Search This Blog
Rajani Thindiath: Writings | Stories | Poems | Scripts | Reviews
Featured Post
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
How I discovered a wealth of films & shows in just the last two years
I've watched some fascinating films and shows in the last two years, especially after the OTT platforms made regional cinema accessible via subtitles. OTT also provides easy reach to gems that lost out in the publicity race against big-budget movies. There's such a wealth of content that it's difficult to sift through the lot, unless one is willing to invest the time to research everything that catches one's fancy. (Guilty! :D)
Film
Clubs:
Some of this has been made easier because of screenings provided by groups such as the The Indian Express Film Club as well as reaction channels on YouTube. It was through the film club that I got to watch the twist-in-the-tale dose of satire and uncomfortable reality that is Super Deluxe in Tamil and Rima Das' languidly beautiful look at childhood in the Assamese film, Village Rockstars.
OTT:
OTT
threw open the doors to such gems as Greta Gerwig’s brilliant adaptation of
Little Women, Anna Boden & Ryan Fleck’s criminally underrated superhero
movie, Captain Marvel, and Taika Waititi’s quirky, wonky Jojo Rabbit. There was
also Zakariah Mohammed's light-hearted, & gentle Halal Love Story in
Malayalam, the superb modern take on the Vikram Vetal tale, Vikram Vedha, in Tamil and the little gems that were Karthik Subbaraj’s Miracle and Sudha
Kongara’s Ilama Idho Idho in the Tamil feature Putham Pudhu Kaalai.
A
few revelations came in the form of Swaroop RSJ’s Telugu comedy thriller Agent
Sai Srinivasa Athreya, Saurabh Bhave’s simple and real Marathi feature
Bonus, Mukta Barve—fabulously in character—in Pratima Joshi's Aamhi
Doghi in Marathi, the practical romance of Prakash Kunte's Coffee Ani Barach
Kahi, again Marathi and H. Vinoth's Tamil brutal dacoit thriller Theeran
Adhigaaram Ondru. But then, how can I forget the sublime, the satirical, the
funny and the poignant moments that make up Arun Prabu Purushothaman’s Tamil
film Aruvi?
As for Modern Family... the topics, the humour, the characters and the sheer juggling of all of these in 20-30 minutes! Mind-blowing. Yeah, there is some stereotyping in some of the gags that could have been avoided but in the larger scheme of things—a captivating effort. The mockumentary The Office astounded me by its fantastic character study and the office dynamics. It must have been fascinating writing for and playing the no-filter, deluded boss guy, Michael Scott, who knows no limits. Steve Carell is so good! :D Family Man and Panchayat, to me, highlight the freedom afforded by OTT platforms to writers and creators and thus the long-awaited return of great Indian content.
Reaction
Channels:
I
enjoyed the ludicrously surreal and entertainingly intriguing experience that
was Kaalakaandi, written and directed by Akshat Verma. This was after watching
a review on Tried and Refused
Productions.
A
keen insight, soft & subtle, was Adeeb Rais' short Auntyji that I chanced
upon because of a reaction on Jaby Koay's channel.
I
was drawn into watching Satyajit Ray’s Bengali classic Nayak after watching a
scene from the film on the YouTube channel Our Stupid
Reactions. What a fascinating study of an actor and a superstar is
the film, coupled with gentleness and self-deprecating humour. So many scenes
stay behind... Arindam (the actor) checking up on the young girl down with
fever, his interactions with the journalist played by Sharmila Tagore, his easy
reactions to and wry acceptance of the judgmental attitudes about his
profession, his dissatisfaction and analysis of his performance in his first
film, his interactions with wannabe and have-been actors as well as with
friends from his early days... Loved the way it is written, shot and performed.
Also enjoyed discovering Uttam Kumar. Nayak is on YouTube with subtitles if
you want to take a dekko. :)
Another film, I discovered through a scene reaction on Our Stupid Reactions was Adoor Gopalakrishnan's Mathilukal (The Walls) in Malayalam. Again, Mathilukal is available on YouTube with subtitles. Good-natured and good-humoured, writer Vaikom Muhammed Basheer is a revelation. The film traces the time when the writer was incarcerated for expressing himself through his writings, termed treason by the British state, something that echoes through time. His whimsical way of looking at things and his writings, draw admirers among jailers and prisoners alike. So, it is particularly poignant when Mammootty, playing Basheer, finds loneliness and laments that he's lost his laughter. And then begins a conversation with a voice, a woman, a prisoner in the women's prison on the other side of the wall...
The films and shows I've talked about are admittedly limited to the platforms I subscribe or have access to. However, I'm
giddily looking forward to more such content that throws my mind wide open to
possibilities, ideas and thoughts all while having a rollicking good time! :)
This
is not even counting the long list of Malayalam films I've enjoyed in the last few years, which include:
Jude Anthany Joseph's rom-com Ohm Shanthi Oshaana, the delightful Oru Muthassi Gadha and the thought-provoking Sara's
Lijo
Jose Pellissery's loony and poignant Amen and the loonier gang war flick Angamaly Diaries,
Zakariya
Muhammed's heartwarming Sudani from Nigeria,
Madhu
C. Narayanan's beautifully breezy and stirring Kumbalangi Nights,
Aashiq
Abu's mad adventure Rani Padmini and gripping Virus,
Dileesh Pothan's sly take on Macbeth, Joji, where the camera is practically another character
Althaf Salim's wry yet heartening look at coping with cancer, Njandukalude Nattil Oridavela
Rosshan Andrrews' unusual Mumbai Police (that twist in the tale!)
Jeethu Joseph's remarkable crime thrillers Drishyam and Drishyam2,
Fellini T. P.'s fun take on a chain-smoker's struggles in Theevandi
Anuraj Manohar's dark Ishq,
Sachy's unusual study of one-up(hu)manship Ayyappanum Koshiyum,
Martin
Prakkat's larger-than-life and magical Charlie,
Anwar
Rasheed's Ustad Hotel,
Anjali
Menon's Bangalore Days,
Dominic
Arun's black comedy Tharangam
Sanu Varghese's Aarkkariyam, a film that flows as gently as a stream, eye-popping revelations and all.
Appu N. Bhattathiri's unusual Nizhal
Mahesh Narayanan's layered, multi-perspective narrative of the briskly-paced and gripping Malik
Rojin Thomas' #Home. This one's just meant to warm up the heart, messy emotions, social media addiction, therapy, Tai Chi, extraordinary stories and all, including minor clichés.
and more...
Starting a list for films from other languages that I've watched and admired since I first wrote this blog:
Amit Masurkar's Sherni, a symbolic representation of the quagmire that is politics, media, forwarded propaganda & unthinking masses that stands for the absurd reality of today.
* I've not mentioned the platforms on which these shows or movies are available since that changes with time. I've found JustWatch a great site to find out what is available to watch where. I searched for Aarkkariyam as an example in the link I've given. :)
<a
href='https://www.freepik.com/vectors/templates'>Templates vector created by
colorfuelstudio - www.freepik.com</a>
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
Comments
Popular Posts
Rajani Thindiath: Portfolio: Stories | Scripts | Series | Books
- Get link
- X
- Other Apps

Love your writing! It's as if I am chatting with a friend over coffee and she is giving me a low down of 'must watch' series/ movies... got so many more boxes to check now😊 nice read.. and keep wielding that pen ( or keyboard, here) 😅
ReplyDeleteThis is so encouraging! Thank you so much! :)
ReplyDelete