Saturday, April 17, 2010

BEVERLY HILLS CHIHUAHUA


Vivian Ashe leaves her pet chihuahua Chloe with her irresponsible niece Rachel to watch the dog. However, when Rachel decides to go to Mexico with her friends, Chloe gets lost and bonds with Delgado, a lonely German Shepard who used to be a police dog, and goes on the run from a ruthless Doberman called El Diablo. Meanwhile, Papi, a hyperactive chihuahua who falls in love with Chloe, attempts to find his love in Mexico while El Diablo attempts to capture Chloe and get her collar to his owner, a dognapper.

Beverly Hills Chihuahua is a must-see for all dog lovers. An adorable comedy, the film manages to engage one completely.

The film combines the themes of dignity and empowerment - "We are tiny, but we are mighty", says the leader of a vast Chihuahua pack - with a story of a spoiled rich canine who learns not to be so high and mighty.

It was a huge commercial sucess.

And what was most endearing were the written words by the producers in the end - that they wished for a loving home for all pets and all pet owners need to be aware of the commitment and love that comes with adopting pets.

So true and so very endearing.

Friday, April 16, 2010

UNDERSTANDING SOUND

I'm almost impelled to reinvent the term 'choreography'....Apalling is the way songs are choregraphed in cinema. Barring a few dancers who have developed the rare art of understanding and mastering the slick 'shiamak davar' style of dance, the rest need to understand what choreography really is...First, its never really about dancing. Sure, dance is one part of it but yes, certainly not the gyrating and pelvic thrusting kind of dance that is passed off as belly dancing. These are art forms that need to be respected independently... but why must we almost always have the usual attrocious mix of acrobatics and a distorted form of Indian dance which interprets no form? Dance is actually about being rhythmic... about truly relating to the sound and responding stylishly....its about being in sync with that sound and rhythm.... its about adding something to the song...beautifying it.. moving your body -letting it understand the sound and feel and allowing it to react.... then simply fine tuning that movement into something artistic and graceful. The body while dancing, should give the feel of a fluidity, a sense of liberation, a dignity and poise that can never be trained. When we dance, we surrender to the soul responding to the sound - a love for the sound... unspoken, untouched, raw and divine...Which is perhaps why Hrithik is always a delight to watch... he takes you to heights unexplored with his grace. No matter how complicated the movements maybe, yet his natural ease and dignity make it graceful and lyrical. However, choreography is not about dancing always.Its about depicting an emotion with subtlety. Using different things to interpret the emotion, the mood, about capturing the moment using music and sometimes simply the sounds of nature like the rains, rippling of the water in the river.... the gushing and whistling of the breeze....things need not be theatrical...they can be sensitive and quiet as well. Sometimes simply the echoing of distant birds in the silence. Music and choreography is to be used to capture a moment- enhancing it. 'Ek ladki ko dekha to aisa laga...' from '1942, a love story' is one such piece of choreography or the recent hrithik number 'dhoom again' in Dhoom 2 that is brilliant and artistically done...
Can we have more of such kind please?

MUSIC TRIVIA

MUSIC TRIVIA

THE YEAR 1965

Laxmikant-Pyarelal’s Lootera has the hits, ‘Raat se kaho ruke zara...’, and ‘Neend nigahon se kho jaati hai...’ The numero uno composers, Shanker-Jaikishan have split and S-J are composing separately under the famous baton. Jaikishan charges exhorbitantly for composing Ramanand Sagar’s ARZOO. ARZOO has hits ‘Bedardi baalma tujhko...’, ‘Aji rooth kar...’, and ‘Chhalke teri ankhon se...’ that largel contribute to the films' successs. Ramanand Sagar then calls Shankar to compose the mujra, ‘Jab ishq kahin ho jaata hai...’ and reveals that he has to pay the same amount for just one song! S-J’s GUMNAAM features the cult Mehmood hit by Rafi, ‘Hum kaale hain to kya hua dilwale hain...’. Lata’s haunting title-track, Rafi’s ‘Jaan pehchaan ho...’ and Lata’s ‘Is duniya mein jeena hai to...’ are the other hits of this thriller. JAANWAR finds another S-J-Shammi Kapoor winner with perennials like ‘Lal chhadi maidaan khadi...’, ‘Meri mohabbat jawaan rahegi...’, ‘tumse accha kaun hai...’ and ‘Mere sang aaa gungunaa...’. Anil Biswas composes his swan song (‘Chhoti chhoti baatein...’) with Shailendra as his lyricist, and quits films to move to Delhi and join All India Radio. Maestro SD Burman gives one of his career-greatest scores in GUIDE and sings the memorable ‘Wahaan kaun hai tera...’. His ‘Aaj phir jeene ki tamanna hai...’ begins with the antara, and is created, recorded and sent by Dada to the Anand brothers with the assurance “I will send you a song that the world will remember”. ‘Din dhal jaaye...’, ‘Kya se kya ho gaya...’ and ‘Tere mere sapne...’ are three uniquely different Rafi numbers while ‘Gaata rahe mera dil...’, ‘Mose chhal kiye jaaye...’, ‘Piya tose naina laage re...’ and ‘Allah megh de...’ create history clearly displaying his expertise in both classical music and folk music and expertly blending the two.

Dada’s other winner that year is TEEN DEVIYAAN. Majrooh Sultanpuri reveals that assistant Jaidev composed the basic tune of ‘Kahin bekhayaal hokar...’, but Dada also creates history withl ‘Arey yaar mere tum bhi ho gazab...’, ‘Aise to na dekho...’, ‘Likha hai teri aankhon mein...’ and ‘Khwaab ho tum...’. Roshan’s BHEEGI RAAT , ‘Dil jo na keh sakaa...’ is in different Lata and Rafi versions, while Neeraj, the gentle poet makes a mark with ‘Kaarvaan guzar gaya...’ and ‘Dekhti hi raho aaj darpan na tum...’ in Nai Umar Ki Nai Fasal. Khayyam’s intoxicating Suman-Rafi duet, ‘Thehriye hosh mein aa loon...’in MOHABBAT ISKO KEHTE HAIN, Salil Choudhury’s ’spiritual Lata hit ‘Tujh bin jiya udaas re...’ and veteran Hansraj Behl’s last hit ‘Jahaan daal daal par sone ki chidiya...’ in SIKANDAR-E-AZAM are immortalized. Madan Mohan’s NEELA AKASH is remembered for ‘Aap ko pyar chhupane ki...’. In RISHTE NAATE, Lata Mangeshkar is the only singer— a feat he again achieves in PRABHAAT eight years later. Chitragupta delivers memorabilia like ‘Jaag dil-e-diwana...’, ‘Aaja re mere pyar ke raahi...’, ‘Haaye re tere chanchal nainwa...’ (OONCHE LOG), ‘Bahut haseen hai tumhari ankhen...’ (AADHI RAAT KE BAAD) and ‘Mujhe dard-e-dil ka pataa...’ (AKASH DEEP). In the last film, he composes the awesome Lata solo, ‘Dil ka diya jalaake gaya...’. Usha Khanna’s EK SAPERA EK LOOTERA has the immortal Rafi solo ‘Hum tum se juda hoke...’. which glorifies sad melodies.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

SASURAAL GENDA PHOOL

SASURAAL GENDA PHOOL on Star Plus seems to strike an instant chord with the viewers. Possibly for the following reasons. The casting is just right. The dialogues are colloquial and something that all of us would relate to, with interesting camaderie between the actors being beautifully handled.
The family for one, actually 'feel' like a family and though a trifle too sweet at times, at least the dialogues ensure that it doesnt get diabetic.
Its a welcome change from the regular dose of dramatics most soaps are doling out. Its time the young, urban viewer connected with the values that the serial hopefully shall continue to highlight.