Saturday, August 2, 2025

Pyaasa

 Pyaasa

1957, Hindi, YouTube (Tommydan55 Channel), 8.5/10 IMDB, Directed by Guru Dutt


A tale of a poet in a wistful society. A society that pretends in making the dead immortal, rather than acclaiming the talents of the living.

Pyaasa (Thirst), is about a remorseful poet Vijay (Guru Dutt), who tries to publish his Urdu poems. None, including his brothers, value his work. A prostitute, named Gulabo (Waheeda Rehman), who buys his poems from the waste paper man, falls for the poet's writing. Vijay though is in reminiscence of his lover Meena (Mala Sinha) from his college days. Meena had left him for a wealthy man Mr. Ghosh (Rehman). Whereas, Gulabo, dreams of a respectful life with Vijay, but never reveals to him.

The global influence of 'realism' on Indian films are pretty much evident. The consequences of 'unemployment' is the core of the film and it surfaces in many instances.

In the later half of the film, the death of a beggar mistaken to be Vijay's. He had given his jacket to the beggar. Vijay is dead while he is admitted to the hospital and is in shock. In the meantime, Gulabo, approaches Mr. Ghosh to publish is work and Vijay's poems become a huge success.

Vijay is out of his mental shock while hearing his poem being recited by the nurse. But, when he claims he is the dead poet, he is put in an asylum. Vijay escapes and reaches just in time for the memorial service in his name. Vijay happens to witness the ill intentions of his brothers, friend and society. This prompts him to pronounce that he is not the celebrated poet.

A story that's so novel as it has so much relevance even in today's scenario. This makes the film ironically 'immortal', given the story is about glorifying the dead instead of recognizing the living.

While confronted by Meena, he expresses his hatred towards the society. The society that denies the right to be a human and throngs to worship the dead, crushing them when alive. He says he could never be at peace in such a society. He then leaves with Gulabo to a place where he doesn't have to go any further.

The character's arc is well defined and the director's closure to the characters are exceptional. Meena's character is an echo of an average human who is after fame at any cost. But instead of embracing the recognition that he had longed for all his life, Vijay opts to outcasts the society for its hypocrisy. The thirst of the poet is quenched. Yet his expedition continues, as his thirst in finding an upright society with integrity, remains unquenched.

Fine craftsmanship is the strength of the film. From the soulful renditions of Sahir Ludhianvi's lyrics in S. D. Burman music to cinematographer V.K. Murthy's usage of light and shadow, the outcome of the combination is sheer magic.

The channel Tommydan55 is a treasure trove. It houses many such timeless collection of legend, in amazing quality aptly subtitled.

Film Appreciation with Namrata Joshi

 Film Appreciation with Namrata Joshi

27th September 2020, Book A Workshop face-to-face


A brief workshop that focused on appreciation of two iconic feature films and a short film- 1960 Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho, the French classic thriller, 1955 'Les Diaboliques' and Short Film Maya by Vikas Chandra.

The workshop threw light on how to read two films of similar genre that has different treatments. The similarities were listed and the major differences were analyzed in depth that made both the films unique for the time it was shot.

Namratha shared her movie watching experiences at the Film institute Pune, and listed few other must watch films. Her approach on bringing in Vikas Chandra, the director of Maya to the workshop was very noble. It gave an insight of the maker's mind and his vision behind making a novel film like Maya.

An exceptional workshop, that provided me with a template to decipher films from the maker's point of view. 

The Social Dilemma

 The Social Dilemma

2020, Docudrama, English, Netflix, 7.8/10 IMDB, Directed by Jeff Orlowski


Social network addiction, decoded using a new lens, that incites silent shock waves and urges the need for weaning off from one's own addiction however minimal one may manifest it to be.

Evils of social media, documented with a parallel drama of a family's addiction. Even if not an eyeopener, it sure is an informative series that insists on keeping our addictions at bay, the beauty of it being, one may know what categorizes as addiction and what doesn't.

Keeping aside the unwarranted hype that preludes the crucial information by introducing some big names of the trade, it sets the stage for something that might have fatal consequences if not kept under check at the right time.

The drama that intercepts the interviews of the big wigs, is mundane but the turbulence of the character in the end, is an unexpected turn of events that we can correlate to the everyday news channels in our living rooms. When it is a result of a subtle innocent addiction, it throws awful lot of emphasis on our daily usage of these networks and never realize that we are being manipulated and lured.

When the Addiction Medicine Fellowship Director of Stanford University throws light, we realize that we are caught in the web of these networking sites and ought to de-route towards rationing our activities on these domains with immediate effect.

The highlight of the film is when, Google's responses on globally common phenomena, varies from person to person, depending the place one lives and personal interest. Just when we believe 'God-sent' Google is here to substitute all kinds of tutors who surfaced the earth ever, its a shame to realize its a mere game of puppeteering that we have fallen prey to all these years.

Its like the line from the film Jurassic Park II- ' Life finds its way', even thought it is unintentional, seems like the plugin are having a life of their own and are trying to conquer the human species.

I could hear a scream within me, 'Lets not totally dodge our commonsense and try harder to move our faces from the screens of our gadgets, to see the divine creations and tangible humans around us'.

The Last Adieu

 The Last Adieu

English Documentary, 2013, You Tube, IMDB 9/10, Directed by Shabnam Sukhdev


An emotional tale of a daughter's quest to fill the missing pieces in her relationship with her 'Padmasri' awardee father, only to realize he wasn't the terrible father that her memory recalled and he was trying to influence her life all along without her knowledge.

The film's strength is its unusual tone of a daughter's disregard for her father, a eminent director at the Films division, who died young at 45 while working.

We hear from interviews of Sukhdev's friends which showcase the different person that he was, to the one his daughter remembered. The interview with her mother to talk about her father was truly emotional as the question becomes more intense about the yelling and fights when she was very young.

The revolutionary film maker of the 60's India, is recalled by his daughter when he slapped her without notice, just to take a realistic shot for his film on 'violence', was such a heart wrenching irony.

Voices of her father are incorporated on images, photographs and incidents, as answers for the questions that arouse in her mind all these years. The director cleverly makes them as dialogues of hers with her father and that seems to resolve her anger. It makes her see the other undisclosed side of her father through the eyes of his friends, colleagues, artist, peers and associates.

When she questions naively to one of her father's friend, 'Why marry if they can't avoid work life taking a toll on personal life?', it does haunt the viewers- if that's the price the creators like S. Sukdhev pay for presenting us with such powerful revolutionary work.


Film Companion Class in Session- "Writing About Films"

 Film Companion Class in Session- "Writing About Films"


A crisp course comprising essential video lectures of professional film critics that aid you to assimilate the phenomena of criticism in its entirety.

With the best film critics from the industry, Anupama Chopra , Baradwaj Rangan , Rahul Desai and Sucharita Tyagi, the course covers a total of 10 topics under Film Criticism.

The course lessons addresses some significant pointers that assist in self analysis. The module consists of sessions covering - Why is film criticism important, Who is a critic, How do you know if you can be a critic, How to watch a film, How to review, How to do a video review and How to evolve as a critic. The highlight of the course is the 'How NOT to review' and 'What a critic should be careful of.'

The course helps an aspirants to evolve into a better critic, the strength of the course being, practical knowledge share and the unique checklist of do's and dont's.

Kamba Ramayanam @ Golden Gates and Emerald Valley Schools, Salem

The Epic Saga, Kamba Ramayanam, a text renowned for its use of skillful poetic devices in its 10000 odd verses, is a pride of every Tamil ac...