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4.10 

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Aamir : Where cinema talks for itself!
Jun 08, 2008 08:34 PM 1861 Views
(Updated Jun 08, 2008 08:46 PM)

Plot:

Performance:

Music:

Cinematography:

Silence speaks volumes. However clichéd it may sound, at times you do experience it. Today, when I came out of the theatre after watching Aamir, I experienced it. There was a silence with me - unbearable, unthinkable, unwanted too because I could notice that it was disconnecting me with the world around me.


And all this was because I actually wanted to talk about Aamir. This movie, ladies and gentlemen, is indescribable. I really am searching for words. Terrific. Master craft. Wonder of cinema (and a marvel of music. Aamir has the kind of  background score that clinches you, suc*s you in its groove and haunts you till the end scroll. )


Make room, dear friends. Here is what we can doubtlessly call work of art. Aamir is a low budget film, the interval happens in 40 mins., film ends in an hour after that and these 100 odd minutes pack up the best that movie making can offer. I might sound repetitive and you may complain that I have still not got down to the content of the movie, allow me to say this - this is how you make a movie!


This is how you build the characters, this is how you operate the camera, this is how an actor (Rajeev Khandelwal, welcome sir and take the seat - actor's i.e., please don't


start working on six packs!) make you feel the pain, this is how cameraman


'shows' the story, this is how director controls every inch of the reel and


this is how you offer an experience to the viewers and not just make them munch


the popcorn by reducing film making to a two hrs dose of action and sleaze.


It has been long since


Johny Gaddar gave us the best of the shots. Aamir, I must say, lands in the


league of extraordinary film making with enviable confidence.


There is no way I am


going to tell you anything about the story. In one line, it is one man's unsought,


frightful journey in the bylanes of Mumbai following his arrival at Mumbai


international airport where a death trap is waiting for him. And this is a kind


of Mumbai, that is never seen before. I dare say that this Mumbai is worth


watching even for the substantive filmmakers like Ramgopal Varma and Anurag


Kashyap. There are torn buildings and shredded faces and a 'neatly' dilapidated


life and the camera actually does the talking. Some shots are incredibly


brilliant, which include a couple of short fight scenes. Boy! I wonder how did


they do it?


Rajeev Khandelwal


delivers a power packed performance. Its about the protagonist's inner


conflict, which he has been able to showcase very very effectively. Watch out


especially for the climax scene. You actually move with him, feel his anguish,


can relate with him and get awestruck with the choice that he makes in the end.


Other characters, some of whom we have seen, many of them we have not seen yet,


do their bit with perfection.


Aamir is inspired by a Filipino


film Cavite, but kudos to Rajkumar Gupta, as he has shown Aamir to the makers


and has got a no-objection certificate from them. This, actually is something


that does not come easy to me, because however great a movie is, if the roots


remain somewhere else, it becomes difficult to enjoy the splendor of the


blossom. This happened with Shaurya (inspired by A few good men) also. But


then, Aamir is an amazingly outstanding work and moreover, obtaining permission


from the makers is a gesture that wipes off all the doubts regarding


plagiarism.


Efforts by lensman


Alphonse Roy (a wildlife cinematographer and debuting with Aamir) are


captivating. If this is a debut, then one can possibly make out what to look


for in his next film. I actually could not get enough of a particular chase


sequence. It was painstakingly shot and ended just when I was demanding for


more run. And that was it. Take a bow, Mr. Roy and Mr. Gupta, for the perfect


timing!


Editing by Aarti Bajaj


(Black Friday) is sleek, cut to the point and screenplay is so powerful that


you cannot take your eyes off. Alongside, ladies and gentlemen, comes the music


of Aamir. With your eyes, your ears too are glued to the screen. Be it the


upbeat track during the titles or Amit Trivedi's brilliant compositions that


work literally as a narrator, it rocks!


Aamir is arguably the


best debut so far by a director, cinematographer and actor. We must applaud the


effort because this is some serious cinema where camera, lights and action MEAN


camera, lights and action. This is the cinema where these words do not lose


their sheen by a star or debut of a star kid backed by media management. This


is the cinema where cinema talks for itself and not for the stars!


Cheers!


Utpal


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