that once conjured such splendour? Rather, it was sorrow, not scorn, that kept me away—a quiet disenchantment with the direction the studio had taken. What had once been a mausoleum of storytelling, painstakingly built brick-by-brick under the discerning eye of Yash uncle and his noble companions, seemed now adrift—its legacy bruised by unwise commerce and the eager but fumbling hands of a younger generation.

 

When their grand spectacles—laden with stars and noise—began to stumble and fall like overfed giants, there came, almost miraculously, a film called Chak De. I did not see it, and yet I noticed it. Not because of the ever-bankable presence of Shahrukh Khan, but because, by all accounts, here at last was a film where the story—not the stardust—held the reins. Content, they said, was king. I believed them, and that belief felt like the faint pulse of a studio remembering its soul.

 

When Fanaa was in the making, I took note—for Ravi K. Chandran, a cherished friend, was behind the lens, and Aamir Khan, whose family I have known with long affection, played the lead. And yet I stayed away. There was something missing—an indescribable vigour, a heartbeat I could not hear.

 

Then came Rab Ne Bana Di Jodi, and though again Ravi lent his gifted eye to the project, and though it marked the debut of Anushka Sharma—a young lady from my own city of Bangalore who had, by happy coincidence, modelled for some dear friends in fashion—it still left me unmoved. The glimpses I caught on television seemed hollow, like an echo of a song once lovely but now too often sung.

 

And so time slipped by, as it always does, with quiet indifference. Then, just last week, in one of those aimless hours when one neither thinks nor dreams with purpose, I found myself perusing the current cinema listings. Amidst the gaudy posters and forgettable titles, one image caught my eye—Band Baaja Baaraat. I knew nothing of it. I had seen no preview, read no review. Yet something in its posture—unguarded, almost cheerful—drew me in. And so, without expectation or reason, I resolved to see it.

 

The Arrival of an Uncut Gem: Ranveer Singh and the Restoration of Sincerity

— A tribute to the rare authenticity of a debut performance, and the hope it offers to a weary industry.

 

With no expectation save the mild curiosity awakened by a well-designed poster, I found myself seated in the dim hush of the cinema, awaiting what I presumed would be a passable diversion. But scarcely had the opening credits faded and the narrative begun to unfurl, when I beheld for the first time the countenance of Ranveer Singh. And in that moment, I knew—with the kind of quiet certainty one rarely experiences—that I would remain with this film to its very end.

 

For here was no mere performer straining to impress. No, Ranveer’s presence was of a different order: one felt an immediate and effervescent euphoria, not shouted but shared, as though he had stumbled upon the art of touching hearts without ever seeming to try. His energy was not the exhausting sort, but a buoyant current, tempered with an innocence rare and a dignity rarer still. It struck me, as I watched, that such a quality had long been absent from our screens—perhaps forgotten altogether in an age increasingly enamoured with spectacle and artifice.

 

As the story wove on, my admiration deepened. The lad carried his role with such ease, such intuitive grace, that one might be tempted to forget the labour behind the craft. I thought to myself, If only he resists the glittering temptation to ascend too swiftly by way of those directors whose reputations are large, but whose works are hollow… For in our times, it is all too easy to confuse fame with mastery, and many a fine talent has been spent in service of mediocrity disguised as vision.

 

If he remains unswerving—if he chooses scripts that stretch rather than flatter him, and continues to refine the subtle sensitivity already evident in his art—then I do not believe he will falter. He may stumble, yes, as all men do when treading uncertain ground. But fall? I think not.

 

The very next day, I came upon a report in the newspaper which told me that young Ranveer had publicly expressed his gratitude to the filmmakers for entrusting him with the role, acknowledging the risk they had taken in casting an unknown. But I must confess, my thoughts ran quite the other way. It is not Ranveer who owes thanks to Yash Raj Films, but they who ought to thank him. For in his performance, they found not only the beating heart of Band Baaja Baaraat, but a long-overdue revival of their own reputation—a resurrection, if you will, from a season of lacklustre offerings.

 

Indeed, fortune smiled on both: on Ranveer, for being placed in a role no one—save perhaps a Shahid Kapur—could have honoured so convincingly; and on YRF, for having found in him an uncut gem who has, by sheer authenticity, restored to them a measure of lost glory.

 

Of Restraint and Radiance: Anushka Sharma and the Grace of Simplicity

— A reflection on quiet strength, natural talent, and the virtue of not seeking more than one is.

 

As I have previously confessed, I hold a quiet fondness for Anushka Sharma—one that stems not merely from her roots in my own city, but from her auspicious debut in a film captured by the discerning lens of my friend, Ravi K. Chandran. It is true, I have not followed her career with any particular diligence since then, and yet, Band Baaja Baaraat has made something plain to me: when rightly cast and sensitively directed, she reveals herself as an actress of genuine substance.

 

There is no denying the charm of her presence—she occupies the screen with a confidence that neither demands nor pleads for attention, but earns it by the quiet force of authenticity. What is most striking, perhaps, is her restraint: she does not fall prey to the theatrical excesses that often mar the performances of the inexperienced. One senses that she understands—perhaps instinctively—that her natural self is already a gift well worth offering. She does not embellish what needs no ornament.

 

From this point onward, I shall be watching with interest, and with hope. My wish for her is simple: that she may be granted not merely roles, but worthy roles—those that speak to her vision of herself and stretch the fine thread of her talent without fraying it. For she has already shown that she can deliver what is required; she now deserves the opportunity to deliver what is great.

 

Craft over Clatter: On Directorial Integrity and the Return of Honest Storytelling

— An appreciation of the film’s creators, their restraint, and the quiet truths embedded in their work.

 

As for the director, young Maneesh Sharma reveals himself to be a craftsman of no small ability. His touch is confident, his choices largely wise, and—most refreshing of all—he resists the garish indulgences that have become habitual within the Yash Raj fold. Gone, mercifully, are the improbable dream sequences set in alien landscapes more suited to travel brochures than human drama. In their place, we are given something far more precious: a story that breathes the air of its own soil, and a world that feels not manufactured but inhabited.

 

The screenplay by Habib Faisal does not dazzle with ornament, but it moves with purpose, taking us precisely where it intends. In its unassuming stride, it teaches—though never preaches—lessons not only of love, but of that rarer and nobler virtue: fellowship. It is a quiet truth, often neglected in tales of romance, that the greatest wonders are worked not by grand gestures alone, but in the steady labour of those whose souls are attuned to one another. This film remembers that, and honours it.

 

The music, too, deserves its applause. There is a vigour in the compositions—a liveliness not contrived but contagious. That the songs are bound closely to the plot gives them an integrity often missing in such fare. They belong, not as adornments, but as chapters in the story’s own rhythm.

 

I must, however, speak plainly of a moment where the film falters. The rupture between the two protagonists—Ranveer and Anushka—is portrayed with a kind of dramatic excess that strains belief. Now, I concede: human beings, when injured in matters of the heart, do not always behave nobly or even logically. But there is a line between the trivial and the petty, and here, I fear, the characters—having built something with mutual respect and effort—regress too sharply into the pettiness of petulant children. Their behaviour, so out of tune with the maturity they had hitherto displayed, pulled me momentarily from the world the film had so carefully constructed.

 

Yet despite this blemish, the film retains a quality too often lacking: freshness. The premise, though faintly reminiscent of The Wedding Planner, stands on its own with grace. The film draws from familiar wells, yes, but manages still to quench. There is a delicacy in the execution—a gentleness with which the story is handled—that made me forgive its reliance on certain time-worn tropes.

 

One moment, in particular, I found both delightful and quietly profound: the subtle satire on celebrity culture, and the unvarnished truth of how great stars descend upon weddings for a fee, like heavenly bodies hired for the evening. The scene in which Ranveer persuades a bride that the real star of her wedding is not a film idol but the man who has chosen to love her is, I think, a moment of quiet brilliance. For in it lies a deeper truth: that no glory, however loud, can outshine the quiet radiance of genuine affection. We need not wait for a Shahrukh Khan to bestow grace upon our lives; we need only open our eyes to the everyday beloved, and recognise the wonder already at hand.

 

Of Intimacy, Language, and the Courage to Be True

— A contemplation on evolving femininity, emotional nuance, and the quiet rebellion of being natural in a world of deception.

 

There were, I must add, certain subtleties within the film that struck me as both refreshing and admirably honest. Chief among them was the portrayal of a young woman who does not retreat into shame or self-reproach for having expressed her desire physically. There is no hollow drama here, no overwrought moralising—only a quiet, sincere rendering of a moment shared between two people who, in that instant, are simply human.

 

What followed—those immediate, inarticulate tremors of confusion and consequence—was, I felt, handled with remarkable finesse. The film captures with rare precision how the subconscious, that hidden architect of our emotions, silently infiltrates the conscious mind. A subtle shift in language—from tu to tum—becomes a symbol of distance and delicacy, of intimacy altered by awareness. Such a small detail, and yet so telling; for often in love, it is not what is said, but how it is said, that tells us whether we are drawing nearer or drifting away.

 

It is also noteworthy how the film reflects the quiet evolution of society—how women, in particular, are increasingly at ease with their agency, even in matters that once bore a cloak of secrecy or shame. The dignity with which this shift is portrayed speaks well of the filmmakers, and gives the audience a chance to reflect without being instructed.

 

And now, if I may turn to a different, more corporeal observation: I have noticed a curious trend of late in our cinema—the pursuit of an almost androgynous aesthetic among leading men, as if masculinity were something to be polished away. One sees them waxed and gleaming, as though sculpted not by nature but by the same pretence that prepares a showroom dummy. Ranveer Singh, to his quiet credit, has resisted this tide. Though he bears a physique that might tempt any man toward vanity, he preserves a look that is unmanufactured, a body that still belongs to the species that builds, breaks, and bleeds.

 

 

It may seem a trivial point, and yet I would argue it is not. There is something noble in allowing men to look like men and women to look like women, not by rigid standards, but by the unspoken dignity of being true to one’s own form. For in a world ever blurring its lines, there is still room—indeed, a need—for distinction. And in this, Ranveer earns one more mark of quiet praise.

 

A Plea for Imagination: On Legacy, Gratitude, and the Courage to Choose Wisely

— A final exhortation to preserve creative integrity and remember the wellspring from which true storytelling flows.

 

In conclusion, it is my earnest hope that Aditya Chopra (Adi, as we call him)—and those who presently preside over the creative destiny of Yash Raj Films—will not allow the triumph of this particular work to dull the edge of their imagination. Success, though a sweet thing, is a dangerous counsellor. It often tempts its recipients to repetition rather than innovation, and in doing so, places at risk the very sparkle that won the victory in the first place. May they not fall into the weary habit of casting actors according to convenience or commercial certainty, thereby imperilling the very lives they have so carefully and providentially set into motion on the screen.

 

In green-lighting this screenplay, YRF have offered a quiet assurance to their audience—that they have, at last, begun to learn from the missteps of the past and are finding their way, however tentatively, back to the road of creative integrity. It is a hopeful sign. I recall with affection how Adi once gave my friend, Jimmy Sheirgill, a fine platform in Mohabbatein, allowing a sincere talent to be seen and heard. And now, with this film, he has done something perhaps more urgent: he has given us Ranveer—a necessary breath of fresh air in a cinematic world stifled by dynastic surnames and the dull entitlement they too often carry.

 

For too long now, we have watched a parade of the well-connected and ill-prepared walk across our screens with no understanding of the craft they pretend to possess. They are given opportunity upon opportunity, as if inheritance were a substitute for insight. In contrast, here is a young man who possesses not only energy but humility, not only talent but the willingness to shape it. For bringing such a one to light, Adi deserves, not flattery, but thanks.

 

And should he, in future days, find himself again uncertain of what stories to tell or whom to trust in the telling of them, I would simply say: do not look too far, dear Adi. Knock gently upon the door of Yash Uncle’s legacy—the wisdom is there, waiting. And if you listen closely, I believe you will not go wrong.