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Starring:
Costume Designer: Anu Vardhan Manish Malhotra
(Kareena Kapoor) Naresh Rohira (Shah Rukh Khan)
Action: Sham Kaushal
Art Director: Sabu Cyril
Editor: Sreekar Prasad
Dialogues: Abbas Tyrewala
Background Music: Sandeep Chowta
Lyrics (San Sa Nana): Anand Bakshi
Lyrics: Gulzar
Music: Anu Malik
Screenplay: Saket Chaudhary, Santosh Sivan
Assoc. Executive Producer: Mark Burton
Executive Producer: Sanjiv Chawla
Cinematography & Direction: Santosh Sivan |
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Great
basic material - unfortunately not so good final outcome
is what one feels like after watching Agni Varsha.
Yes the effort, earnestness is all there in the endeavours
of the team involved but finally in spite of the fine
cinematography, marvelous use of locations, a rousing
background score you have a film that quite does not
succeed. Some could argue that maybe the play on which
it was based (Girish Karnad's The Fire and the Rain)
works as an intimate theatre piece but not so much
in the medium of film. With Agni Varsha however what
one feels is had the makers stuck to the basic plot
of the play, it could have been a far superior 90-minute
film, which could easily have held its own. In fact
what Agni Varsha has not lent itself to is being adapted
as a mainstream Hindi Film. The so-called commercial
elements like the songs and dance just don't work
and in fact take away a good deal from the film.
Director
Sajnani admits to opening up the play wherever necessary
in order to adapt it for the big screen and while
there is nothing wrong with interpreting something
the way one sees it, one cannot help but feel Agni
Varsha still works better when keeping it in mind
as the theatre piece it was designed as. In fact the
film works best in the scenes where the makers have
remained faithful to the play with scenes played out
with just 2 or 3 actors rather then the other so-called
'cinematic' scenes (The less said about the Deepti
Bhatnagar song the better). In fact it was the script
of The Fire and the Rain, which inspired Sajnani to
make the film and a more faithful adaptation of that
very script rather then bending to commercial compromises
would have left Sajnani with a much better film. Incidentally
Sajnani did approach Girish Karnad to write the script
for the film but Karnad refused. It would be interesting
to see what his views are on the film now.
Coming
to the actors, the big let down in the film are the
central performances of Milind Soman and Sonali Kulkarni
as Aravasu and Nitilai. Soman is no actor and finds
the role way beyond him while Sonali Kulkarni as the
low caste tribal girl in love with him has always
been a much-overrated actress and why our filmmakers
continue to think of her in roles she cannot do justice
to is a mystery. The other performers - Jackie Shroff
as Paravasu , Nagarjuna as the wily Yavakri, Raghuvir
Yadav as the theatre manager are competent and efficient
without being great but a special mention must be
made of Raveena Tandon who impresses one with both
looks and acting as Vishaka, the woman who is taken
for granted by both the men in her life, Paravasu
and Yavakri. As Lord Indra, Amitabh Bachchan depends
on his charisma to carry his all too brief cameo through.
As
mentioned before the songs are a no-no as are the
visual effects by and large (perhaps the only exception
being the sequence where Jackie walks into the burning
mandap). Dialogue too is inconsistent and yes, often
trite with no consistent language.
The
redeeming factors? Precisely just the elements mentioned
earlier. Anil Mehta's cinentography - vibrant with
stunning use of the locales of Hampi and yet not standing
out by itself but going along with the story flow,
lifting the film several notches. And Taufiq Qureshi's
evocative background score.
Otherwise
sadly, Agni Varsha joins that long, long list of films
that fit into the 'good effort but if only
.'
category.
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