Showing posts with label HA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HA. Show all posts

REVIEW: DVD Release: Kuch Kuch Hota Hai























Film: Kuch Kuch Hota Hai
Release date: 16th October 1998
Certificate: U
Running time: 177 mins
Director: Karan Johar
Starring: Shahrukh Khan, Kajol, Rani Mukherjee, Farida Jalal, Reema Lagoo
Genre: Bollywood/Comedy/Family/Musical/Romance
Studio: Dharma
Format: DVD
Country: India

Every so often a casting director pairs two actors who mesh so well together it feels like magic. Rarer still are the occasions where the on-screen duo will work repeatedly alongside one another to become not only respected as individual actors but beloved by the public as half of a whole. In Hollywood, such pairings include Katherine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy, Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire, even Matt Damon and Ben Affleck. In Bollywood, however, there is one couple that stands out above all the rest, one couple who over and over shared such dazzling chemistry that their celebrity remains equally for their individual talents as for their work together. This couple is Shahrukh Khan and Kajol, who starred for the second time together in the smash Hindi film Kuch Kuch Hota Hai (Something Is Happening).

Khan plays Rahul Khanna, a successful businessman who’s wife Tina (Mukherjee) dies in childbirth in the opening scene, leaving behind nothing but eight letters for her daughter and two strict instructions to her husband. The first is that he name their daughter Anjali, the second is that Anjali must receive one letter every year on her birthday.

The story begins on Anjali’s 8th birthday, when she reads her mother’s last words to her. Through this last letter, she not only learns how her parents met, but of her father’s best friend in college, a woman who – it turns out not coincidentally – is also named Anjali. The letter ends with Tina’s last dying wish: that her daughter should reunite the two long-lost best friends.

The audience is then taken through flashback to Rahul’s college days, where he and Anjali (Kajol) are inseparable. She is a tomboy through and through, and it never occurs to either of them to take their friendship to another level. Then Tina arrives. Tina is the antithesis of Anjali; beautiful, feminine, and the apple of every boy’s eye. Rahul falls for her within seconds. But at the same time as he’s falling for Tina, and Tina is slowly falling for him, Anjali is beginning to develop romantic feelings for her best friend. In an attempt to have Rahul look at her as more than a basketball buddy, she starts to emulate Tina’s mannerisms and discards her tomboy clothing for more feminine attire. Of course, typical of a man in love, Rahul remains completely oblivious to Anjali’s feelings, and her actions go unnoticed. She finally decides to confront him and tell him how she feels, but just when she is about to express her feelings Rahul tells her he’s in love with Tina. The news crushes Anjali and, heartbroken, she decides to leave college, and Rahul, behind forever.

Little Anjali is touched by this story of unrequited love, and though she knows her father loved her mother deeply, she also shares Tina’s certainty that on some unrecognized level Rahul and Anjali were soul mates. And so she decides to fulfil her mother’s last wish and play cupid.

The rest of the film recounts how the young Anjali attempts to reunite her father with the only other woman he could ever fall in love with. However, with the older Anjali about to get married to a man she doesn’t love, little Anjali is off on a race against time…


Kuch Kuch Hota Hai, the debut of writer/director Karan Johar, is a romantic comedy that tells the age-old story of a platonic friendship-turned-true love. However (a necessity given it’s three-hour running time), there are so many twists that by the film’s happy ending even the most pessimistic viewer believes that love can overcome all obstacles.

Kuch Kuch Hota Hai is an impressive film debut for Johar. Rahul states repeatedly throughout the film, “We live once, we die once, we marry once and love…we love once.” But Johar juxtaposes this saying with the events unfolding on camera, and under the guise of a light romantic comedy creates a film that sends a message that true love can occur twice, that marriage can occur twice, and that if life is measured in loves, than living and dying can occur more than once as well.

That being said, the film’s message is not the focal point. Rather, for the most part, the film is what it sells itself as: a heart-warming romantic romp. It is a fun, oftentimes funny story that shows the great lengths people will go to for the ones they love.

The techniques employed in the film are typical of Bollywood. The story is mildly melodramatic, the script is a mix between Hindi and English dialogue. and the costumes – both western and Indian – are bright and sparkling.

As with any good Hindi film, the story is interspersed with ‘filmi’ numbers: song and dance sequences that Johar uses to reflect the nature of a scene. These sequences can run for up to six minutes, which to a western viewer would more than likely seem tedious, but for Bollywood is nothing short of ideal. In fact, the entire film might seem tedious to a western viewer, not because the story is bad, the story is great, but because it could easily be told in a much shorter time frame. Every scene includes long glances exchanged between two characters or exaggerated humour that doesn’t actually advance the story in any way. To western moviegoers, these tactics would normally be viewed as easily dispensable, but they are enjoyable here because the film is, quite simply, not a western movie.

Therefore, regardless of the long running time and the Bollywood clichés, Kuch Kuch Hota Hai is a winner for all audiences. Particular praise needs to be given to the cinematography team, whose mix of aerial shots and close-ups capture both the vibrant feeling of the overall film and the strong emotion of the individual characters.

Furthermore, the use of flashback allows the viewer to get a sense of the personal growth of Rahul and Anjali. Understanding their emotions and how they’ve evolved over time is important in order to bring believability to an otherwise slightly far-fetched story, and the successful realization of this is a testament to Johar’s vision and the excellent abilities of the editing team.

The principle kudos of the film is the famous pairing of Shahrukh Khan and Kajol. Both actors absolutely shine in their roles, and Kajol is especially fantastic as the chatterbox tomboy side of Anjali. She is so honest in her representation of a victim of unrequited love that viewers from all over the world are sure to be able to sympathize. The chemistry of the two actors is in no way over-hyped. They play off one another brilliantly, both as best friends in college and as adults who realize that their outwardly happy lives are incomplete without one another. The way they look at each other when they finally declare their love for one another seems so true that even the toughest of male viewers are likely to shed a tear or two.


Kuch Kuch Hota Hai is enjoyable from start to finish. Truth be told, it’s more than just another romantic comedy. On top of a cast of good-looking actors with great chemistry, a light, but often poignant, script and an upbeat soundtrack, it makes its mark as a top-quality Bollywood film. It reignites the hope in any cynic that it is never too late to find happiness - that it is never too late to find that one true love. HA


REVIEW: DVD Release: The Counterfeiters























Film: The Counterfeiters
Release date: 17th March 2008
Certificate: 15
Running time: 98 mins
Director: Stefan Ruzowitzky
Starring: Karl Markovics, August Diehl, Devid Striesow, Martin Brambach, August Zirner
Genre: Crime/Drama/War
Studio: Metrodome
Format: DVD
Country: Austria

Holocaust films are a tricky business. For the most part they’re produced with the dual goal of accurately depicting the Nazi’s systematic methods of reducing humans to beasts while honouring and remembering the millions of Jews who suffered, and died, at Hitler’s decree. At the same time, filmmakers don’t want to be too graphic because, with all honesty, no one with today’s Western sensibilities could sit through the truth. So it becomes hard; how to make a film about the Holocaust without glorifying it, but at the same time without trivializing it? In short, how does one tell the truth?

Austrian filmmaker Stefan Ruzowitzky found the answer, and the result is the 2008 Oscar winner The Counterfeiters, a film that tells the spectacular true story of Operation Bernhard; the greatest counterfeit operation in history.

At the start of the film, the audience is taken through flashback to 1936 Berlin and the arrest of Salomon “Sally” Sorowitsch (Markovics), the renowned king of counterfeiters. Sorowitsch is a Russian Jew who is funding his extravagant life of gambling and women with money of his own production when a gloating Nazi by the name of Superintendent Herzog (Striesow) has him sent to prison.

Three years later, the war has broken out, and Sally is transferred to Mauthausen concentration camp. There, in a desperate effort to save his life, he weasels his way out of physical labour by offering his artistic services to the guards.

Sorowitsch survives day by day for the next five years through exchanging his skills as a painter and portraitist for extra food rations. His thoughts are for his own survival and he works to secure himself only the chance to see tomorrow.

The story moves forward with Sorowitch’s deportment to Sachsenhausen in 1944, where he comes face to face once again with Herzog, now a member of the Nazi elite. This time, rather than extinguish Sorowitch’s prodigious counterfeiting skills, Herzog intends to put them to use in the name of the Nazi party. Along with a select number of other prisoners, all who had held professional careers as printers, designers, artists or in some cases simple craftsmen, Sally is welcomed with insincere smiles before being set to work fabricating false passports and currency for the bankrupt Nazi party. Most importantly his objective is to perfect the pound and then – the ultimate goal – the dollar…


The principle focus of the film is the moral dilemma faced by the prisoners involved in Operation Bernhard. They are the star prize of the concentration camp, rewarded with soft beds, adequate food, even a ping-pong table! But as time goes by, it becomes increasingly challenging for the men to accept their luxurious lifestyle knowing how the rest of the camp is run, knowing their kin are starving and being beaten to death on the other side of the wall, and, most importantly, knowing their work will bring about the destruction of the Allies’ economies and fund the Nazi effort. Soon they are each wrestling with the question, how important is individual survival when compared with moral responsibility?

Ruzowitzky tackles the question with skill. The entire film is paced so each character’s psychological degeneration is given attention, and the audience is shown each of their breaking points - the point where they must question what survival is worth. Some give up on survival; others will stay alive at any cost. Some men are selfish. Sorowitch, in particular, will willingly help fund the Nazi war effort in order to save his own life. By contrast, the young Adolf Burger (Diehl) deliberately sabotages the production of counterfeit currency on a matter of principle, believing even if the whole team is killed as a result of his actions, they will have died for a good cause. These two men are the two extremes, but the moral restlessness of each of the counterfeiters is examined, and what makes Ruzowitzky’s film so truthful and therefore so powerful is that it tells the story in a completely objective way. One man’s belief is never shown as right or wrong; there is no ‘good guy’ or ‘bad guy’, there are only individual struggles.

Furthermore, Ruzowitzky excels in creating an honest representation of the Holocaust by focusing his film on the psychological undoing of the counterfeiters and not trying to portray life in the concentration camps as a whole. He doesn’t ignore life as an ordinary labouring prisoner; all the elements commonly associated with concentration camps are there: emaciated men, broken in body and spirit, inhaling their meagre meals and staring greedily at those who haven’t eaten as quickly - men literally killing themselves through physical labour. References are made to the gas chambers and to Auschwitz. Ruzowitzky doesn’t shy away from addressing the horrors of the camps, but he makes sure to depict that side of camp as a contrast to the counterfeiter’s lives. One of the most memorable scenes is near the end of the film, when the wall separating the Operation Bernhard team from the ordinary inmates is broken down and the audience sees the stark contrast between the reasonably well-fed and clean counterfeiting team and the savage, half-crazed looking prisoners. But for the most part, the atrocities of the camp occur off camera, which places the viewer inside the counterfeiter’s barracks, making the entire film more vivid.

Truth resonates through the film in Ruzowitzky’s use of colour: grey tones set the mood of the concentration camp and help communicate the despair felt by the men who are nothing now but shadows of ghosts. But the principle kudos of the film, of creating as real a representation of Sachsenhausen as possible, must be given to the actors. The way they held themselves, at times standing tall, eyes blazing with fury, at others hunched over, eyes vacant, was a natural physical parallel to their mental see-saw between the urge to fight back and overpowering listlessness. Markovics captured the intelligence, compassion and furious survival instinct of Sorowitch perfectly, and Diehl embodied the idealistic spirit and passion of Burger with such conviction that both characters earned the sympathy of the viewer, though neither believed in the same course of action.


The Counterfeiters rings true from start to finish. Not one line of dialogue is wasted. Each uttering, every sigh, and every outburst contributes to creating an environment where people with different ideals are forced to work together on pain of death. It is more than just another Holocaust film; it’s an examination of the moral ambiguities of life, and of the course human nature will take when faced with the difficult decision of choosing to live while others die or to dying yourself. HA