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Regular-article-logo Wednesday, 16 July 2025

DVD/VCD reviews

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The Telegraph Online Published 15.09.06, 12:00 AM

Owen Wilson-Vince Vaughn are the unbeatable duo in David Dobkin’s movie Wedding Crashers (Weg; VCD Rs 299). They are divorce mediators and the best in their job. But they have an addictive hobby — to crash into the most happening weddings in town every week and happily flirt with the bridesmaid. They are such smooth operators that they make their way smoothly to a social event hosted by a very influential and eccentric politician, Christopher Walken. And life takes a weird turn. They get caught in the love net, something their Crasher’s rule-book strictly forbid.

 

Madhur Bhandarkar’s Corporate (Excel Video; DVD Rs 499, VCD 199) takes a shot at a different social stratum. After bar-dancers and Page 3 personalities, it’s gazing at the business class at their best and worst. This film promised to change our views, not just about a certain section of the society, but also about the way we viewed Bipasha Basu. Here Bipasha is a part of the cut-throat business, and being a power-suited woman makes it all the more intriguing.The film brings up the war between two industrialists in the food sector and how the competition grows murkier with the market opening up to the international players. The game follows no rules, no scruples, it’s winning that matters.

And this 2-disc DVD pack could get you winning something, too — ‘Corporate’ games and downloads for your mobile worth Rs 700! That apart, there are the usual suspects: the making of the movie and the deleted scenes for your exclusive catching up.

 

Bhanu Bandopadhyay and Jahar Ray are the uncontested kings of Bengali comedy. Together in films like Bhanu Goenda Jahar Assistant they have entertained people no end. Separately too they are as hilarious. The Hanshir Toofan - Bhanu-Jahar (Angel; VCD Rs 99) series brings together the unforgettable comic scenes by these great entertainers for our viewing pleasure. The name of films like Personal Assistant, Jomalaye Jibanta Manush, Miss Priyambada, Shaare Chuattor, Ashite Ashiona, Chhadmabeshi and Ora Thake Odhare are enough to revive mirthful memories.

 

 

Master Strokes

Okay, you’ve got to look at this! Is this a film buff’s delight, or some sort of a treasure island of 20 ‘first films’ (read: FTII Pune diploma films) compressed into two DVDs? It’s like striking oil in the slithery fields of Bollywood and discovering how the oil-gush as we know it today sprang up. Master Strokes, a Rudraa Home Video release and an FTII Pune presentation (curated by Tripurari Sharan, director, FTII), makes for 413 minutes of excited viewing (black-and-white films and colour films, with English subtitles, in two separate DVDs) for just Rs 400. Why look a gift horse in the mouth, especially at this time of seasonal goodwill?

Jaya Bhaduri? See your favourite Guddi doing her act for the real first time onscreen in Madan Bavaria’s Suman. And that sultry smouldering Smita Patil? Watch her debuting in celluloid in Arun Khopkar’s Teevra Madhyam! Who’s Vidhu Vinod Chopra? The producer of Lage Raho Munna Bhai/Munna Bhai MBBS and director of 1942 A Love Story/Mission Kashmir/Parinda? Of course! But, hey, isn’t it the same Vidhu Vinod who’s directed Murder at Monkey Hill? And didn’t we see (the late) Renu Saluja slip past in these credits, too, as editor and associate director? And who’s this tough-looking chikna hero with scruffy long hair? Why, Vidhu himself!

It’s impossible not to list the other 17 films: Awashesh (Girish Kasaravalli, originally known as K.G. Girish!), Bonga (Kundan Shah), Vilaap (Surendra Chawdhary), A Day With The Builders (C.J. Paulose), Man vs Man (Shashi Anand), Bodhvriksha (Rajan Khosa), The Eight Column Affair (Sriram Raghavan who directed the recent Ek Hasina Thi; and edited by Rajkumar Hirani, the director of Lage Rago Munna Bhai/Munna Bhai MMBS and editor of Mission Kashmir), Joyce (Jill Misquitta), Hypnothesis (Rajat Kapoor), Yeh Woh Shehar to Nahin (Vajjha Sudhakar Rao), Jam Invalid (Nishta Jain), Let’s Talk a While (Ruchika Oberoi), Jee Karta Hai (Hansa Thapliyal), Chaitra (Kranti Kanade), Do Hafte Guzarte Do Hafte Nahin Lagte (Rajula Shah; and there should be an award for the brilliant title), Saanjh (Jasmine Kaur), Dwijaa (Pankaj Purandare).

The inlay cover is actually a miniature encyclopaedic four-fold leaflet, giving you little stills of each film, complete with all the technical details and credits and a snappy synopsis. Then there are brief paras on all the filmmakers and some USPs of the galaxy of names involved in various capacities as the legendary cinematographers (Jehangir Choudhary) or sound designers (Hitendra Ghosh, Bishwadeep Chatterjee). And one can’t resist the temptation to quote the gem of a line about Pankaj Purandare: “...after working in sales and marketing at MNCs like Nestle and Johnson&Johnson. At FTII, he found his peace and his chaos.” As Nike might have said, Just do it (go and get it).

Your peace, your chaos.

ANIL GROVER

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