Connect with us

Entertainment

Carnatic musician TM Krishna and comedian-performer Alexander Babu on music, mania and mountains

Published

on

Carnatic musician TM Krishna and comedian-performer Alexander Babu on music, mania and mountains


Carnatic musician T M Krishna and comedian-performer Alexander Babu at The Hindu Fridays
| Photo Credit: Shivaraj S

Just as he ambled on stage at The Hindu’s art deco office building, Alexander Babu, performer and comedian extraordinaire, said that he came prepared with a line that would elicit initial giggles. It was part of his formula, one guaranteed to please the audience.

“That moment when a Christian at The Hindu office chats with Krishna about Sebastian and Sons and other things,” he said. On cue, the audience let out a laugh.

The Hindu Fridays, ironically held on Tuesday this time, saw a packed crowd that actively engaged with the two showmen, who enthralled the gathering with a conversation on a host of topics including their respective musical journeys, handling criticism and a conscious effort to strive for equity in unequal spaces. The two performers who also proved to be eloquent speakers, dabbled in banter, often pulling each other’s leg, while also often switching to philosophy.

Alex, who began by speaking of his journey in the stand up scene, said that he had a fairly comfortable life in the corporate world. “I decided that I had done my part, worked long enough. This was to be a two-year sabbatical. It has been 10 years. I was motivated by joy,” he said.

On the other hand, TM Krishna said that he was always enwrapped in the world of music. Purpose led him in the direction of economics. It was his way of trying to decipher the world. However, he was equally musically inclined. “I had a clearly laid out plan. I had finished my college at Vivekananda. I was to go to the Delhi School of Economics and eventually to the London School of Economics. But right then, I had to choose so I looked to my father. He suggested that I try my hand at singing for a while and then study if it did not work out,” he said. Krishna went on to say that the internal churning led to finding something sanguine on stage. He loved the applause and attention that he received, but found himself seeking purpose. “I was the darling. Then, things changed because the meaning of joy changed,” he said, adding that his journey of understanding his privilege and politics has been a central part of his growth.

Stand-up  Comedian  Alexander Babu  at The Hindu Office in Chennai on Tuesday.

Stand-up Comedian Alexander Babu at The Hindu Office in Chennai on Tuesday.
| Photo Credit:
RAGU R

Alex recounted the first time he watched Krishna on stage. It was a small hall in Salt Lake City with a sparse audience. Krishna intervened to say that it is likely to have been in 2005. “He performed as though he was singing to a stadium,” Alex remarked, asking Krishna if his voice ever felt a strain. “I don’t think anyone in my family knows the meaning of speaking softly. When you are taught by someone who has excellent voice culture, it automatically gets easier. One must know how to produce the voice,” he said.

Alex, who has learnt Carnatic music too, was asked to sing by Krishna. He obliged and the two jumped into a conversation about the sabha culture in the city. “I was told that kutcheris are the best way to learn to sing so I began paying attention but I often found them boring,” he said. Krishna said that the idea of a stage has changed over the years through his activism and performances on streets and beaches. He however, added that he usually prefers quiet time before getting on stage. Tuning the tambura is one of the ways he prefers to shut the world out. “I experimented once by tuning the tambura on stage with the audience. They knew that they had to remain silent too through the process. I found that they were more drawn in during the performance,” he said.

Two bits of Krishna’s observations were particularly fascinating. One, he said that he felt like his voice opened up once he got fitter. He aims to climb and summit at least one mountain a year. This requires year-long training so he tries to get in four days a week. “I try to sing for a few minutes when I summit a mountain. I was curious to see which was the longest performance under the circumstances. It was Mt. Aconcagua in Argentina and was about 15 minutes long. I too had summited that mountain in 2019 and sang for as long. I just didn’t record it. It could have been mine,” he said.

Carnatic Vocalist T.M. Krishna at The Hindu Office in Chennai on Tuesday.

Carnatic Vocalist T.M. Krishna at The Hindu Office in Chennai on Tuesday.
| Photo Credit:
RAGU R

He added that learning to be deeply vulnerable was central to his being. Alex agreed and said that he often addressed the audience as his ‘chellams’ because he called his children the same way and added that learning to circumvent different forms of criticism has been an eye-opening journey.

Alex often said that Krishna knew how to ‘rock the boat’ in several spheres. Playing on the pun, the two musicians sat down to sing ‘Nila, adhu vanathu mele’, Ilayaraaja’s nod to fisherfolk in the iconic Mani Ratnam film Nayakan (1987). A fitting, spirited end to a loquacious evening.



Source link

Continue Reading
Comments

Entertainment

‘Until Dawn’ movie review: David F Sandberg conjures a fun, blood-curdling time-loop horror

Published

on

‘Until Dawn’ movie review: David F Sandberg conjures a fun, blood-curdling time-loop horror


That David F Sandberg, the director of Lights Out and Annabelle: Creation, is returning to horror should pique your interest. But the hype behind his latest film adaptation of the Until Dawn video game had to be studied. Having not played the original game, it was only right that I researched what the deal was all about, and boy, did Sandberg land upon a gold mine of material that lets him flex his genre-filmmaking muscles.

Sandberg’s adaptation, apparently like the game, is designed with just one goal: to instil fear, not the kind you feel of a spirit lurking in the dark, but the visceral feeling that makes you feel grateful for having company around you. The screenplay by Blair Butler and Annabelle writer Gary Dauberman gets its cues sharp and doesn’t beat around the bush. Is it an innovatively narrated genre-defining piece of work? No. Does it scare and engage you throughout? It certainly isn’t for the weak-hearted.

A group of five friends embark on a journey to a remote valley. We have Clover (Ella Rubin), a woman battling a cycle of grief and hope over the mysterious disappearance of her sister Melanie (Maia Mitchell); Max (Michael Cimino), Clover’s ex-boyfriend who clearly hasn’t moved on; Megan (Ji-young Yoo), with a penchant for New Age spiritualism and rituals; Nina (Odessa A’zion), who is suppressing attachment issues; and Nina’s three-month-old boyfriend Abel (Belmont Cameli), the stock horror movie doofus. The group is backing Clover’s wish to go on the trip to where her sister vanished a year ago, searching for closure. Clover’s love for Melanie, Max’s attempts to win back Clover, and Megan’s general sense of kindness towards all form the emotional foundation to back these characters for the next 100-odd minutes — there simply isn’t enough time for more tango, as they would be busy staying alive, keeping each other safe, or at times, even having to kill.

A still from ‘Until Dawn’

A still from ‘Until Dawn’
| Photo Credit:
Sony Pictures Entertainment

Clover gets a clue about Mel’s last known whereabouts, following which they meet a deserted cottage called Glory Valley, tucked into the woods and fenced by a weird weather anomaly. Just as the gang investigates the clues in the cabin, the film’s atmosphere begins to take shape, and a wildly fun ride begins. Each of the five gets killed in some creatively gruesome fashion — firstly, there’s a masked brute with an axe; escaping who you would meet gnarly creatures called wendigos all around the valley, waiting to feast upon the humans; and there’s a witch that can possess you and make you do some killing work on its behalf. Did I mention that the water in the valley can explode you from within? After a point, cinematographer Maxime Alexandre’s capturing of these combustions borders on sickly dark humour.

When the fifth character dies, all five go back in time to the cottage, and the dreadful night begins again. And oh, if you were to attempt to escape via road, a giant Slender Man-ish creature towers over the trees. That the characters are themselves becoming wendigos with each successive time-loop makes the ticking time bomb of this horror.

Until Dawn (English)

Director: David F Sandberg

Cast: Ella Rubin, Michael Cimino, Odessa A’zion, Ji-young Yoo, Belmont Cameli

Runtime: 103 minutes

Storyline: Five friends, in search of a missing woman, get trapped in a time loop at a deserted cabin in the woods as they search for an escape all the while looping back to a dreadul night over and over again

First off, Until Dawn isn’t for an audience searching for refined storytelling flourishes. But that doesn’t make it a less novel cinema either. It’s a film that plays as an exercise in reducing horror to its bare essentials: being scary. The screenplay takes a no-frills approach to horror, and an episode ofGoosebumps would have more twists and jumps in time than this slasher Groundhog Day; much of it is just a series of gruesome attacks and almost-there escapes, made interesting purely by how shockingly creative the kills become in each successive time loops.

Until Dawn also proves to be deserted of impactful character writing, as none build upon their initial promises. Nina and Abel make meta horror-movie comments before becoming genre-cliched annoyances, and Max is just the knight in shining armour Clover didn’t need. Megan is as immaterial as the plot serves her abilities, and it is only in the showdown that Clover gets some material to grow beyond a final girl cliche. If this is for the human characters, the wendigos and the boogeyman stick to their jump scares and slashing through people, and it gets quite tedious to the extent you begin to wish for the Witch to come back.

A still from ‘Until Dawn’

A still from ‘Until Dawn’
| Photo Credit:
Sony Pictures Entertainment

Yet, one must confess that these complaints may not matter while watching Until Dawn, especially if you have been craving a pure horror film that doesn’t try to be anything more. In a way, this is the fast-food version of the horror genre; with each time-loop, the gang is allowed to discover new details about this world, where Sandberg and co find space to bend through sub-genres, like when the film takes a found-footage turn.

Until Dawn is meant to scare and engage you, and it does so using one of the oldest tricks in the book — bread-crumbling information, letting us sit with our unanswered questions until the grand reveal that tells it all. One would also nibble comfortably on the many ambiguities it leaves you with. After all, it’s only intentional that you are told nothing more than what our leads witness, as if it’s all a first-person VR game with no cut-away scenes. Like was the case with Lights Out, Sandberg (and, one must credit the film’s production design team) leaves you wishing for more stories in the world of the film.

If you had to look up the Until Dawn video game, you might come across articles by gamers who are already livid with Sandberg’s adaptation. Regardless of where you fall on that argument, it’s only intriguing how the film, as well as the gaming community’s perception of the adaptation, inadvertently shines light on the source material. Perhaps it’s time to check out that game, and perhaps like the film, the game should arrest you in a chokehold for much of its gameplay.

Until Dawn is currently running in theatres



Source link

Continue Reading

Entertainment

‘Gangers’ movie review: Vadivelu almost saves Sundar C’s low-stakes heist comedy

Published

on

‘Gangers’ movie review: Vadivelu almost saves Sundar C’s low-stakes heist comedy


A still from ‘Gangers’
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

Two clips from recent promotional interviews went viral for the most ironic reasons. A Telugu producer asserted that there’s no nepotism in their film industry, and closer home, Sundar C, while promoting his movie Gangers, said his films never have double-meaning dialogues or suggestive sequences. Of course, netizens called it out and had a field day on social media. In fact, that is one of a few more concerns that plague Gangers, a rudimentary heist comedy almost rescued by the back-in-form legendary comedian Vadivelu.

Veteran filmmaker Sundar C’s films are known for their simple plots, and Gangers is no different. The film is a mishmash of several ideas and templates we have gotten accustomed to — some from the director’s yesteryear hits. When a schoolgirl goes missing, her teacher, Sujitha (Catherine Tresa), takes it up and gets an undercover cop to serve as a teacher. Meanwhile, Saravanan (Sundar C) lands up in town as the new PET teacher for a school where Singaram (Vadivelu) holds the same position and has an eye for Sujitha. Is Saravanan the appointed cop? What’s the correlation between the teachers and the local gangsters masquerading as bigwigs? What are the films these plot points remind you of?…

The biggest USP of Gangers is the reunion of Sundar C and Vadivelu. Apart from directing the comedy icon in films like Winner, Giri, and Rendu, the director has also shared screenspace with Vadivelu in films like Thalai Nagaram and Nagaram Marupakkam — films that have become synonymous with their humour stretches. Gangers reunites the duo after 14 years, and while the new film does not break any boundaries with its genre, the veterans predominantly deliver! It’s been more than a decade since we saw Vadivelu in an extended comedic role, and Gangers seats him right on top of the throne he once reigned from.

A still from ‘Gangers’

A still from ‘Gangers’
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

Humour is not just Gangers’ calling card but also its primary asset. Though some fall flat, most of them — especially the ones featuring Vadivelu — work and when they do, they bring the roof down with laughter. In the opening credits, Vadivelu is introduced with an epithet that goes, ‘the Vaigai river that never dries up’ as a play on his Vaigai Puyal sobriquet, and he proves it to be right.

The plot of two men falling for the same woman is a recurring subplot seen in Sundar C’s multiple films; as a serious trope in Ullam Kollai Poguthae and Anbe Sivam, and for comic relief in films such as Mettukudi and Naam Iruvar Namakku Iruvar. Despite going for the same trope, it’s the actors who make sure the scenes do not feel mundane. There’s a fantastic stretch involving Singaram’s tryst with Alexa and an oner where Vadivelu mouths an insanely lengthy dialogue. Even the scenarios that Vadivelu’s character is put through in this film remind us of his iconic roles in his various films. In a way, Gangers is Vadivelu’s Good Bad Ugly.

Gangers (Tamil)

Director: Sundar C

Cast: Sundar C, Vadivelu, Catherine Tresa, Vani Bhojan, Hareesh Peradi

Runtime: 159 minutes

Storyline: A bunch of teachers team up to pull off a heist to teach a valuable lesson

It’s rather pitiful that despite taking half of every poster’s real estate, Vadivelu’s screentime is way less than expected. It’s as if his screentime is what’s been heisted. The rest of the sequences offer very little and with ideas that leave us feeling been-there-seen-that, they fail to impress us with their emotional moments. For example, a cliched flashback that defines Saravanan’s backstory ends with the death of a character who, in the filmmaker’s Aranmanai franchise, would have come back to haunt the villains.

Gangers takes its time to use its arsenal of immensely talented actors, and instead, we get Sundar C thrashing baddies in a renewed attempt to showcase him as an action hero. One can play a drinking game on how many times his identity is mentioned as the ‘6-foot-tall guy’. Despite the likes of actors like Bagavathi Perumal, Hareesh Peradi, Mime Gopi and Munishkanth, not even their character names get registered. Catherine Tresa’s Sujitha is yet another damsel in distress who gets saved by everyone from the lead character to a school kid. Not to mention how she’s made to dance in a special number that adds no value to the film whatsoever. What can we expect from a character that’s written in such a way that she deciphers a goon-thrashing vigilante to be her fellow teacher Saravanan because of the same “technique” he employs to hit the volleyball?

A still from ‘Gangers’

A still from ‘Gangers’
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

Behind the camera, C Sathya’s music comes very handy in elevating many aspects of the film, especially the otherwise monotonous action sequences. Gangers’ VFX looks extremely iffy, but for a film that’s stuck between being a comedy entertainer and a star vehicle-powered revenge drama, substandard graphics are the least of its worries. The final heist stretch, which involves an unnecessary rape joke and the age-old idea of cross-dressing to milk humour, is — like most of the film — savaged by Vadivelu. There are some interesting touches, such as a meta-reference to the director’s last release, Madha Gaja Raja and the climax within a theatre that’s filled with the director’s film posters. But the lack of this ingenuity in the script is evident, and the lengthy runtime does not help either.

Sundar C’s last film, in which he took both acting and directing responsibilities, wasAranmanai 4, and we called it the best in the franchise for how well-rounded it was compared to the other entries in that series. That balance is what Gangers desperately misses, given how it tries to stay stable despite having multiple sub-plots. What we end up with is a convoluted comedy of errors that’s single-handedly made tolerable and in some places enjoyable by the ever-dependent Vadivelu. The biggest takeaway from Gangers is that the veteran comedian still has it in him, and all it takes is a filmmaker like Sundar C, who is adept at making a comedy caper, to come up with a film that would showcase his strengths. That’s a film I’d like to take my gang to.

Gangers is currently running in theatres



Source link

Continue Reading

Entertainment

Watch: Is Andaz Apna Apna still relevant? | FOMO Fix

Published

on

Watch: Is Andaz Apna Apna still relevant? | FOMO Fix


Watch: Is Andaz Apna Apna still relevant? | FOMO Fix

Film critics and buddies Raja Sen and Sudhish Kamath take a nostalgic deep-dive into Andaz Apna Apna, the cult comedy classic re-releasing in cinemas this week.

From crime master Gogo’s chaos to Salman’s scene-stealing comic timing, they debate whether the film still works today — or if it’s just a rose-tinted time capsule. Slapstick, spoof, or satirical gem? The verdict’s in.

Also on this episode:

TV Gold — The Last of Us Season 2 brings grief, gore, and gut punches. Is this still escape, or just emotional masochism?

Heads Up — Logout on Zee5 proves a one-actor thriller can still scroll deep.

KHAUF — Real horror hits home in Smita Singh’s harrowing hostel haunting.

Rewatch Alert — Andaz Apna Apna is back on the big screen. Go for the nostalgia, stay for the oranges gag.

Hit play, subscribe for more recs, and remember:

Sometimes the only escape is watching someone else lose it.

Script and editing: Sudhish Kamath

Sound: Ivan Avakian



Source link

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025 Republic Diary. All rights reserved.