Wednesday, 8 July 2026

Ijazat: A Study in Silences

Few Hindi films have lodged themselves in the collective memory quite like Ijazat, and fewer still linger in the mind the way its melodies do, long after the screen has gone dark. Directed by Gulzar — a filmmaker whose visual language remains unmatched — the film unfolds with a patience that modern cinema has largely forgotten. There is no urgency here, no impatience with the audience, none of the narrative shorthand that demands a story justify itself in its opening minutes. Gulzar trusts the silences as much as the dialogue.
The film opens on a river winding through the mountains, accompanied by a song that speaks of a small story, filling a valley the way rain fills the monsoon — and, without quite knowing why, filling the heart and welling up in the eyes. It is in this unhurried, almost meditative register that we first encounter Mohinder (Naseeruddin Shah), arriving dishevelled at an unnamed railway station in the middle of a downpour. A woman notices him — and works visibly hard to avoid being noticed in return, hiding behind a magazine with a gesture so understated it says more than dialogue could. Fate, inevitably, throws them together anyway, and the audience is made to feel like an accidental witness to something deeply private. A single look passes between them, and the past reasserts itself: in a darkened room, Mohinder develops a photograph of himself and Sudha (Rekha). The film cuts back to the present, where Sudha wordlessly hands him a set of keys — clearly a familiar ritual — and in that one gesture we understand the quiet, proprietary claim they still hold over one another.
Excavating the Past
Mohinder retreats to the bathroom, and the narrative opens outward into memory. We meet Daadu, played with warmth by Shammi Kapoor — a Brahmin by conviction but liberal by temperament, strict without ever being unyielding, the family's moral centre without being its tyrant. Mohinder, we learn, has spent two years living with Maya, and it is to Sudha — not Daadu — that he first confesses this. He is direct about it, holding nothing back. Sudha, in turn, urges him to be equally honest with Daadu, certain that the old man will understand.
Sudha herself had been raised by Daadu, who arranged her betrothal to Mohinder. Her mother, meanwhile, is drawn as one of countless anxious, dependent women we recognise from our own lives — women whose entire sense of security rests on one figure, in this case, Daadu. When a desperate Mohinder finally goes looking for Maya, true to her name, she has already slipped away. He returns, resolved to build the life Daadu had always envisioned for him, and Sudha — for reasons the film leaves unspoken — agrees to take him back.
A Marriage Haunted
What follows is Sudha's quiet, competent effort to build a home: a tastefully kept house, everything in its place, everything idyllic on the surface. But beneath that order, Maya is everywhere. Sudha finds her first in Mohinder's wallet — and here Gulzar stages one of the film's most quietly devastating scenes, in a railway waiting room, where Sudha checks the photograph inside without the audience ever being told whose face she finds. Maya's belongings and letters remain scattered through the house, and Sudha oscillates between composure and vulnerability, at times honest with herself, at other times consumed by an obsession with her husband's former lover. The trouble is that Maya isn't really a former anything — she is a shadow still stretching across their present.
Mohinder tries, in his own limited way, to make the marriage work, and Sudha tries to release her jealousy, choosing instead to live moment by moment — katra katra. But life, as it tends to, has other plans, and all three are tested past what their resolve can bear. It is a very ordinary kind of tragedy: people swept along by circumstance, blameless yet unable to stop themselves from losing something they value.
Three Portraits
Mohinder is a talented, free-spirited man, a little careless but never unlikeable, carrying a charm that survives even his weaknesses. Over the course of the film he visibly ages — the unruly curls thin out, the forehead lines deepen, the cheeks hollow, diabetes sets in, and the old sparkle in his eyes fades. He is a man suspended between his past and his present, gambling with his future, and forever leaning on Sudha to rescue him from the very messes he creates. Of the three, his is the most difficult character to resolve, and perhaps the most human for it.
Sudha is conservative and precise, someone who takes her responsibilities seriously and recites her daily rituals without fail. She married Mohinder with full knowledge of Maya's existence, only to discover that accepting an idea and living beside its reality are two entirely different things. She feels for Maya even as she cannot make room for her — because this was never really a contest between equals. It was, simply, wife against girlfriend, and no wife could be expected to navigate that gracefully. It is Sudha, in the end, who breaks the deadlock, recognising her own limits and what she actually needs. Every detail of her presentation — her clothes, her hair, her jewellery, her bearing — is exact.
Maya is impulsive and undefined, a girl without a plan, unwilling to be tied down by any of it. Something in her past — never fully explained — seems to have soured her on marriage altogether, driving her repeated flights from Mohinder. What she actually needed was patience, stability, a home — and her life offered none of it.
Craft in the Details
The narrative moves non-linearly, dense with symbolism, and every performance is precisely calibrated. Gulzar's lyrics are given room to breathe within the songs, and R.D. Burman's compositions match that patience note for note. The film's use of props and lighting reinforces the sense that we are not watching a performance so much as glimpsing something through a half-open window: the wallet, the wardrobe that goes from full to empty, the motorcycle, candles and the shadows they throw. Sudha's domesticity and Maya's restlessness sit in constant, quiet contrast, with Mohinder helpless between the two.
Costume becomes its own form of characterisation. Mohinder first appears in a threadbare, unkempt jacket — denim, boots, a mop of curls, a mustache — every inch the drifter. At home with Sudha, he settles into a kurta-pajama in the evenings; with Maya, he reverts to loose jeans and cut-off T-shirts, the clothing itself charting how thoroughly each woman reshapes him, and how little control he has over his own shifting self.
Sudha is always immaculate — starched cotton sarees with broad, defined borders, narrow necklines, her mangalsutra resting visibly at her collar. Her hair stays tied up except in private, with her husband; even her bindi sits fixed precisely between her brows, never allowed to drift. Every choice signals a woman who lives by clearly drawn boundaries, whose personality — like her palette of strong, earthy colours — admits no blurring, however much she occasionally wishes it could.
Maya, by contrast, drifts through the film in muslin and chiffon, drawn to airier, Western silhouettes that mirror her unmoored, undecided nature. She wants desperately to belong to someone, yet cannot bring herself to commit — her loose hair and long scarves lending her an intrigue that Sudha can't help but be pulled toward. The two women's wardrobes sit at opposite poles, just as their temperaments do.
A Story That Stays
Every performance here feels lived-in rather than acted, which is precisely why the story earns belief. Ijazat is, at its heart, a small, character-driven tale — ek chhoti si kahaani — but it fills the viewer completely, leaving behind an aftertaste worth sitting with long after the credits roll.

Sunday, 28 June 2026

The Titan Story: A Timeless Masterpiece of Indian Enterprise:

Growing up in India, a watch was never just an instrument to check the hour. It was a milestone. It was the graduation gift from a proud father, the wedding heirloom passed down with a blessing, or the first major purchase from a hard-earned paycheck. For decades, HMT held the winding key to the nation's wrist, Allwyn was also present but the late 1980s brought a seismic shift.
Enter Titan.
Made in India: A Titan Story is a brilliant, nostalgic plunge into how a joint venture between the Tata Group and TIDCO transformed a traditional mechanical market into a world of elegant quartz precision. It captures the sheer audacity of building a world-class precision engineering brand right here in India, forever changing how an entire generation looked at time.
A Masterclass in Casting and Character Nuance.
What truly elevates this docudrama from a corporate chronicle to a deeply moving human story is its flawless casting. Jim Sarbh delivers a career-defining performance as the charismatic, mercurial founder Xerxes Desai. He plays Desai with an absolute masterclass of restraint, capturing the fiery determination of a man fighting Swiss skepticism and rigid domestic red tape.
Matching his brilliance is  Naseeruddin Shah, who disappears completely into the skin of JRD Tata. Shah brings a quiet, towering authority and gentle warmth to the screen, embodying JRD's iconic posture and precise mannerisms. The profound mentor-mentee dynamic between Sarbh and Shah forms the emotional beating heart of the series. Backed by a stellar supporting ensemble including Vaibhav Tatwawadi as the dependable right-hand man Akash and Kaveri Seth as the sharp marketing lead Megha—every corporate negotiation feels alive, charged, and intimately personal.

Beyond the performances, the auditory landscape of the series is a masteract in itself. The brilliant use of retro songs seamlessly woven into the narrative doesn't just serve as background music it acts as an emotional time machine. Every track is chosen with meticulous precision, fitting the respective sequences so flawlessly that it anchors you right into the heart of the late '70s and '80s.
Whether it is scoring the high-stakes, late-night strategy sessions or framing moments of quiet, hard-fought triumph, the musical choices hit with a spectacular resonance. It is handled with such care that it repeatedly delivers genuine goosebumps, evoking the exact textures, optimism, and cinematic romance of that bygone era.

It can also be taken as the Ultimate Crash Course in Marketing Strategy.
Beyond the gripping drama, the series doubles as a phenomenal, real-world crash course in niche marketing, product mix development, and the classic 4 Ps of Marketing. It brilliantly charts how Titan refused to battle established giants on baseline utility, instead rewriting the textbook on brand building:

Product & Product Mix: Rather than launching a single, one-size-fits-all watch, Titan engineered a deeply segmented product mix. They understood that a consumer's needs vary by occasion and income. The series shows the strategic birth of distinct lines—from the robust, everyday reliability of the Classiique and Precision of Exacta  , or other launches like Royale, Fast track and to the ultra-thin engineering marvel of the Edge, and the opulent, gold-plated luxury of Regalia. They expanded the width and depth of their mix so beautifully that they had a product for every wrist.
Price: Titan masterfully avoided the race to the bottom. They skipped the budget price war with existing mechanical giants and instead introduced value-based, aspirational pricing. They positioned the quartz watch as a premium, yet accessible luxury—a reward for achievement rather than just a functional tool.
They brought in same consumer price across the country.
Place: In an era of dusty, multi-brand watch shops, Titan revolutionized distribution. They established the World of Titan showrooms..Pristine, exclusive retail environments where buying a watch became a premium experiential journey.
Promotion (Sensory Branding): Alongside the brilliant period soundtrack, who can forget that iconic, adapted Mozart theme music? By seamlessly weaving Western classical elegance with distinctively Indian emotional storytelling in their Sunday television slots, Titan built an unforgettable sonic and visual identity that still evokes deep nostalgia decades later.

A Personal Connection to a Legacy:
For me, this journey hits exceptionally close to home. As the credits rolled, I couldn't help but glance at my own wrist with an overwhelming sense of pride. I am the fortunate custodian of an original, launch edition Titan Exacta—a tangible piece of history from the brand's pioneering days.
Holding it today, its flawless quartz movement remains as beautifully precise as it was all those years ago. It isn't just a vintage timepiece; it’s a living symbol of India's manufacturing renaissance, a quiet reminder of an era when "Made in India" stepped onto the global stage with absolute confidence.
If you appreciate great storytelling, corporate grit, and a heavy dose of pure nostalgia, The Titan Story is an absolute must-watch. It’s a beautiful reminder that while time always moves forward, some classics remain truly timeless.
Rating: 4.5/5

Friday, 26 June 2026

Welcome to the Jungle

WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE
Welcome 3 if you wish..
Welcome to the Jungle is the kind of film that proudly announces at the very beginning, "Leave your brain at the ticket counter." If you follow that advice, chances are you'll have a reasonably enjoyable ride.
This is unapologetically a throwback to the loud, colourful, anything-goes entertainers of the 1980s where explosions solve problems, coincidences are a lifestyle, and every actor gets a chance to say, "Look, I'm in this film too!"
Director Ahmed Khan deserves applause for managing an ensemble so huge that the end credits almost feel longer than the climax. The ambition is admirable, but in trying to serve every possible flavour of entertainment, the film occasionally resembles a buffet where you've piled too much onto the same plate.
The first half is breezy, packed with laughs and nostalgia. The second half, however, overstays its welcome and begins testing the audience's patience more than their funny bone.
One of the film's biggest strengths is how it affectionately reminds you of the original Welcome. The familiar background score instantly evokes memories of the 2007 blockbuster, and the clever use of musical cues brings a smile every time they play. Unfortunately, the newly composed songs don't leave the same impact. They look lavish on screen but lack the catchy, hummable quality that made the original soundtrack so memorable.
Akshay Kumar is the film's biggest asset, effortlessly carrying the madness with his trademark comic timing. Suniel Shetty and Arshad Warsi are dependable, while Paresh Rawal, Rajpal Yadav, and Shreyas Talpade deliver some of the funniest moments. Johny Lever reminds us that comic timing never goes out of style.
The Azadganj village track ( POK …??) featuring Raveena Tandon, Farida Jalal, and Kiran Kumar is among the film's highlights post interval. Jackie Shroff makes for an effective villain, while Disha Patani and Jacqueline Fernandez are left with little to do beyond looking glamorous. We have Lara Dutta as an Army instructor if you please..
The jokes and punches  in the film are sportively on actors themselves..
The surprise cameos evoke genuine nostalgia, the dialogues produce several laugh out loud moments, and the music, apart from the nostalgic throwbacks to Welcome 1, is a mixed bag.
To sum it up
Welcome to the Jungle is noisy, overstuffed, and gloriously illogical. It's the cinematic equivalent of a family wedding
too many people, too much chaos, plenty of fun, and by the end you're wondering if it could have wrapped up 30 minutes earlier. If you're looking for logic, you'll be disappointed. If you're looking for laughs and comedy, you'll walk out smiling.
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐ (3/5)

Saturday, 20 June 2026

Cocktail 2 Review: A Glossy, Well-Meaning Drama weighed down by its length.

More than a decade after Cocktail (2012) defined urban romance for a generation, director Homi Adajania returns with a spiritual sequel exploring modern love. Scripted by Luv Ranjan (taking over from Imtiaz Ali) Cocktail 2 swaps youthful recklessness for a mature look at emotional compatibility in an era of fleeting "situationships." While the film boasts a refreshing vibe and earnest intentions, it ultimately struggles to justify its bloated runtime.
The narrative follows Kunal (Shahid Kapoor) and Diya (Rashmika Mandanna), a couple fracturing under the weight of changing expectations. The arrival of Ally (Kriti Sanon) triggers a love triangle that intentionally or unintentionally mirrors the original trio. Rashmika Mandanna brings sincerity to a role reminiscent of Diana Penty’s Meera, while Kriti Sanon plays her version of Deepika's Veronica with grounded restraint rather than wild rebellion.
She is the true Scene stealer. Anchoring them is Shahid Kapoor, who delivers a beautifully restrained, vulnerable performance that stands tall against Saif Ali Khan’s iconic Gautam. In the supporting cast, Tiku Talsania steps in as Kunal's father, though his track unfortunately lacks the memorable comic and emotional impact that Dimple Kapadia and Boman Irani brought to the original.
The first half is breezy, fun and smooth. You almost feel like you’re on a chilled out holiday, sailing on the calm turquoise waters of Sicily.
Technically, the film is gorgeous. Santhana Krishnan Ravichandran’s cinematography turns Sicily’s landscapes into a visual treat, and Pritam’s score—accented by R.D. Burman's "Nahin Nahin Abhi Nahin"—complements the mood perfectly.
However, the film’s major undoing is its pacing. It takes 150 minutes to communicate straightforward ideas. As Ally points out early on, an honest conversation could solve the characters' issues—and ironically, it could have saved the audience an indulgent second half.
Worse, the script plays it too safe. Intense moments are quickly deflected with humor, and a late-stage revelations sanitize the conflict. Where the 2012 original gained its raw complexity from Gautam's messy, morally flawed betrayal, this 2026 version refuses to sit with discomfort. By cleaning up the mess, it robs the story of genuine dramatic friction.
Cocktail 2 has its heart in the right place, elevated by a stellar cast and aspirational aesthetics. It is a pleasant, mature look at contemporary relationships, but it mistakes duration for depth more so in the second half.
Ultimately Cocktail 2 comes off a bit of a cocktail itself, swinging between style and substance .
Rating: ⭐ ⭐ ⭐

Monday, 25 May 2026

The Clash of Principles and Destiny: A Retro View of B.R. Chopra’s Aadmi Aur Insaan..

The cinematic landscape of 1970 was marked by transition, but few films captured the era's grand scale and emotional gravitas quite like B.R. Chopra’s production Aadmi Aur Insaan. Released in Bombay Territory fifty-six years ago on March 27, 1970, this romantic thriller drama arrived with immense promotional fanfare. Longtime cinephiles will vividly recall the booming radio advertisements that rallied the youth of the nation with the slogan, "Nau jawanon, utho, jaago ..BR Films ka tehelka..Aadmi Aur Insaan!" followed by the soaring, high-octane vocals of Mahendra Kapoor promising that a storm was brewing on the horizon. Although the film was released during the tricky March time frame period its sheer cinematic merit defied the odds. It went on to enjoy a triumphant regular run of fifteen weeks at the Novelty theater and other premier venues, ultimately celebrating a coveted Silver Jubilee in its matinee shows. The frenzy was palpable across the city.

Directed by Yash Chopra, Aadmi Aur Insaan is a masterfully crafted exploration of friendship, arrogance, and conflicting ideologies. At its core, the narrative navigates a potentially convoluted love triangle involving two men and one lady, with an additional woman skillfully woven into the plot. The film thrives on the dynamic contrast between its two male leads. Dharmendra as Munish delivers a remarkably restrained and dignified performance as a fiercely loyal friend who maintains his integrity and affection despite facing severe humiliation. Opposite him, Feroz Khan plays Jai Kishen (JK), the affluent friend whose descent into villainy forms the emotional anchor of the drama. Interestingly, this career-defining role for Feroz Khan was originally offered to Raaj Kumar. However, history was rewritten when Raaj Kumar refused to shoot a specific scene requiring him to place a necklace around Dharmendra’s neck. The role subsequently went to Feroz Khan, who delivered a powerhouse performance that permanently elevated him out of B-grade cinema and earned him the Filmfare Award for Best Supporting Actor that year.
Behind the silver screen, the film’s production was as dramatic as its screenplay. The project faced significant delays, a circumstance that inadvertently birthed another Hindi cinema classic. While waiting to complete this big-budget venture, Yash Chopra quickly assembled and released the groundbreaking, songless suspense thriller Ittefaq in 1969. In a delightful twist of meta-textual irony, Mumtaz’s character in Aadmi Aur Insaan repeats the word "ittefaq" (coincidence) so frequently throughout the movie that one cannot help but wonder if the repetition subliminally inspired the title of the interim thriller. Unfortunately, the aftermath of the film also marked the end of an era; a serious falling out occurred between Dharmendra and Yash Chopra after the release, ensuring that the star and the visionary director would never collaborate on a film project again.
Beyond the heavy interpersonal drama, the film balanced its narrative weight with exceptional comic relief and a legendary soundtrack. Johnny Walker provides delightful moments of levity, 
Elevating the entire experience was the brilliant musical score composed by Ravi, with poignant lyrics penned by Sahir Ludhianvi. The soundtrack seamlessly blended social consciousness with romance, featuring the scenic beauty of "Ye Neele Parbaton Ki Dhara," the playful energy of "O Dil Karta O Yara Dil Dara," and the deeply reflective . "Jagega Insaan Zamana Dekhega." Above all, it was Mumtaz’s lively onscreen presence during the repetitions of "Zindagi Ittefaq Hai" that captured the public imagination, creating a chartbuster that resonates just as strongly today as it did more than half a century ago. Ultimately, Aadmi Aur Insaan stands as a monumental testament to the golden age of B.R. Films, leaving behind a legacy of rich storytelling, unforgettable music, and timeless nostalgia.

Sunday, 17 May 2026

The Ideological Tightrope. AAKHRI SAWAAL

Director Abhijeet Mohan Warang’s Aakhri Sawal is a bold political thriller that fearlessly explores the complexities surrounding the RSS and some of India’s most debated historical events. Instead of offering easy answers or taking a one-sided stand, the film challenges viewers to think, question, and form their own conclusions.
The story begins with a heated classroom confrontation between a passionate student, Vicky, and his professor over alleged ideological bias in an academic thesis. When the exchange goes viral, Vicky raises five controversial questions linked to the RSS, Mahatma Gandhi’s assassination, and the Babri Masjid demolition, turning a campus dispute into a nationwide ideological storm.
The film is powered by a restrained yet strong performance from Sanjay Dutt, who steps away from his usual larger-than-life image to portray an intellectual and emotionally layered professor. Namashi Chakraborty delivers a confident breakthrough performance as the fearless student challenger, matching Dutt with sincerity and intensity.
The supporting cast, including Amit Sadh, Sameera Reddy, Neetu Chandra, Tridha Choudhury, and Mrunal Kulkarni, adds emotional and social depth to the narrative, particularly highlighting the media’s obsession with sensationalism and public outrage.
The film is Produced by Nikhil Nanda jointly with Sanjay Dutt.
What makes Aakhri Sawal stand apart is its balanced storytelling and gripping screenplay, moving smoothly between debates, flashbacks, and ideological clashes without losing momentum. Rather than preaching or propoganda, the film provokes discussion, making it a rare and thought-provoking piece of Indian political cinema that lingers long after the credits roll.

Thursday, 30 April 2026

A Sharp but Uneven Investigation: A Review of Mrithyunjay

Hussain Sha Kiran’s Mrithyunjay is a film that understands its scale, opting for a taut, 122-minute investigative narrative rather than the high-octane spectacle of a traditional commercial potboiler. While it succeeds in trimming the cinematic fat that often plagues the genre, it occasionally trips over its own logic. Led by Sree Vishnu, the film is a commendable effort that plays to the strengths of its core team, even if the writing sometimes chooses the path of least resistance.
The story centers on Jay, an aspiring crime reporter played by Sree Vishnu with his signature grounded charm. Jay’s current professional reality is a morbidly unique hustle: he secures obituary ads for a newspaper by posing as a grieving acquaintance at mourning households. This ethically murky setup serves a dual purpose, showcasing Jay’s "chameleon" ability to blend into any environment and his sharp observational skills. These talents eventually pull him away from the obituary desk and into a dangerous conspiracy involving sophisticated bank scams, contract killers, and murders staged to look like accidents.
One of the film’s most refreshing qualities is its narrative discipline. Director Hussain Sha Kiran resists the urge to include a traditional romantic track, allowing Reba Monica John’s character, Sita, to remain a focused police officer rather than a love interest. Their paths cross solely for the sake of the investigation, a choice that keeps the pacing brisk. Furthermore, the humor is strictly situational, arising naturally from Jay’s undercover antics rather than being shoehorned in as a separate comedy track. Even Jay’s personal trauma is handled with a light touch, providing just enough emotional weight to justify his dogged pursuit of the truth without stalling the plot.
However, the film’s intelligence is inconsistent, often asking the audience to ignore practical questions in favor of narrative momentum. While Jay is portrayed as a brilliant investigator, his success frequently comes at the expense of the police force's competence. Even Sita, who is established as a resolute officer, often feels peripheral to the investigation, leaving Jay to do the investigation that professional detectives should handle. This reliance on "convenient writing" prevents Mrithyunjay from reaching the heights of the great crime dramas. Ultimately, it remains a solid, intermittently intriguing thriller that respects the viewer’s time, even if it doesn't quite realize its full potential.

Available on Netflix.
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐

Monday, 13 April 2026

FARZ : A Tribute to Bond

FARZ (1967) – Bollywood’s Early Brush with James Bond… and Beyond..
Released on 6th October 1967 at Central Cinema, Farz went on to become a Silver Jubilee Hit, firmly establishing itself as one of Hindi cinema’s earliest and most ambitious spy thrillers.
Often remembered as one of Bollywood’s first “James Bond-style” films, Farz was actually inspired by the Telugu hit Goodachari 116, starring Krishna Ghattamaneni later fondly regarded as “Tollywood Bond.” Interestingly, Jeetendra too carved his own niche in this genre, even revisiting it years later with Bond 303 (1985) and Raksha.
The film opens with a gripping sabotage attempt at a dam complete with explosives, garrote wires, and shadowy operatives setting the tone for a spy thriller. The mysterious Agent 211081 steps in, only for the narrative to take a shocking turn early on. Enter Gopal, Agent 116 (Jeetendra), who takes over the mission with charm, style, and a touch of Elvis-inspired swagger.
There are also clear echoes of the classic Dr. No particularly in the initial premise of investigating a fellow agent’s mysterious death, and later in the climactic confrontation with the main villain in his secret lair. These similarities further underline Farz as an early and earnest attempt to adapt the Bond template into a distinctly Indian cinematic style.
From here, Farz blends espionage with classic Bollywood elements romance, acrion family drama, comic sidekicks, and, of course, memorable music. The central conflict thickens as Gopal finds himself entangled with Sarita (Babita), whose father may or may not be the very villain he is chasing. Trust, deception, and melodrama weave through the narrative, sometimes overshadowing the spy angle.
And then comes the music truly an integral asset to the film.
Composed by the legendary duo Laxmikant Pyarelal, the soundtrack is nothing short of superhit and continues to live on decades later.
Songs like Mast Baharon Ka Main Aashiq, Hum Toh Tere Aashiq Hain, and the evergreen birthday anthem Baar Baar Din Ye Aaye became hugely popular and remain etched in popular culture.
Like many films of its era, Farz follows the delightful trope of the “double boss” where the apparent villain gives way to a more sinister mastermind lurking behind the scenes. Add to this secret lairs, disguised weapons, fake ambulances, and dramatic rescues, and you have a film that embraces its pulp roots wholeheartedly.
While the espionage may feel light and occasionally confusing, the film redeems itself with its energetic songs and dances. Jeetendra, not quite a Sean Connery style action hero, instead wins over with his rhythmic moves earning his place as a “pelvis-grinding” crowd-pleaser and also getting the name Jumping Jack which has stayed with him.
Farz may not deliver tightly wound spy intrigue, but it remains a fascinating and entertaining relic of Bollywood’s early attempt at the spy genre where style, music, and masala take precedence over realism.
A nostalgic watch for lovers of vintage Bollywood and musical spy dramas.
#Farz #Jeetendra #LaxmikantPyarelal #BollywoodBond #SpyThriller #1960sCinema #SilverJubileeHit

Sunday, 22 March 2026

SANKALP – A Game of Minds, Morality & Power and Master of the Game


There are stories that entertain… and then there are stories that unsettle you. Sankalp belongs firmly to the latter.
In the hands of Prakash Jha, the world of politics is never black or white it's Grey and it lives in the uneasy space of ambition, ideology, and compromise. With 'Sankalp',Inspired by the Chanakya-Chandragupta legend, he once again opens the doors to that shadowy corridor where power is not seized, but carefully cultivated.
At the heart of this gripping narrative stands Nana Patekar as Kanhiyalal aka  Ma’at Saab a man who doesn’t raise his voice, yet commands absolute attention. His presence is like a slow-burning fire… controlled, calculated, and capable of immense destruction. This is not just a performance; it is a lesson in restraint, in authority, in the art of saying more with silence than words ever could.
The story, echoing the timeless dynamic of mentor and disciple, follows a man who dares to “fix” a broken system—not from the outside, but from within. He shapes minds, builds careers, and plants ideas like seeds of power. But what happens when the very mind he nurtures begins to question him?
Aditya (Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub) brings that conflict alive with remarkable intensity the student who refuses to remain a pawn and is misled to swing like a pendulum.
Supporting pillars like Neeraj Kabi as The Scheming and Corrupt Waqar and Sanjay Kapoor as CM Prashant (overdoing the What the F**k exclamation) add gravitas, ensuring that every conversation feels like a duel, every silence like a strategy.
Sankalp does not rush. It unfolds deliberately, almost like a game of chess where every move is measured, every consequence inevitable.
Yes, the journey can feel stretched at times, as ot covers 10 parts and not every subplot finds perfect harmony but perhaps that is the nature of power itself: complex, layered, and often untidy. A rushed end leaving scope for the next season.
This is not a series for those seeking quick thrills. It is for those who enjoy the slow tightening of tension, the weight of words, and the uncomfortable realization that right and wrong are often just matters of perspective.
Sankalp is not merely watched it is experienced, questioned, and quietly absorbed.
And above all, it reminds you why Nana Patekar remains not just an actor… but a Master of the Gane 
 Rating: 3.5 / 5
Streaming on: Amazon MX Player

Sunday, 22 February 2026

Shatak: A Cinematic Tribute to RSS's Century of Courage!

Just watched Shatak..
This film is a testament to courage, vision, and selfless service, bringing the RSS's first 50 years to life in a way that hits you right in the heart.
What stands out? The raw human stories, young swayamsevaks leaving home, families in uncertainty, volunteers shouldering massive responsibilities. 
Shatak is a powerful testament to courage, vision, and the spirit of service—portrayed in a way that lingers long after the screen fades to black. Each scene allows you to feel their emotions, fears, and unwavering dedication, turning history into something deeply personal and profoundly moving.
Conceptualized by Anil D. Agarwal, sensitively directed by Aashish Mall, and produced by Vir Kapur with co-producer Aashish Tiwari Shatak reflects sincerity, integrity, and respect for its subject. Rather than opting for sensationalism, the creators choose authenticity, nuance, and depth—an approach that elevates the film into something far more meaningful than a conventional historical narrative.
This is not merely a recounting of events but an emotional exploration of conviction, courage, and service. It invites understanding, evokes empathy, and highlights the individuals behind a movement who dedicated their lives to an ideal larger than themselves. 
Dr Keshav Baliram Hedgewar and Madhav Sadashiv Golwalkar (Guruji)
One leaves the film with admiration for the century-long journey it portrays and the quiet commitment of those who shaped it.( Till 1975 )
Many facts have been shared which are documented but never made popular.
In essence, Shatak is a cinematic celebration of belief and resilience moving, inspiring, and unforgettable. 
Technically the AI generated and adapted casting is very genuine.
The dialogue is meaningful..
What stands out is ..one which stays with me is " Indira Ko Sangh Ke Prati dvesh Virasat Main Mila Hain " 
Something which remains and resonates even two generations later.
They have kept the Pace moving..at times a bit too fast and major episodes are just told or hinted at. Finally 50 years are covered in just under two hours.
The first fifty years are captured with brilliance; the next fifty are eagerly awaited. It is not just a film, but a heartfelt tribute to an idea that refused to bend.
The film halts as Balasaheb Deoras takes charge and emergency is declared where 80% of those arrested and jails were of the RSS.
Looking ahead to the next part.

Sunday, 4 January 2026

Miss You Pancham

4th January is not just a date on the calendar for Hindi film music lovers. It marks the day Rahul Dev Burman aka Pancham Da fell silent in 1994. Or so it seemed. Three decades later, his music still refuses to rest, echoing with the same restless energy that once unsettled, surprised, and ultimately reshaped Bollywood’s musical imagination.
Born on 27 June 1939 in Calcutta, Pancham was destined to live inside melody and music.. As the son of S.D. Burman, one of Indian cinema’s greatest composers, music was everywherebut Pancham was never content being a mere extension of his father’s legacy. Legend has it that his nickname came from crying in the fifth note (Pa) of the musical scale as an infant. Myth or truth, it feels fitting. He seemed tuned differently from the very beginning.
His early years were spent learning quietly assisting his father on films to his first break with Chhote Nawab. 
But it was Teesri Manzil (1966) that marked the real rupture. With electric guitars, pounding rhythms, mouth organs, ghungroo beats, and a heady Western influence, Pancham announced that Hindi film music could swing, swagger, and seduce in entirely new ways. He created an aura Called Pancham who was widely credited with revolutionizing Bollywood music. His genius lay not just in innovation, but in fearless assimilation. He incorporated influences from an astonishing range of genres ; electronic rock ,pop, disco, jazz, Latin rhythms, Indian classical, and Bengali folk—often blending them within the same composition. At a time when love stories followed predictable musical patterns, Pancham injected fast beats into romantic narratives, giving them youthful energy and edge.
Jazz harmonies and improvisational structures found their way into his background scores and orchestration, lending sophistication without alienation.
What made Pancham truly special was his enthusiastic, unorthodox approach and ability to embrace every form of music, bend it to his will, and stamp it unmistakably as his own without ever damaging the soul of the melody. That balance between experimentation and emotional purity gave his work a class that remains unmatched.
An Era of Endless Reinvention
The late ’60s , ’70s and early '80s belonged to him. Pancham was everywhere and repetitive yet never repetitive. He could craft tender introspection like "Kuch Toh Log Kahenge" , “Yeh Shaam Mastani”, aching restraint in “Tere Bina Zindagi Se”, playful romance in “Jawani Diwani”, and wild abandon in “Mehbooba Mehbooba”, sung in his own raw, unpolished voice or the Medley in Hum Kisi Se Lum.Nahin. His music captured a changing India—restless, experimental, modern, yet emotionally grounded.
Innovation came instinctively. Pancham recreated rainstorms inside studios, experimented with reverse playback long before it became fashionable, layered sounds with intuitive brilliance, and turned everyday objects—combs, bottles, table edges, claps—into percussion instruments. Jazz riffs sat comfortably beside Indian rhythms, never clashing, always conversing.
Gargling became a background anthem.
His collaborations with Gulzar, Anand Bakshi, Majrooh Sultanpuri, Gulshan Bawra and Javed Akhtar, and voices like Kishore Kumar, Lata Mangeshkar, Mohammed Rafi, and Asha Bhosle, weren’t mere professional alliances they were creative symphonies that defined decades of listening.
His personal and musical partnership with Asha Bhosle resulted in some of the boldest, most sensuous, and emotionally layered songs Hindi cinema had ever heard.
Pancham even carried his charm onto the screen. In Bhoot Bangla (1965), his brief acting appearance revealed the same playful intelligence that danced through his compositions a reminder that for him, music was joy before it was a craft. He quit acting when his father asked him to concentrate on one art and not have two legs on two boats. 
The final Quiet Years were like a shock .
Despite composing for over 300 films, recognition often lagged behind influence. The late ’80s were particularly cruel. As trends shifted, Pancham—the composer who once defined modernity—was ironically labelled “outdated.” Yet his creative fire never dimmed.
Then came 1942: A Love Story. Released after his death, its lush, soulful music felt like a quiet apology from time itself—timeless, tender, and deeply emotional. Once again, Pancham proved he had never chased trends. He had always created them or been ahead of them.
For many of us, Pancham Da does not exist in discographies or documentaries alone. He lives in memory. In old cassette players, crackling radios, long drives, college canteens, and solitary evenings when one song suddenly pulls us decades backward. You don’t need to check the credits—within seconds, you know it’s Pancham.
Even today my playlist reads Hits of R.D.Burman or something related to him.
Some composers belong to history.
Pancham belongs to life.
As he composed Khali Haath Shaam Aayi Hain Khaali Haath Jaayegi...
He left us .. Khaali Haath but Bhare Kaan..
MISS YOU PANCHAM.