Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Barfi!

Ranbir Kapoor has been an actor who has consistently surprised audiences with his acting skills. Rocket Singh to Rockstar, Ranbir Kapoor has steadily bettered his performance, I’m skipping Saawariya since it’s a movie I haven’t seen in the cinemas.

Barfi is a refreshing attempt in popular hindi cinema, the plot would have been a fusion of O Henry and Charlie Chaplin with the lead actor borrowing heavily from the latter. His mannerisms and almost every light scene is a tribute to Chaplin. The production design is excellent, once gets a feel of Calcutta of the late 70’s. The hills are always a joy to see on screen, I presume to shoot too, so nothing great about Darjeeling and the toy train but all the night scenes are lit, framed and exposed wonderfully.

This is a fairy tale, an Indian one at that and while it plays it regales you through it. The opening is a cheeky song that asks you to behave in the cinema hall rather humourously and the movie begins. Anurag Basu comes from the Bhatt family of movie making. Gangster, Murder and Kites which apparently didn’t get any wind beneath it’s wings to take off. It’s surprising that he was able to cobble together such a warm movie. Being diagnosed with cancer and recovering from it probably made Anurag reflect on life.

There is one scene which exhibits how neatly the story is made to unfold. Barfi (deaf and mute) after being paid a donation by the girls father after being mistaken for someone asking for alms sees the girl and her fiancee, walks out of the house, there’s rain and thunder, no background music and his cycle chain comes away not giving him the luxury of speeding away from the moment of abject rejection, confronts the girl, angry and in squeaks and then lets it all go and asks her to smile and goes away.

Pritam’s music isn’t catchy, I guess they meant to keep it that way. The motif of showing musicians on screen making the transition between scenes is replicated in Barfi too, the background music is not just accordion, guitar and violin but piano heavy too. The whole movie is one grand con on the mind. Never during the movie did the laughs stop and once it got over one realizes it’s a sad little story, one that highlights the mistakes people make in the battle between head and heart.

Sunday, February 11, 2007

John Williams and Yo Yo Ma playing live

This is a video of John Williams (on the piano) and Yo Yo Ma (on the cello) playing the theme from the movie "Memoirs of a Geisha" in NBC's "The Tonight Show".

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

After the end - Finding Neverland

In this series I'll try to bring your attention to the music of movies after they technically get over. Yes, we are talking about the soundtrack that accompanies the credits on screen. This is the least heard/seen aspect of a movie but many a times it turns out to be the most fulfulling in terms of music. This week we'll start with the music that accompanies the end titles of the movie 'Finding Neverland'.


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Jan A.P Kaczmerak wrote a score that was melodic and orchestrated subtly for the movie about the writer of 'Peter Pan'. The end titles is accompanied by a piano solo deftly played by Leszek Mozdzer. The main attraction of this piece is the simple melody which when played over and over is improvised by the pianist. Scores like these should be written about less and heard more. So go on, list to the music and send your views too.