Saturday, March 26, 2022

It's probably complicated.

Abhay Deol is the nephew of Dharmandra, the "He-Man" of Bollywood, and the cousin of nineties action stars Bobby and Sunny Deol.  Despite belonging to the Deol dynasty, though, Abhay has really focused on what's called "parallel cinema", and even when he dabbles in mainstream films, he tends to play complicated and nuanced characters rather than the usual action and romantic roles.  So when I sat down to watch Velle ( 2021), I knew I would be getting an Abhay Deal movie, but I did not realize how very Abhay Deol the movie would be.

Deol plays Rishi, a ghost-writer in the film industry who hopes to finally make a movie under his own name. He's hoping that Bollywood star Rohini (Mouni Roy) will agree to play the lead, and when they finally meet, he begins narrating the story to her in traditional Bollywood fashion.

Cut to Rahul (Karan Deol), Rambo (Savant Singh Premi) and Raju (Vishesh Tiwari), a trio of high school slackers who call their tight-knit circle of friends "R3".  (They all look too old to be in high school, but the film helpfully explains that they've failed the twelfth grade several times.)  When they meet the principal's troubled daughter Riya (Anya Singh) she quickly becomes their partner in mischief, joining the group as R4.


Riya wants to dance, but her father insists that she focus on her studies, and forces her to take late night tuition sessions with one of the teachers.  When the teacher touches her inappropriately, her father thinks she's lying to get out of work.  Riya turns to her friends, and Rahul suggests that she just leave, go to another city and study dance.  Of course, she'll need money, so they hatch a ridiculous scheme to fake Riya's kidnapping and get her father to pay a ransom.


And it works!  Riya leaves town and enrolls in dance school.  The plan is for the other three Rs to join her later, but before they can, Riya is actually kidnapped.  The real kidnappers want a million rupees, but instead of contacting her father they accidentally contact Rahul.  He promises to get the money somehow.

Meanwhile, Rishi and Rohini have grown closer as he works his way through the story.  They are so close that when Rishi receives a call from his mother telling him that his father is in the hospital and they'll need a million rupees for the operation, Rohini immediately volunteers to help.  The money is withdrawn from the bank, and as the pair are driving to the hospital, a stone flies through the windscreen, Rohini is knocked out and seriously injured, the car crashes, and the money is stolen . . . by Rahul, Rambo and Raja.


And then things get complicated.  Riya is in real and immediate peril.  The three Rs try to negotiate her release, but it gets much harder when they realize that Rahul has lost his phone.  Rishi is scouring the city looking for the money he needs to save his father.  And Riya's father has put lazy but very clever police inspector Rajni Verma (Rajesh Kumar) on the case.


Velle
handles its shifts in genre well, but I have questions!  Rishi is narrating a story which he says is fictional, but with some elements of truth.  The movie certainly implies that that movie plot is the story of Rahul and Raya, but nobody bats an eye about the story within a story escaping from within the story, and Rishi doesn't seem to recognize any of R3, so if they weren't his story, then what is his movie actually about?  Why does every single named character who appears onscreen have a name that starts with R, and what;s with all the Rs appearing in the background of various scenes?  Is the police inspector doing a deliberate Rishi Kapoor impression?  Is all of this deliberate ambiguity or just me missing things because I am watching a movie that's in a language I do not actually speak?

Having questions is good, I think?  I will certainly be thinking about this movie for a while.  And there's one thing I know to be true: Abhay Deol stars in some weird movies.


(And yes, Karan Deol is related; he's Sunny Deol's son.)


Saturday, March 12, 2022

Bahubali: The Clone Wars.

Bahubali: The Lost Legends (2017-) is an animated series set in the Bahubali universe.  The series acts as a prequel to the movies, detailing the adventures of the young Amarendra Bahubali (Viraj Adhav) and his obviously evil brother Bhallaldeva (Manoj Pandey) as they compete and cooperate in an attempt to prove themselves worthy of the throne of the kingdom of Mahishmati.  Other important characters include unflappable Queeen Mother Sivagami (Manini Mishra), her treacherous husband Bijjaladeva (Mukesh pandey), and the throne's incorruptible retainer Kattappa (Samay Thakkar).  The series has original characters as well, most notably Pradhan Guru (Vinod Kulkarni), who is obviously up to something, but I haven't seen enough of the series to know what that is.   


Amazon has only two episodes of Lost Legends available for streaming.  In the first episode, Riot in Mahishtami, when food shortages and systemic prejudice lead to the death of a government official, Bahubali is charged with dispensing justice while still preserving the city's fragile peace.  because Bahubali represents an ideal king, he does this by listening to what people have to say, and in the end he manages to uphold the letter of the law while still striving to make amends for a historic injustice.  


The second episode, The Blood Moon, is a bit more action oriented; Bahubali opens an ancient urn, and when a local family disappears, the people assume that demons released by the prince are responsible.  Naturally, Bahubali investigates, and discovers that the truth is much more Scooby Doo.  This episode is notable for a much more nuanced depiction of tribal peoples than in the actual Bahubali movies.  


Bahubali
is not the only Indian movie franchise to get a cartoon spinoff, but it's it's much more straightlaced than some of the others.  While Little Singham is wooing mermaids and fighting ancient sorcerers at the bottom of the sea, Bahubali is . . . . doing the same sort of things that he does in the movies.  The scale is much smaller, though.  The Bahubali movies are epics, with massive and deeply improbable battles, stupid vows, gorgeous musical numbers, and queens who SHOUT ALL THE TIME!!!!  Cartoon Sivagami is remarkably restrained, and there are a few minor skirmishes and one murder attempt but nobody enters the city via catapult.


That's not a bad thing, though.  The quieter tone and slower pace means that the characters have a chance to be fleshed out a bit more - instead of characters telling each other that Bahubali is an ideal king, he gets to show his kingliness on a regular basis.  It's not a necessary tie in by any means, but it does expand the universe and fill out the characters.


Saturday, March 5, 2022

It's like the mirror universe version of "Jab We Met."

 Uday Chopra is the youngest son of legendary Bollywood director Yash Chopra, and he has a number of credits as a writer, assistant director, and producer.  As an actor he is probably best known for his role as Ali Khan, the comedic sidekick in the Dhoom series.  But there was a brief time in the early 2000's when people were really trying hard to make "Uday Chopra, romantic hero" happen.  And that's how Neal 'n' Nikki (2005) happened.

Neal (Uday Chopra) is an enthusiastic athlete and self-proclaimed "super star" leading a contented life on his family's horse ranch in Canada. Neal loves the ladies and leads a very active social life, but when his parents start pressuring him to agree to an arranged marriage, he's happy to go along with it; as he explains to his stereotypically henpecked friends, he has terrible taste in women and he trusts his parents' judgement.  (Does this movie lean heavily into skeezy "women you date vs. women you marry" tropes?  Enthusiastically.)  After a few false starts, his parents arrange a match with Good Indian Girl Sweety (Richa Pallod), and Neal is . . . reasonably pleased.  However, he asks permission to spend the twenty one days before the engagement in Vancouver, so that he can have a little fun.


Of course, when Neal says he wants to have a little fun, he means women.  His plan is to meet twenty one women, one for each remaining night of unmarried life, and he starts off strong, almost accidentally scoring a date with famous model Kristy (Kristy McQuade).  (Does this movie also lean heavily into the all too common Bollywood trope that white women are just there to be objectified?  Oh yes.)


It's on that date that Neal meets bartender Nikki (Tanisha Mukherji), and she's . . . awful.  Loud, obnoxious, aggressive, and very drunk.  She's also just been fired, and celebrates her unemployment by dancing on the tables.  Neal is suddenly paying a lot of attention, which gives Abhishek Bachchan the opening to swoop in and take Kristy away.  By this point Nikki is very drunk indeed, and she asks Neal to take her home.  He doesn't know where she lives, so he takes her to a nearby hotel, the Thorny Rhino, and . . . 

Okay, nothing happens.  Nikki falls asleep, and Neal leaves her alone.  We're supposed to think that this show's Neal's inner core of nobility, but he still took an obviously intoxicated woman to a hotel room - way to show the bare minimum of human decency at the last possible minute, Neal.  

Of course, this is a sex comedy, so thanks to a series of unfortunate events Neal is naked and standing beside the sleeping Nikki when the police arrive to raid the hotel.  The misunderstandings are eventually cleared up, and Neal and Nikki go their separate ways.  Neal continues his quest while Nikki goes back to drinking and bouncing from one job to another.  (Does the movie ever confront the issue of Nikki's obvious drinking problem?  It does not.  We're supposed to find it quirky.)


Once again, sex comedy, so every time Neal looks like he's about to achieve his goal, he's interrupted.  By Nikki.  Along the way, they get to know each other a bit better, and Nikki offers to take him to a small resort which is full of beautiful women.  Neal agrees, which means it's time for a road trip.  And whenever the hero and heroine take a road trip together in a Bollywood movie, they are bound to grow closer.

Of course it's a trick - Nikki wants Neal to help her make her ex boyfriend Trish (Alexandre Montez) jealous.  Naturally, they do that by staging a mid-nineties Bollywood romantic song and dance number, and the movie briefly becomes entertaining. Nikki wins Trish back, then dumps him, getting the closure that she needs.  She takes Neal to a bizarre midsummer Christmas party to repay the debt, and that's when they realize that they love each other after all.  They spend the night together, and after an awkward morning after Nikki preemptively dumps Neal before he can reject her, not realizing that he's about to propose.  After a bitter argument they go their separate ways.


Neal returns home and finally meets his fiance Sweety, along with Sweety's family, including her cousin Nikki.  The movie is no longer a sex comedy, it's a straight romance. Will Nikki and Neal be able to overcome their differences and unite, finally becoming the Neal 'n' Nikki that they were clearly meant to be?  Probably, but they're not very likeable, so at this point in the movie I was much more invested in the romantic travails of incredibly minor character Happy (Gaurav Gera), who's spent most of his limited screen-time singing traditional Punjabi songs in the background.  Can Happy be happy with the sweet girl of his dreams?  Hopefully!  And Neal and Nikki are there too, I guess.