Showing posts with label soft porn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soft porn. Show all posts

Saturday, 10 May 2014

MASTRAM: A satisfying session, far from being an orgasmic delight! [3/5]

The fact that I belong to Uttar Pradesh, the dregs of North India and the very same time zone; there can’t be any possible chance of denial that I might not know about these hugely popular & highly erotic writing materials, openly available at all book stores at crowded state bus-stations and local newspaper vendors under a fictional handle-name of Mastram. I never really bothered much about who’s the man behind and what force could drive him to enter this very exploitable yet offensive sector till Akhilesh Jaiswal’s fictional biography MASTRAM came into limelight.

A small town writer from Himachal Pradesh dreams to make it big as a novel-writer in big cities like Delhi. He definitely is aware of the consequences of being a writer so doesn’t want to get into married life but soon he’s told about the girl being a typical housewife material who can cook lip-smacking mutton, he agrees. Now, this is the era where most publishers are only interested in printing study materials and not some boring ‘shuddh Hindi’ literature. Rajaram- our protagonist is forced to look out for some ‘masaaledar’ addition to his stories, often explained by people around as sex. And, thus Rajaram turns into Mastram- an unknown iconic writer of soft-porn novels!

Many would look at it with expectations to be a pornographic movie that would tickle mostly the lower part of human body but the writer-director Jaiswal boldly decides to focus on the writer’s catch-22 situation while changing gears from one kind to a completely different, the pain of losing opportunity to be known and famous and also the categorical expansion that creates competition in his self-claimed province. Film also talks; if not in volumes, in suggestions for sure, about the hypocrisy of the two-faced society. People, who read him the most, start disgusting him in the same measure after his identity comes out in light.

The real hero of MASTRAM besides the fascinating concept is Mukesh Chhabra- the casting director of the film. This man does magic with his strong sense in reading the characters and finding out talents that can carry it more than what is written, briefed or expected. Though Rahul Bagga as Rajaram is very recluse, reserved and restricted for the most part, it’s the supporting cast that outshines everyone else in the crew. Debutante Tara-alisha Berry as his charming wife, Akash Dhaiya with his publisher partner and Istiyak Khan as his best friend are outstanding.

With aesthetically shot intimate sequences, hilariously erotic dialogues on the likes of the original Mastram bestsellers, nicely built plot and believable performances, if MASTRAM couldn’t take a deserving leap from being just watchable, it is only because it lacks more layers to the story with time and again getting repetitive especially with the episodic visualizations of erotic stories he pens down.

Overall, it is an entertaining effort to bring the legend of Indian soft-porn back on screen. Watch it to relive the era or to get a brief intro to this yesteryear’s guilty pleasure if you haven’t been fortunate enough to enjoy till date. Do not expect orgasmic pleasure but a satisfying experience is guaranteed! [3/5]         

Friday, 17 January 2014

MISS LOVELY (A): ‘A’ grade film about ‘C’ grade Film Industry in late 80’s! Dark & disturbing! [3.5/5]

Much before the current ‘Salman-Akshay & now everyone else’ dominating world of non-sense action thrillers, existed the times of Bollywood’s guilty pleasures confidently called as ‘C-Grade’ films. The period when soft-porn sleazy horror flicks were considered the most profitable idea of mass entertainment. The period when ‘Ramsays’ were more a rage in show-business than ‘Benegals’ & ‘Nihalanis’. Ashim Ahluwalia’s MISS LOVELY takes you back to the very same fascinating era but in a very dark, disturbing, unsettling and highly absorbing tone.

Set in Bombay Film Industry of late 80’s, MISS LOVELY is an atmospheric tale of two brothers [on the suggestive lines of ‘Ramsay Bros.’] trying to make it large in a parallel running darker side of mainstream cinema that is destined to find its end in an illegal commercialization of sex & porn. Vicky Duggal [Anil George] alongwith his younger brother Sonu Duggal [Nawazuddin Siddiqui] makes movies with plump-chubby women of desire in ill-fitted blouses and blood-red lipsticks for clients who only bother about filthy exhibition of female body. These movies are in general those ‘extra reels’ that get added in between shows at single screen cinemas to give viewers maximum pleasure and their value for money.

Where Vicky is unabashedly passionate about making money through these movies, Sonu seeks a way out of all these filth and wants to make ‘ceretainly not with Kumar Gaurav’ but a romantic film. Soon he finds his leading and love-lady too in Pinky [Niharika Singh]- a small town girl with twinkled eyes. Rest is the series of betrayal, hope, dream and passion…all in a dim-lit dark shade.

Ashim Ahluwalia masters in soaking you in the not-so-lovely shocking world behind the curtains where C-grade films rule. The nuances and the settings are perfectly captured through lenses. The lighting sets the swing in moods from cheap flashy parties to excessively melodramatic & multi-colored shooting sequences and the shady-murky times of harsh rejection from reality. The soundtracks are varied, apt and interestingly engross. You can easily find the transition stage from subsequential in quality music pieces in movies to jazzy Biddu-Nazia Hasan eon of Music videos in 90s. Production-design succeeds well in recreating the atmos and the textured look of 80s.

Performances here are subtle, realistic and innate. Nawazuddin is known for the kind of acting his role demanded. He impresses with his honesty mixed with brilliance that never allows you to doubt on the standing of his character. Anil George though looks methodical & disciplined in most of his portrayal. Niharika Singh brings a breezy break with her innocence in playing a small towner.

This all can never be completed without making it loud & clear that MISS LOVELY takes on a world popular in mass but is not everyone’s cup of tea when it comes to an overall movie experience. It does have an arthouse movie feel with less dialogues, engaging but slow pace, lack of hardcore non-sense entertainment & anything that is regular and in routine these days. It is a film for cinema adults. [3.5/5]