Showing posts with label Sonam Kapoor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sonam Kapoor. Show all posts

Sonam Kapoor wants to do item numbers

It seems Sonam Kapoor is itching for an image makeover. The actor says she would love to do a sexy item number.

"No one asks me to do an item number. I am just asked to do classical type of films. So, I guess people have to start looking at me in that way and see me as a sexy item number girl," Sonam said at an event here.

The actress was recently seen in Pankaj Kapur's Mausam along with Shahid Kapoor. Although the film hasn't got great reviews, she is not upset.

"Fortunately for me I have got unanimously great reviews for Mausam this time. I haven't got one bad review," Sonam said.

"People have unanimously loved me in the film. I have not actually encountered too much criticism with it. So I don't know how I will deal with it but hopefully I will deal with it gracefully," she added.

Lately, a lot of mainstream actresses are doing item numbers - whether it's Deepika Padukone, Katrina Kaif or Kareena Kapoor. And Sonam hopes to join the league soon.

Mausam box office collection on 1st day was Rs 90 million

Mausam box office collection on 1st day was Rs 90 million. This is a decent opening by any yardstick

Shahid Kapoor and Sonam Kapoor starrer Mausam is getting great response from the film buffs who thronged the theaters in Mumbai, Delhi and other metros. The film is attracting good crowds at multiplexes in metros, but in smaller town in single screen theaters the response is rather muted.

The film that is based on love story of a Kashmiri Muslim girl (Sonam Kapoor) and Punjabi boy (Shahid Kapoor) seems a very tragic one. In the background of Sangh orchestrated riots following Babri Masjid demolition, Pakistan inspired Kargil war and in between Mumbai riots, the film passes through some of the most troublesome times in India’s recent history.

Meanwhile reports suggest that the film has got thumbs up from viewers despite some critics attempt to call it trash. The film has earned Rs 90 million on the first day of its release at the box office in India. This is a decent opening.

Though it may not be comparable to Bodyguard’s success nonetheless it is a decent opening and collections are expected to go up in the coming days.

A reader sums up the film’s appeal in the following words, “A fabulous movie! Both Shahid and Sonam make awesome pair. Obviously not a film for the ‘Bodyguard’ kind of audience! Sophisticated crowd loved this clean romantic film. I give it a 10/10”.

Another reader says this, “Do you believe innocence love? If the answer is “yes” then watch it to appreciate it and if the answer is “no” then watch it, you’ll believe. It is a forgotten love story which can occur only in Indian sub-continent. But it is boring to some extent”.

Review: Mausam fails to impress

Raja Sen feels that Mausam has its moments but disappoints overall. 


Our hero, a bizarrely uptight young air force officer, sits across from the beautiful woman he loves, yet seems afraid to smile. Suddenly, in what may be perceived as a moment of weakness, humanity or merely kindness toward an exasperated audience, he lets his guard down and says, "Yeah, baby." And then he grins.

Bad, bad idea. He knows it; cluelessly, abruptly, his face automatically falls. Not everyone can get away with that, and in his latest film Shahid Kapoor is visibly better equipped to play a baby than call a woman one. For the cosy first half-hour or so of Mausam, he does so with gusto, a delightful young rapscallion with cheek and vigour.

Set in a small and very warmly depicted Punjab town, Mausam kicks off most entertainingly. The elderly gent playing the befuddled yet gruff village chieftain is an absolute treat and unquestionably the finest thing in the film, while cinematographer Binod Pradhan, capturing earthy frames with unusual yet fluid grace, earns a clear second place. The rest of the folks involved, including debutant director (and the best actor in the history of Hindi cinema) Pankaj Kapur are best advised not to look at the marks-sheet with much optimism.

Mausam starts off significantly fresh, making up for slightly overdone cutesiness with heart and flavour. The setting is enchanting and real, the characters are likable, the supporting cast stays pretty solid throughout, and Shahid revs up the energy while his classically gorgeous heroine Sonam Kapoor does what she does best, skipping around looking breathtaking.

It is when the film changes gear from romcom to melodrama that both Kapur and his son struggle, going from light and likable to irritating and implausible. The couple that initially wins us over gradually emerges harebrained and inexplicably passive. We never root for either girl or boy, because they coyly retreat just when they shouldn't. The passion the film began quickly turns lukewarm, because as Mausam and Shahid begin to take themselves seriously, we stop having fun. And, more importantly, giving a damn.

This is a love story gone awry purely because of under communication, and while that seems fine enough on paper, it's rather hard to swallow two lovers cleaved for well over a decade simply because they don't have each other's forwarding address.

This isn't a period film. Cellphones, email, academies and embassies, answering machines all exist. Our leads are well-to-do youths of significant affluence and sophistication, and neither makes standard inquiries? No, because we're supposed to sob over the old-world sight of letters piling up in an unpeople courtyard.

Sure, mosques are smashed and wars break out, but the real-life atrocities the film uses as background soon feel like predictable gimmick. Worse still, they serve only to underscore the film's repetitive, episodic nature, making the already overlong Mausam feel like several seasons too many.

Kapur frequently salutes Dev Anand's superlative Hum Dono, borrowing far more than a great song. A man goes to war incommunicado with his lover, with no clue of her whereabouts. A moustached soldier loses the function of a limb, and wonders aloud whether his love will still want him. A woman stays steadfast in her affections for her man, no matter how steadily he neglects her. Except Hum Dono has both well-defined motivations and strong characters; this one has a couple of flibbertigibbets, a man disgracefully churlish and the woman too bashful to ever speak up.

Sonam's Aayat is a thankless character with an exquisite name, one I first encountered in Gulzar's Chhaiyya Chhaiyya. (It means a hymnal couplet.) The first time we meet her we hear an alarming giggle before we see her face, and the second time she screeches out of a nightmare. This, despite there being much pretty smiling in the first act, somewhat sets a tone. In the rest of the film, she waits and pines, and is made to simper an awful lot. We've seen it before, and Kapoor knows what she's doing. The actress shows genuine grace, once even while in a Mozart wig, and one wishes her character was smarter.

Shahid, as said, makes for a smashing small-town scamp but is inexplicably somber as a decorated IAF pilot. His Squadron Leader Harry is the kind of guy Tom Cruise's Maverick would have made faces at, no-nonsense to a ridiculous degree. Once in uniform, he's too self-serious to be taken, well, seriously, and we're treated to a plywood-stiff performance, all pruned lips and occasional MohnishBahl-ery. He's pretty good when in action, when running frantically across snow or while one-handedly trying to douse a fire (looking like a wrestling referee going for the three-count) for example, but the problem is when he sits down quietly and tries so very hard to look thoughtful or introspective or melancholy: there's only that much you can say by sucking your cheeks in.

The film provides some genuinely affectionate moments -- one where a song turns almost to karaoke as the lovers scribble notes making up the lyrics -- and some curious but lovely detailing. A pair of small binoculars, opera-glasses actually, with a scarlet stain that could be both blood or betel seems like a sinister clue to a later revelation till the girl efficiently and unthinkingly wipes it clean; and later Shahid dancing at a wedding with a checked-shirt under his sweater reaching down to the knees of his jeans, looking quite a bit like a kilt: a fine precursor to the film's next venue, Edinburgh.

But no lovely little nuance could forgive Mausam its preposterous bad-action-movie climax, completely bringing the guillotine down on the already too-long film. As manipulative masala tearjerkers go, it's a film that tries relatively earnestly and certainly one that occasionally looks striking, but disappoints overall.

Finally, giving you opinion about a film called Mausam turn us critics into weathermen, so here goes: Bright and cheerful day, hit by a predictable, gloomy downpour and turned into a damp, middling mess. Perfect one-day cricket conditions, as the English would say.

Mausam to release on September 23: Shahid

Mausam, Pankaj Kapur's much-awaited film starring Shahid Kapoor and Sonam Kapoor, will release on September 23rd now instead of September 16th.




"Mausam is confirmed to release on 23rd of September, IAF clearance and censor done," Shahid Kapoor tweeted.


Earlier, the Indian Air Force (IAF) withheld a No Objection Certificate (NOC) objecting to an action sequence in the film. Without the NOC, the Censor Board was unlikely to clear the film.

Shahid Kapoor was in Delhi today (September 14) holding a special screening for all IAF officials to work around their objections.

"Going to IAF tomorrow in Delhi to show them Mausam ... Fingers crossed and hoping for the best..," the actor tweeted Tuesday night.

Meanwhile, Mausam was pulled from the Toronto Film Festival line-up, a day before it was to premiere. Organisers said they were informed by the studio that the film had not received regulatory approvals in India in time to screen the film this week in Toronto.

Despite the faceoff with the IAF, the film received a breather earlier this week when the Censor Board gave a green signal for release.

This was confirmed by Shahid Kapoor who tweeted: "MAUSAM finally got its censor certificate last night ....... Watching it now with family in a bit."

With the IAF clearance finally coming through, the actors and makers of Mausam can now look forward to its release.

Shahid turns weatherman for Mausam promotion!

Mausam actor to learn tricks of the meteorological department for a day. You will soon see Shahid Kapoor donning a completely novel avatar that of a weatherman. In keeping with the theme of his upcoming film Mausam, the Kapoor boy will soon join the India Meteorological Department (IMD)
for a day. To help promote his new film also starring Sonam Kapoor, Shahid will become an employee of the department for a day and like a typical weatherman, will be involved in weather forecasts.

The IMD, which is in charge of providing the country’s weather forecast, will get Shahid to learn the tricks of the trade too. "Mausam is about seasons of love and not exactly about the weather. However, the marketing team came up with this unique idea and everyone loved it. We are working on getting the required permissions for it now. I’m sure it will be interesting,” says director, and Shahid’s father, Pankaj Kapur.

Since Mausam happens to be Kapur’s directorial debut, Shahid is believed to be very hands-on about coming up with innovative initiatives to promote it.

So even as the makers plan a musical event to celebrate the success of the film, Kapur, who has sung a song in the film, will also hit the stage to perform live for a public audience.

He will sing the track Saj Dhaj Ke..., which he has sung with singer Mika Singh in the film. Meanwhile, the film is also in the news for its five promotional trailers, which are apparently pending clearance with the censors on humanitarian grounds, as one of them features a cow. Apparently, the Censor Board has now asked the film’s producers to obtain clearance from the Animal Welfare Board, since a sequence shows a cow passing by in a frame. The film is a star-crossed tale of a Punjabi Indian Air Force pilot and a Kashmiri girl

 
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