Showing posts with label quentin tarantino. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quentin tarantino. Show all posts

Friday, 26 February 2016

THE REVENANT: Bloody Brilliant! [4/5]

Tarantino’s most-celebrated blood-porn and Terrence Malick’s spiritual and emotionally enriching visual-narratives have found a beefy believer in Alejandro G Inarittu’s latest revenge drama THE REVENANT. Though this is not the first time Terrence Malick has shared his confidante behind the lenses Emmanuel Lubezki with Inarittu, [Lubezki has already won an Oscar for the latter in BIRDMAN OR (THE UNEXPECTED VIRTUE OF IGNORANCE)] but this time the plot itself, an expected yet absorbing one, allows him to bring into play his trademark masterstrokes on the moving picture canvas. The same also encourages the film to be as wintery, gory and gruesomely beautiful as Tarantino’s last THE HATEFUL EIGHT; in fact, in a more riveting and gut-wrenching outfit.

Set in 1823, the story tracks down a group of trackers in fur trading business being attacked by some Native Americans while returning to their homes. The most-experienced Hugh Glass [Leonardo DiCaprio] is leading the fleeing troop till he himself gets badly hurt in a terrible bear attack. Considering his hopeless physical condition, the troop decides to leave him and his son behind with a couple of members to accompany them. Abandoned by his own team, Glass is forced to survive through many physical challenges of extreme nature and intense mental trauma to deal with. A strong desire seeking revenge keeps him going even when going gets tougher.

THE REVENANT doesn’t overwhelm you with its crude, simplistic and naïve American legend as the basic plot but undoubtedly excels as a gritty documentation of a survivor’s story. The glory belongs to a taut screenplay that never offers you a dull moment. The severity and intensity of physical assaults on Glass are such brutal that you never expect him to breathe life again but the way Inarittu crafts and constructs the rise of the fallen is tremendously absorbing. Inarittu orchestrates scenes like an extended opera; they decline to cut the shots in between and go on and on with a continuous thrust scenes demand. The precise scene where Glass is seen attacked by a grizzly bear is one of the most gratifying part in the film, not only as a visual fascination for the viewers but also as a textbook example in VFX advancement. There is never an iota of disbelief in what you see and hear huffing, roaring, grunting and purring on screen.       

Setting frozen rivers, frosted trees and widespread snowfields as the film’s scenic canvas, Inarittu alongside Emmanuel Lubezki ensures you’re taken to the same territory with no hesitation, no apprehension and with all the certainty to experience the events to its maximum but it is only the second best asset THE REVENANT owns. The top one on the chart is DiCaprio’s categorical, precise and career-best performance as Hugh Glass. Watching him sinking deep in the character that needed extreme physical participation (He crawls, creeps and slithers in most of the reels), intense acting skills (He hardly mouths verbal expressions) and a seasoned expertise in evoking transferable pain from his haunting past is an ecstasy. You don’t need to be a fan to recognize and recommend his talent for the Oscars’ pride. Tom Hardy as his counterpart Fitzgerald- a mean, sly and egotistical teammate provides a great support.

To conclude, THE REVENANT is a gritty, gutsy and grave revenge drama that is not for the faint-hearted. After all, when was the last time you saw someone clearing out the insides of a dead horse to make it a potential shelter in a bone-freezing sleet or someone chewing blood-soaked raw meat from a freshly slaughtered Bison? MAN Vs WILD lovers can come up with many such stories but this is some rare cinematic experience! Go for it, you might end up watching an Oscar wining performance! [4/5]                             

Friday, 15 January 2016

THE HATEFUL EIGHT (A): When Tarantino tries to please Tarantino! [3/5]

With THE HATEFUL EIGHT, Quentin Tarantino revisits (again) the 70s era of classic spaghetti westerns where the production company logos and the title-designing go retro with those bright, bold and yellow western fonts on a panoramic, scenic and slow long-shot of a barren territory (in this case, a snowy landscape). Bracing and brisk? Absolutely, but not for long! The real trial of your serenity starts when the characters get introduced calculatingly in the most similar manner where the words are set loose to roam free and the actions hardly try to set the tone any warmer. Hang around, isn’t it the pattern Tarantino is loved all over for? Couldn’t agree more; THE HATEFUL EIGHT pays not only a homage to the yesteryear’s gratifyingly grand movie-making techniques but also to the ‘Tarantino’ style cinema. Only thing funny is that the payee here is none other than the master himself.

A bounty murderer Daisy Domergue (Jennifer Jason Leigh) is being transported to the town Red Rock, handcuffed with her hunter John Ruth (Kurt Russell) in a stagecoach. Soon they are stopped and accompanied by another bounty hunter Marquis Warren (Samuel L Jackson) and Chris Mannix (Walter Giggins), supposedly a ‘yet to be badged’  new sheriff of the town. After roaming around an hour or so of screen-time in a snowstorm-prone province, THE HATEFUL EIGHT settles in a small shelter where the previous four meets another four; Oswaldo (Tim Roth), Joe (Michael Madsen), Bob (Demian Bichir) and Smithers (Bruce Dern). As the conversation gets deeper and the dialogues a lot edgier revealing the darker sides of each one under the roof, the action initiates to take over the stage with bullets being fired to pierce and explode various body parts without showing any discrimination of any kind. A typical Tarantino you’ve been waiting and dying for the whole first half!

The snow-clad geographical-spread was, at any given day, a perfect canvas for Tarantino to paint it bloody red in all the panoramic wide shots likewise the Coen Brothers excelled in FARGO but the Tarantino of RESERVOIR DOGS tows away the plot to stay put in the restricted and walled barn- a quite suffocating stricture for Robert Richardson (the cinematographer) to play around. The first half though scenic and scintillating in the opening sequence impressively blessed with the soundtrack by Ennio Morricone, sucks most of your survival force with the all dead, wordy expressions. And then it tries to compensate it in a ‘been there-seen that’ scenario where the blood spatters easily manage to please the desperate genre-aficionado in you. In this very half, you will never feel for the lack of words, I guarantee you.

Samuel L Jackson being a regular in a Tarantino film looks comfortably positioned. With a coarse and wavy accent and a lot stronger character manipulative of racial intolerance in his own favor, he leads the cast. Kurt Russell with his one-liners impresses. Jennifer Jason Leigh as the smirking, gruesome and blood-licking bounty proves to be a worthy nomination for Oscars this year. If rumors are to be believed, Tim Roth has been roped in for the role meant for Christoph Waltz, another Tarantino regular. He makes it his own; no doubt on his caliber but still, you could find a glance and glimpse of Waltz easily there within the character.

Overall; despite being gifted with some exceptionally good performances, a soul-pleasing opening sequence, a few lyrical blood-shots and even more engaging and tempting soundtrack; THE HATEFUL EIGHT remains an unfulfilling, desperate and standard Tarantino film. Now, I am ready to take the shots! [3/5] 

Friday, 25 April 2014

REVOLVER RANI: Loud, laborious and lethargic desi-ode to Tarantino! [2/5]

In Sai kabir’s REVOLVER RANI- an underwhelming homage to Quentin Tarantino style Filmmaking, Sai often takes his narrative to a local TV News anchor who loves to connect and end every breaking news piece with some popular Bollywood songs. Her local flavor in the diction, interesting writing and primitiveness in the enactment never goes wrong, not even for a single time. This is probably one and only element in the film that is constantly entertaining, remarkable, convinced and believably relatable. For the rest, REVOLVER RANI is a loud, laborious and lethargic outing in search of pleasurable entertainment.

The daredevil dacoit of Chambal, Alka Singh [Kangana Ranaut in form] is a tigress with gun in her hands that can walk fearlessly into its rival’s den, shoot its mouth off, shower as much bullet in the stock and return back winning all the claps and whistles. ‘Fashion, fun and gun’ is what describes her ferociously wild flashy character the best but at the same time, she is a trapped soul in the hostile world of politics, power and position driven by bullet and ballot both. If not fighting back in stride with her rival gang the corrupt politician trio Tomar brothers [Zakir Hussain, Kumud Mishra & Pankaj Saraswat], Alka loves to explore the arena of love with her lover Rohan [Vir Das in a regular but meatier role], a struggling actor in Bollywood. Things go erratic when Alka gets pregnant and that could possibly turn into a serious threat to all the prospects her mentor [Piyush Mishra saving some grace] had eyed for.

Sai sets the mood perfectly with real locations, interesting characters, local dialect and the scheming political scenario everyone can relate to. Extended shootouts weaved in with gun-shots and music, satirical approach in the narrative and the stylized action sequences are clearly Tarantino effect but it’s the lifeless story and scattered screenplay that hardly do any better to the promising premise. Entertainment comes in bits and pieces and for the most, the whole 2 hour 15 minutes looks like a never ending journey in the tiring terrain of Chambal itself. Music is another letdown as it plays one of the most prominent parts in such film and can never be less than a driving force to the film.     

Kangana Ranout, after her super-delightful performance in QUEEN is back with a character that needs guts and a certain kind of spark to set the screen on fire. Sadly, Kangana puts her best but the writing doesn’t give her what she deserves. Vir Das is likeable in parts. Watch him explaining how his situation in the film at that time finds similarities with Hollywood actor Daniel Day-Lewis and it’s all about being a true actor. Funnier than you think! Piyush Mishra shows his mastery over the art and though he’s more visible in second half, he captures your attention in total effect. Zakir Hussain, Kumud Mishra and Pankaj Saraswat as witty villains are good to watch.

In nut shell, REVOLVER RANI is a sad victim of baffled screenplay that loses its steam way before the end. Even good performances and fascinating characters aren’t good enough to make your day. Avoid this messy ride of bullet, ballot and bizarre ballet of love! [2/5]