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May December review: Disturbing, brilliant drama with a cast at the peak of its powers

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May December review: Disturbing, brilliant drama with a cast at the peak of its powers

A popular actress, hoping to win acclaim by portraying a controversial figure, invites herself into the home of that figure as part of her research. Our performer friend asks tricky questions about the past, the present and everything in between. When nobody is watching, she mimics and occasionally mocks her subject. Here is the kicker: the woman she’ll be playing is a registered sex offender.

Indeed, this mischievous, meticulously crafted film is loosely – very loosely – inspired by a real-life case, that of the late Mary Kay Letourneau, a Washington-based schoolteacher who seduced and subsequently married one of her students.

For the most part, however, May December is a work of fiction, an intentionally disorientating tale that employs heightened melodrama and twisted black comedy to accomplish its goal.

We begin in Savannah, Georgia. The Atherton-Yoo family are having a barbecue for pals. Handsome, quiet, afraid to stand out, husband Joe (an excellent Charles Melton) is supposed to be manning the grill, but instead he’s collecting beers from the fridge. “That’s two,” his wife Gracie (Julianne Moore) tells him, and Joe is ordered to return to his station.

There’s a special guest on the way, an actress named Elizabeth Berry (Natalie Portman) who has arrived in town in preparation for her new film, a “sensitive” independent drama about the Atherton-Yoo history.

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As it turns out, Joe was just 13 when a 36-year-old Gracie initiated an ‘affair’ at the pet shop where they worked. The tabloids had a field day, and their so-called romance was a national scandal. It ended Gracie’s first marriage, and the entire episode left her son, Georgie (Cory Michael Smith), emotionally scarred.

Gracie went to prison and gave birth to Joe’s first daughter behind bars. After she was released, they married, had two more children and built a beautiful home for themselves in the suburbs.​

Gracie doesn’t like to talk about what happened. She pretends there’s nothing wrong, that other opinions are irrelevant. She has her family, her house, a fledgling cake business – everything is peachy. Elizabeth will almost certainly hurl a grenade at this problematic paradise.

A cold, calculating type, she carries a notebook with her and asks difficult questions about Joe and Gracie’s pairing. She’s embarrassed by her daytime television work and is determined to make a name for herself on the big screen. In time, Elizabeth develops an icky, toxic obsession with Gracie’s story, and all signs point towards another troubled, disillusioned individual.

Meanwhile, Joe is struggling to keep it together. He works as a radiographer, but his real passion is insects. He’s just 36 years old, but already one of his kids is in college, and the other two are about to graduate high school. Gracie bullies her husband. She is cruel, manipulative, and she won’t allow him to grow up. After the kids leave, it’ll be just the two of them again – and that won’t do at all.

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Quite the set-up, and Haynes’s film keeps us on our toes. Bold, beguiling, occasionally brilliant, May December doesn’t sound like an easy watch, and it isn’t, but Samy Burch’s screenplay indulges in soapy satire, and Haynes (I’m Not There, Carol) dresses their film up like a campy melodrama, replete with stagey close-ups and sinister score arrangements.

A playful, experimental filmmaker, he incorporates elements of Michel Legrand’s twitchy score from 1971’s The Go-Between. If you know that film, and the accompanying tunes, then you’ll know exactly the sort of tone we’re dealing with. Weird? For sure. Does it work? Absolutely.

Witty, wicked, undeniably elegant, May December toys with all kinds of visual metaphors, and there are mirrors everywhere in this thing. In someone else’s hands, it might have been a mess, but Haynes is a clever man, and this is a very clever film.

Likewise, Portman (an exemplary performer) and Moore (likewise) are at the peak of their powers. Together they relish the opportunity to portray characters that are messy, flawed, impossible to like, for very different reasons. You would happily watch them all day. A hell of a film.

Four stars

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Movie Reviews

Pankaj Tripathi & Sanjana Sanghi’s Kadak Singh Movie Review

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Pankaj Tripathi & Sanjana Sanghi’s Kadak Singh Movie Review

Director: Aniruddha Roy Chowdhury

 Cast: Pankaj Tripathi, Sanjana Sanghi, Parvathy Thiruvothu, Jaya Ahsan, Paresh Pahuja

Language: Hindi

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The story of Kadak Singh is about one of the sharpest and finest officers of the Department of Financial Crimes (DFC), A.K. Srivastava (Pankaj Tripathi).  Kadak Singh is a workaholic who does his job with honesty, but somewhere down the line he neglects his family. After a suicide attempt he gets admitted in the hospital for retrograde amnesia. He doesn’t completely forget everything, but the saddest part is he forgets his own daughter (Sanjana Sanghi). Her daughter is completely wiped out from his memory.

It is his daughter, who realises that Kadak Singh was so Kadak (strict) and most importantly strong that could never commit suicide. It is she who takes upon the job of narrating his life to Singh (Pankaj Tripathi) to understand what went wrong in their relationship and how he lands up in the hospital. There are people who are trying to help Singh come out of the mess that he is in, while some of his colleagues in the office try to play nasty. But from the very beginning, it is very obvious who the criminals are. Yet there is something that is very gripping about the story. But what it lacked was a tighter screen play.

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Kadak Singh Movie Review Pankaj Tripathi  Sanjana Sanghis performances are saviours in a mediocre thriller
Still from Kadak Singh

We are all aware of the brilliant performer Pankaj Tripathi is and how effortlessly he fits into any role, but it is also a pleasure to see the way Sanjana Sanghi has worked on herself. The actress has truly come a long way since the first time she was seen in Dil Bechara opposite Sushant Singh Rajput. But sometimes or rather most of the times, I felt that Pankaj Tripathi’s character wasn’t explored well. He is one of the brightest craftsmen in the entertainment industry, but most of the time he was just trying to be witty. And when we have all noticed over the years that doing serious roles with a comical twist is Tripathi’s forte, he could have done it a little better. I guess it was the director’s job to make the look of the movie better, which he clearly didn’t put much thought into. By the look of the movie, I mean the visuals. Kolkata has so much to offer in terms of visuals, but sadly that wasn’t utilised.

The story of Kadak Singh was engaging no doubt, but it is predictable. Considering it is a film based in Kolkata, he could have romanticised the place a little bit if not much. The movie lacked visuals.

One of the best performances was delivered by Parvathy Thiruvothu who played the role of a nurse who was patient, humane and took good care of Kadak Singh and was always ready to listen to his stories, his confusion and grievances. Singh’s relationship with the nurse has been beautifully explored and it really touched my heart, rather than the one shared by Jaya Ashan and Pankaj Tripathi. The relationship hardly made any sense, in fact, they were more like sex buddies and there was absolutely no depth in their relationship.

Kadak Singh Movie Review Pankaj Tripathi  Sanjana Sanghis performances are saviours in a mediocre thriller
Still from Kadak Singh

Jaya Ashan who plays the role of Tripathi’s girlfriend hardly spoke and when she spoke it appeared like Greek to me. Her Hindi was as disastrous as her Bengali and here she plays the role of a literature teacher. Good Lord, I must say, a literature teacher needs to be articulate and here she is struggling to express herself. Jaya Ashan seriously needs to go through acting workshops and diction coaches before taking up a role. Her eyes were equally expressionless. This export from Bangladesh just didn’t work at least for this film.

Kadak Singh could have been handled in a mature way and it could have been more impactful too, but I believe it was a failure on the part of the director. It had everything, starting from the leading good cast to a decent story. But, it appeared like filmmaker, Aniruddha Roy Chowdhury was in a hurry to catch a bus to Goa to do the screening at IFFI.

Rating: 2.5 out of 5

Kadak Singh is streaming on Zee 5

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Kastoori Movie Review: A heartbreaking story of social change and escape

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Kastoori Movie Review: A heartbreaking story of social change and escape
Story: Gopi, a 13-year-old boy exuding wisdom beyond his years and his best friend Adim, find escape in attar (aromatic essential oils) that offers them momentary escape from their poverty-ridden grim world plagued by death and dirt. After watching his dreams being crushed by everyone around him, it dawns upon Gopi that his real escape is not the fragrance of Kastoori (musk) but his right to education and a better life.

Review: Nadine Labaki’s poignant Lebanese drama ‘Capernaum’ sees a young boy suing his abusive parents for giving him a life riddled with misery and despair. Even if one overlooks the lack of basic needs, care, and respect, why would adults bring children into the world if they can’t even make them smile or allow them a moment of peace? Co-written by Shivaji Karde, director Vinod Kamble’s heartbreaking yet uplifting film on the intricacies of class and caste disparity treads a similar path. He reminds you that you don’t have to be a slave to your surroundings or situation.

Gopi is a Dalit and belongs to a family of sweepers and manual scavengers. The sight of his drunk father burying rotten unclaimed bodies, performing PM (post-mortem) as directed by a local doctor or mother cleaning drained toilets makes his stomach churn. The privilege of choice is not for the needy. Adim is the son of a butcher. Rotten flesh, blood and waste is all the two friends are subjected to. They find solace in the fragrance of an attar, that transports them to a happy place, away from the suffocating stench that engulfs and erodes their existence and dreams.

Despite being one of the brightest talents in his class, Gopi’s mother reminds him that books don’t satiate hunger and like his family, he too needs to follow the role assigned to him by society.

The topic is not for the faint-hearted and can be triggering if you too went through a similar trauma. Despite the suffering you witness, what stays with you is Gopi’s resilience, optimism and heartening friendship with Adil. Kamble keeps the hope alive and reminds you that you are the captain of your ship, you define your destiny. Change is possible. The two children brave the physical and mental hardships to keep going. Sometimes deciding to live is an act of courage. Kastoori salutes this human spirit.

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Lead performances by Samarth Sonawane (as Gopi) and Shravan Upalkar (as Adim) are powerful and heart wrenching. They give the film everything it needs – innocence, little joys and hope for a better tomorrow. Kastoori is great filmmaking that demands social change without begging for it.

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Movie Review: Poor Things

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Movie Review: Poor Things

Self-actualization is a complicated, chaotic, exhilarating thing. We all stumble along, feeling our way through the vast expanse of the world as we grow up, making messes but learning all the while, too. None of us ask to be born, but we all are tasked with making sense of it and making ourselves, even if it takes our whole lives. Therein lies the thrill of life: We must lean into it all, the pleasures and the pain, to be human. So goes the story of Bella Baxter (Stone), the heart and soul of Poor Things, the latest film from director Yorgos Lanthimos.

Based on the novel of the same name by Alasdair Gray, Poor Things is a period Frankenstein piece that is also a story for our times. It’s a journey toward self-actualization and autonomy that relishes in the tactile pleasures of life without shying away from the contradictory, messy parts.

Bella is the reanimated creation of Dr. Godwin Baxter (Dafoe, surprisingly moving and funny), an unorthodox scientist marked and maimed by his father’s experiments. He is protective of Bella, hiding her away from the world even though she yearns for more. When a dedicated student, Max McCandles (Youssef), begins studying and then becoming enamored with Bella, she begins to slowly learn about the world and her hunger for adventure grows. As Bella becomes increasingly aware of the outside world and of her own body and its capacity for pleasure, she decides to escape to travel the world with sleazy lawyer Duncan Wedderburn (Ruffalo). Her travels with and without him are transformative, letting Bella come into her own, with all the complications that come with it.

A constant complication that Bella faces is the discomfort of the men around her as she comes into her own. Even the well-meaning, caring men in her life, like the good doctor and McCandles, want to rein her in and exert control over her. It’s a struggle every woman can understand: men being intimidated and confused by a woman who knows exactly what she wants and runs after it. It also speaks to the complications Bella runs into with sex, which serves as her great awakening to the world and her own bodily autonomy. Later in the film, she works at a brothel, learns about all the different desires men have, and is confused by the idea that some men want to have sex with women even if the women don’t. In these ways, this movie is incisive about patriarchy and the insidious ways it seeps into life through not only obviously nefarious men but well-meaning ones, too.

Poor Things balances sincerity with a delicious unpredictability. Bella is a woman who has the most thrilling opportunity – coming into her own sexually and intellectually with no shame. She carries none of the societal pressures of being a woman, freeing her and the movie to follow her whims. We often can’t track where Bella’s desires will take her, meaning the film’s plot unfolds in gloriously chaotic fashion. It’s a thrill to surrender to a movie and let it lead you through all its discoveries and revelations – even if you don’t know where it’s going.

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Not only is it perfectly paced and sequenced, Poor Things looks beautiful, too. Cinematographer Robbie Ryan captures Bella’s lush, surreal world beautifully – first in stark black-and-white and then in storybook-perfect colors. The ensemble cast is delightful, with Ruffalo’s Wedderburn a great pathetic, comedic foil to Stone’s determined, headstrong Bella.

Poor Things is a revelation, a potent story about self-creation that’s worth seeking out, and that’s worth getting lost in.

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