Tuesday, 18 February 2014

GUNDAY movie Review


Gunday Movie Review
There is a place, in popular film, for a genre piece that plays exactly according to the established template for that genre as a means of highlighting skillful execution. "Gunday" is a fine example. Its gangland saga narrative isn't a particularly novel one, with its morally ambiguous cops and love triangles and so forth. As a '70s throwback it's definitely not alone in recent years. And yet "Gunday" is a thunderously entertaining movie, which is down to its cast and director.
Before getting properly underway, "Gunday" has a slightly protracted introduction—which, with apologies, features two of the worst kid performances of all time—in which we follow inseparable friends Bikram and Bala, torn from their families by the partition that created the nation of Bangladesh, and unceremoniously dumped in Calcutta with very few options. Once they hit on a means to support themselves, we jump ahead a decade or so and are introduced to Bikram and Bala as adults: Ranveer Singh and Arjun Kapoor. The movie itself makes a corresponding leap forward as well, powered by the intense presence and chemistry of its leads.
Ranveer Singh's career is off to a fantastic start. Not yet thirty, he's already showing the charisma necessary to pull off full-on masala hero roles in their most florid glory, and the acting chops to build the proper emotional foundation to support the heroic swagger. As a physical presence, he's almost overwhelming, as if the power of his stardom is not to be contained. This is, if hyperbole, only barely that. Ranveer Singh is awesome. The fact that Arjun Kapoor manages to not only not get blown off the screen but co-exist as an equal is a sign that he's going to be just fine in the stardom game himself. Singh and Kapoor are absolutely magnificent together.
"Gunday" also features two splendid supporting turns. Priyanka Chopra features as a kind of meta-Priyanka Chopra, a character who exists to start a love triangle, and to essentially be an item girl made flesh in the world of the movie. Ultimately she's what Robertson Davies called the "fifth business": not the heroine, not the villain, but a character without whom the story couldn't exist. (Further explanation impossible without spoilers, upon which the previous, with apologies, tap-dances.)
No discussion of "Gunday," though, would be complete without a tip of the hat to comment section favorite Irrfan Khan, billed here as the mononymic "Irrfan," which is funny for about ninety different reasons. As the eccentric genius cop on Bikram and Bala's tail, Irrfan gives a performance that is an absolute master class in "serious actor picking up a paycheck in a pop blockbuster." This is not a slight by any means. One needs to be a really good actor to pull that off while giving an actual performance, and to project the kind of enervated ennui that he does while still being invested. It's absolutely splendid work, all the more so for giving the impression that "Irrfan" is a performance art project where he takes on the persona of a "Bono" or a "Sting" except as the morally ambiguous cop in Yash Raj blockbusters.
Director Ali Abbas Zafar does a smashing job with his second feature. The only lulls are the necessary exposition at the beginning and the inevitable dip in urgency around the middle (which is nowhere near as bad as it is in some movies). The action's top-notch, the songs are good, and with the above-mentioned assets, "Gunday" is an unqualified success on its own terms: a solidly entertaining pop movie. The fact that Bollywood has been faltering a bit of late in cranking out this kind of picture really only highlights how much skill it takes to make one properly. In "Gunday," there is a lot of skill on display. And if one doesn't expect to see something it's not, "Gunday" should hit the spot.
Gunday Movie Poster

GUNDAY (2014)

Cast
Director
Screenplay

Action, Crime, Drama
Rated NR
152 minutes
***Source***

Monday, 3 February 2014

Jai Ho Review

jai ho poster
Director: Sohail Khan
One Line Review: A scorching socio-drama with loads of Salmangiri inviting seetis and taalis.
Positive Points: An inspiring social message, Salman Khan's style and smile, Perfect handling of today's social issues, Crunchy punchlines.
Negative Points: Over-the-top fighting sequences, Excessive Bollywood touch rendered to the film.
Plot: Jai Agnihotri (Salman Khan) is a man, who has guts rolled up on his sleeves. He lives with his mother (Nadira Babbar), sister (Tabu), her husband Rihan (Mahesh Thakur) and their kid Kabir (Naman Jain). Jai is an ex-army officer, who had been suspended due to not following high command orders, but he is always remembered by the other army-men for his bravery. Now, he lives a life of a righteous common man, who comes across several social injustice issues and he is keen to make the society a better and safe place to live. Jai believes that if you want to do anything good for the society, you don't need to wear uniform. This gutsy handsome man once helps a handicapped girl (Genelia D'Souza) to write her exam paper. Jai fights with the man, who slaps a beggar little girl at the traffic signal as well as he saves a baby, who is stolen by a beggar. Jai turns messiah for the aam janta and the layman starts approaching Jai to solve their problems. When somebody says 'thank you' to Jai, he advices them Not to say 'thank you', but help three other people in need and tell those people to help three more people. In this way, Jai strives hard to originate this noble chain, so that the world will become a beautiful place. During all this, Jai invites lot of enemies for himself and these are the ones, with whom Jai fought with for the safety of people. One day, Jai comes across his beautiful, chirpy neighbor (Daisy Shah) and gradually, both of them fall in love.
While Jai strongly attempts to eradicate crime and injustice from the society, he unknowingly locks horns with the powerful home minister Dashrath Singh (Danny Denzongpa). Jai provokes the wrath of this influential local politician by his good deeds and now, this starts proving dangerous for Jai's family, as Singh aims to finish all of Jai's family members. Jai's mother falls prey to the attack by this politician, as she gets hit by a truck in the market and this puts her life in danger. This incident wakes up the real tiger inside Jai and the tale alters the track.
Direction And Other Technical Aspects: The producer-director Sohail Khancame up with the Hindi version of the 2006 Telugu release 'Stalin' that featured Chiranjeevi in the lead role. The social-drama 'Jai Ho' aims to focus on the condition in which a common man is living today and under what circumstances he has to undergo. The well-intentioned movie depicts the dirty picture of today's political world and its bitter truths. The theme this film handles is a deja vu and is presented by numerous films before,Amitabh Bachchan starrer 'Sarkar' and 'Sarkar Raaj' as one of them. Also,Sanjay Dutt's 'Munna Bhai M.B.B.S' revolved around the resembling topic, however with a different perspective. Nevertheless, if one will look closely, then Salman Khan's films like 'Wanted', 'Dabangg', 'Ready', 'Dabangg 2' and 'Jai Ho' seem to be each other's siblings in one way or the other, power-packed fight by Salman being the common factor among them all. 'Jai Ho' seemed a shiniest piece of them all and imparted a strong social message of helping each other in order to make the world a beautiful and safe place. The direction was good along with a good screenplay. The prime intention of the film seemed to highlight the 'being human' attitude of Salman Khan, as the film twirled around his bravery as a macho-man and his love life to a large extent. The film managed to get a good grip in the first half and retained it well also in the second half of it. It's is worth watch for Salman fans for enjoying their favorite star wearing cool, colourful shades with vibrant outfits. Not to forget the action stunts he does with oodles of style!
'Thank you mat kehna, aur tin logo ki help karna aur unko kehna ki voh aur teen logo ki help kare' is what our muscular hero and the other people keep on saying repeatedly in the film. The biggest loophole in the story is when Jai's aka Salman's nephew Kabir gets kidnapped at the hands of criminals, Jai goes on riding his bike on the road very carelessly, which could have seriously hurt several people or even take their lives! He fuels up bike's speed even in the small lanes, where people walk and children play. He even roars up the bike on the station flyover without caring for other's safety. Someone with a noble thought in his mind will certainly not play with lives of others in this way. The other drawback noticed was obviously over-the-top fighting scenes by Salman, where he alone proves tough enough for a huge flock of goons. The over acting done by the child actorNaman Jain was unbearable and seemed more like an adult and less like a child in terms of his dialogue delivery and overall expressions.
If one ignores these flaws by considering it as a typical Salman Khan masala entertainer, then the remaining picture is embedded with lots of dhishum-dhishum, emotions, romance and revenge. The fight sequences are well captured by the lenses, where Salman spreads all over it. The background score is average and cinematography is good.
Performance: The muscular, spectacular Salman Khan turns avenger, as he takes the entire show on his shoulders. As usual, Salman's killer smile and cooler style does all the work. The actor has performed well as a layman bursting with social injustice. His scorching screen presence forms the USP of the film. The newbie Daisy Shah looks good in her role and has performed her part conveniently well. The versatile actress Tabu has got to play a meatier part and once again, she has rekindled her charisma. Mahesh Thakurprovides justice to his character. Nadira Babbar played her part with great aplomb and it couldn't have been better.
Danny Denzongpa re-created the villainous air with his baritone and strong personality. Genelia D'Souza played the role of a handicapped girl with convenience and apt expressions. Suniel Shetty shined well as an army officer, though he played a very short role. Mohnish Behl essayed the Chief Minister and there was a room for perfection for his performance. Aditya Pancholi was good as a crooked cop, while Pulkit Samrat grabbed attention as an upright dashing cop.
The other actors like Yash TonkMahesh ManjrekarSharad KapoorVikas Bhalla,Vatsal SethResham TipnisAshmit PatelSana KhanMukul DevTulip JoshiBruna AbdullahVarun Badola and Nauheed Cyrusi provided a very good support in their respective roles.
Music: When it's Salman Khan action flick, the music has to be alluring. The music given by Amal MalikWajid Ali and Sajid Ali became the favorite among the audience, especially among the youth. The track 'Baki sab first class hai' was the creamiest of them all, as it covered the essence of the film and slapped the current political scenario on various boiling issues like farmers' suicides, women safety and inflation. The song 'Tere naina' sounded soothing and tuneful, while the track with Gujarati touch 'Photocopy' lightened the air with its catchy tune. Not to miss the 'Jai ho' title track after the film finishes!
Final Verdict: A must watch for every Salman Khan fan for the Salman Khanfactor! The movie embodies a strong social message of assisting others, which will be very useful if it would be applied in real life by everyone. In all, a wakeup call for the voiceless public!

Tuesday, 24 December 2013

Kick-Ass 2


  • Starring: 

  • Summary: After Kick-Ass' insane bravery inspires a new wave of self-made masked crusaders, led by the badass Colonel Stars and Stripes, our hero joins them on patrol. When these amateur superheroes are hunted down by Red Mist -- reborn as The Mother F%&*^r -- only the blade-wielding Hit Girl can prevent their annihilation. When we last saw junior assassin Hit Girl and young vigilante Kick-Ass, they were trying to live as normal teenagers Mindy and Dave. With graduation looming and uncertain what to do, Dave decides to start the world's first superhero team with Mindy. Unfortunately, when Mindy is busted for sneaking out as Hit Girl, she's forced to retire-leaving her to navigate the terrifying world of high-school mean girls on her own. With no one left to turn to, Dave joins forces with Justice Forever, run by a born-again ex-mobster named Colonel Stars and Stripes. Just as they start to make a real difference on the streets, the world's first super villain, The Mother Figure, assembles his own evil league and puts a plan in motion to make Kick-Ass and Hit Girl pay for what they did to his dad. But there's only one problem with his scheme: If you mess with one member of Justice Forever, you mess with them all.

In my opinion:- 

This movie is AMAZING!The story is great,the characters are funny and in some points very serious.If you want to have a movie that has all in one package,watch this movie.
The Kick-Ass himself seems like a better hero than he ever was before and Hit Girl is still a bad ass. Jim Carreys performance was great but he wasn't in the movie enough. I'd say he had twenty minutes of screen time which was a big disappointment. A big problem with this movie is that they entered so many new characters but they never had any character progression. But even with that you don't even notice it.
Just a quick message I would like to see the final Kick-Ass movie come out so please support the movie by buying it instead of pirating it online.

Saturday, 21 December 2013

'The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey': Is it really necessary?

My first thought in watching “The Hobbit” was: Do we really need this movie? It was my last thought, too. Having powered his way through the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, which had its occasional majesties, director Peter Jackson now feels compelled to give us this prequel, based on the Tolkien novel that spawned the cult I never joined.
Whether this makes me the best or the worst judge of this movie I leave to others to decide. But I must confess that by the time the last of the “Rings” movies wrapped, I had had quite enough of orcs and dwarves and rings and Gandalf and Middle-earth. I even had my fill of Gollum. And so, wouldn’t you know, all of that and more – though with less effect – is present and accounted for in “The Hobbit,” which tells of the troll-infested exploits of hobbit Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman) in Middle-earth.
As a further lure, Jackson has even fashioned this CG-heavy film in 3-D and shot it digitally at 48 frames per second instead of the usual 24 f.p.s. (A 2-D, 24-f.p.s. version is also being screened.) Among other things, this supposedly enhances the clarity of the imagery, although why expend all that energy on imagery that isn’t inherently awesome to begin with? And did I mention that Tolkien’s novel is going to spawn two sequels? I suppose we should be thankful that Hollywood is trilogy-crazy these days and not quartet- or quintet-mad. Grade: C+ 
I went Inox to watch this movie, the movie was basically boring and waste of money. The film was tiring and the end of movie make's you feel the movie is not yet over but it will continue in next part of the movie. I personally feel the ending was a little bit incomplete.
My suggestion don't go for this movie in theater and if you want see it in your PC you certainly going sleep. If you want to sleep but you are not sleepy than please watch this movie you will certainly going sleep.
source:-The Hobbit

Friday, 18 October 2013

Playing to Win: How Strategy Really Works

Buy Playing to Win: How Strategy Really Works: Book


Review:-Playing to Win: How Strategy Really Works


Are you just playing or playing to win?
Strategy is not complex. But it is hard. It’s hard because it forces people and organizations to make specific choices about their future something that doesn’t happen in most companies.
Now two of today’s best-known business thinkers get to the heart of strategy explaining what it’s for, how to think about it, why you need it, and how to get it done. And they use one of the most successful corporate turnarounds of the past century, which they achieved together, to prove their point.
A.G. Lafley, former CEO of Procter & Gamble, in close partnership with strategic adviser Roger Martin, doubled P&G’s sales, quadrupled its profits, and increased its market value by more than $100 billion in just ten years. Now, drawn from their years of experience at P&G and the Rotman School of Management, where Martin is dean, this book shows how leaders in organizations of all sizes can guide everyday actions with larger strategic goals built around the clear, essential elements that determine business success where to play and how to win.
The result is a playbook for winning. Lafley and Martin have created a set of five essential strategic choices that, when addressed in an integrated way, will move you ahead of your competitors. They are:
  • What is our winning aspiration?
  • Where will we play?
  • How will we win?
  • What capabilities must we have in place to win?
  • What management systems are required to support our choices?
The stories of how P&G repeatedly won by applying this method to iconic brands such as Olay, Bounty, Gillette, Swiffer, and Febreze clearly illustrate how deciding on a strategic approach and then making the right choices to support it makes the difference between just playing the game and actually winning.
About the Author
A.G. Lafley
 is the former Chairman of the Board, President, and Chief Executive Officer of Procter & Gamble. Under Lafley’s leadership, P&G’s sales doubled, its profits quadrupled, its market value increased by more than 100 billion, and its portfolio of billion-dollar brands like Tide, Pampers, Olay, and Gillette grew from 10 to 24 as a result of his focus on winning strategic choices, consumer-driven innovation, and reliable, sustainable growth. Today, Lafley consults on business and innovation strategy, advises on CEO succession and executive leadership development, and coaches experienced, new, and potential CEOs.
Roger Martin is Dean of the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management and an adviser to CEOs on strategy, design, innovation, and integrative thinking. In 2011, Roger was named by Thinkers50 as the sixth top management thinker in the world. This is his eighth book; he also contributes regularly to Harvard Business Review, the Financial Times, and the Washington Post, among others. He holds an MBA from Harvard Business School and an AB in economics from Harvard College.

Frankly Speaking:-

1.)A book full of theory
This a very theoretical book like the ones you would have read in b-school. It is actually written by the dean (Martin) and hence no surprises for the theoretical nature.

Lafley has only written some small stories so people buying this book for largely lafley's perspective will be disappointed.

Pick it up if u r looking for theory and some examples.

2.) Insightful
If you'd like to see great business leadership at work, you should read Playing To Win. Lafley is a sound business and marketing person, and it shows in each of the examples. I personally loved the Olay story.
3.)Playing to Win
Amazing book to know how you value your products in market and where you want to position your products in competitive market. Must read for young entrepreneurs.

SPECIFICATIONS OF PLAYING TO WIN: HOW STRATEGY REALLY WORKS (HARDCOVER)

CONTRIBUTORS
AuthorA.G. LafleyRoger L. Martin
BOOK DETAILS
PublisherHarvard Business Review Press
ImprintHarvard Business Review Press
Publication Year2013
ISBN-139781422187395
ISBN-10142218739X
LanguageEnglish
BindingHardcover
Number of Pages272 Pages
DIMENSIONS
Width6.30 inch
Height1.20 inch
Weight499 g