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FEATURED REVIEWS |
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Water |
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MUSIC |
REVIEW |
MUSIC REVIEW |
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Seema
Biswas
-
Shakuntula |
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Lisa Ray -
Kalyani |
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Sarala -
Chuyia |
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John Abraham -
Narayan |
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Raghuveer Yadav -
Gulabi |
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Kulbhushan Kharbanda -
Sadananda |
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Vinay Pathak -
Rabindra |
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Waheeda Rehman -
Bhagavati |
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Rishma Malik -
Snehalata |
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Deepa
Mehta -
Special
Appearance |
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Ms. Mehta, please take a bow. You have consistently provided your
audiences with cinema of the utmost quality, never once sacrificing
your creative genius to appease the forces opposing your goals.
Moreover, movies like Fire, 1947-Earth, Bollywood/Hollywood--and now
Water--established your prowess as a raconteur and expressed your
versatility. |
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That Water is not an Indian movie is a fact of shame for the Indian
Film Industry. The sign of a true democratic and progressive society
is the freedom to scrutinize, critique and condemn those customs and
traditions that inhibit the development of equality and assimilation
of a civilization. Clearly, India has a long way to go. What´s
ironic about the film is that it is the year´s best Hindi-language
movie (movies like Hazaaron Khwahishen Aisi,
Black,
and
My Brother Nikhil
were predominantly in English); aside from its subject matter,
language, and cast, the movie is anything but Indian--even two of
the leads are non-Indian. What´s more, Water is banned in the very
nation it attempts to help. |
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Congratulations for making Water the first non-English or
non-French-language movie to open the Toronto International Film
Festival, which is an immense achievement given Canada´s cultural
politics. Congratulations for making such a brilliant movie that it
was voted one of the top ten movies in Canada for 2005.
Congratulations for being one of the rare Canadian movies to cross
the $1 Million mark. Congratulations and thank you. |
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Ms. Mehta brings us into the world of those girls and women
unfortunate enough to have become widows before India´s
independence. Our eyes and ears are those of Chuihya (Sarala), a
seven-year-old widow sent to live in an ashram for widows. She
encounters the vile head of the widows, Madhumati (Manorma), who
exploits the residents. Shakuntala (Seema Biswas) is the only force
that occasionally opposes Madhumati´s tyranny. Kalyani (Lisa Ray) is
the beautiful young widow who befriends Chuhiya--she is also pimped
by Madhumati and the eunuch Gulabi (Raghuveer Yadav). Ironically,
she sent to work by crossing the Ganges. Narayan (John Abraham) is a
follower of Gandhi who falls in love with Kalyani, regardless of her
status as a widow. |
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Throughout Water, Mehta exposes the cruelties of Hinduism against
widows. Chuhiya, in her ignorance, asks all the right questions like
"Hum apne ghar kab jaayenge?" or "Aadmi vidhwaah kahan jaate hain? "
It is not that Mehta is rejecting Hinduism as a respectable
religion. She is merely raising the right questions--she is striving
to empower those with the means to help those widows who, till this
day, suffer in the same conditions described in the film. No
religion is perfect. Each one has a dark past. Hinduism is no
different. Whether these injustices are innate to the religion or a
by-product of chauvinistic interpretation, one thing is clear:
unleashing and relinquishing one of the skeletons in Hinduism´s
closet will only enhance the quality of the religion. |
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"We are very good, as different nations and different cultures, to
have a collective amnesia about our own [problems]…[Water] is about
three women trying to break that cycle and trying to find dignity,
and trying to get rid of the yoke of oppression, and if it inspires
people to do something in their own culture, that´s what´s
important." (Deepa Mehta, as told to the CBC). |
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Considered as a film, rather than a "baggage of controversy" (says
Mehta herself), Water is superior. The screenplay is crisp and
tight. There are not miscellaneous sub plots that divert from the
prevailing theme, which is always a bonus. No action completely
overt, which makes the experience even more fulfilling. Moreover,
the dialogue is engaging, especially those lines in which Narayan
deciphers the need for a custom that sentences widows to lives of
degradation. Thankfully, the movie is not preachy but speaks volumes
on the issue it addresses. |
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Mychael Danna´s background score is outstanding. A.R. Rahman has
composed the Hindi songs in the film. The music blends into the
scenes instead of overpowering them like in
Mangal Pandey.
The cinematography is perfect. The sets are accurately recreated in
the picturesque locals of Sri Lanka; special mention goes to the
design of the ashram. Direction is, as always, amazing. As a
storyteller, Mehta is focused and obviously inspired and passionate.
Scenes seem right out of life and she incorporates appropriate light
moments well. |
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