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Babel (I) (2006)
8/10
Chaos and Emancipation...
14 April 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Babel – a mythical name which stands for confusion created by languages. And this can very well happen to you if you get a pirated copy of the movie. That's what I did, but thankfully, the confusion is minimal as most of the movie can be understood without knowing the languages (Arabian, Mexican, Japanese), which is saying a lot for any film.

The story revolves around a rifle and the repercussions it makes, literally and figuratively. The concept is similar to that of The Butterfly Effect, but the way it is handled is more documentary-like. A Moroccan family buys a rifle to protect its herd of sheep from jackals. An estranged couple tries to come to terms with differences of opinion while vacationing in Morocco. Their kids are back in the U.S., under the care of a Mexican baby-sitter. A stray bullet hits the wife, and lives go haywire: The Moroccan siblings who played with the rifle learn the "stress" word. The American couple faces apathy from comrades; surprisingly, finds a comrade in a native; ironically, comes closer in strife. The baby-sitter, in for "longer hours", chooses to take the kids along with her to Mexico for her son's wedding, only to face border trouble on her way back. There is a fourth family, but more of it later.

The director Alejandro Gonzalez has so brought out the performances that it does not seem at all that the actors are 'acting'. Be it the rugged Moroccan family or Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett or Rinko Kikuchi or Adriana Barazza, all emote so naturally as if one were witness to an actual event, and not watching a movie. A case in point is the scene where Yussef surrenders himself. You actually get a lump in your throat, what though you be a pachyderm, which I am. The cinematography is top-notch, the pathos of circumstances being aptly evinced by barren landscapes and vivid colours (mark, in particular, the shock of Amelia's red gown trailing down the earthy terrain dotted with green coppice). And the music: one significant aspect of a movie is the way a director uses sound. We see long stretches of scenes in the movie without one background score, and then we come across a 15-second strain of a guitar. The effect: brilliantly subtle. Of course, many scenes are such which are wholly traversed without one word being spoken, only the background music playing away. The effect: subtly relieving. No wonder, the movie won the Oscar for the best Original Score.

So what goes wrong with the movie? Here comes the part of the fourth 'interwoven' story, that of the Japanese deaf-and-dumb girl, Cheiko. It would have been better to hive it off into a completely different film, rather than trying to construe a vague connection with the roots of the rifle. The sequence is touching, but it does not merit fusion, and definitely not the pedestal of the last scene. Other things too seem a little of a drag: the long dance sequence at the Mexican wedding, the 'drug effect' experienced by Cheiko… One major irregularity with the film is the security-check problem faced by Amelia on the return journey. What about the onward journey? Didn't the police find it suspicious as to why two Mexicans had two American children on their way to Mexico? But these are aspects you can ignore when the 'whole' touches a nerve somewhere. And this film touches the finest nerve – that connecting the heart. And so it succeeds.
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6/10
Not much of a change...
17 August 2006
All right, I ventured to see this movie with a biased attitude. I had heard a lot many criticisms against this movie, and I went just to pour my part of criticisms on it, and the director.

The whole of the first half, upto the interval, satiated my desire. There is hardly anything new in this part, with the same SRK pouts (seriously, he is irritating throughout the movie. I am getting really tired of this guy.), the same clichéd scenes of pseudo-comedies and tussles.

But the part of the film after the interval, till the title song, is really good. The title song comes some 20-25 minutes before the film ends, and Karan should have actually ended the film there, and left the audience to do some thinking. But no, he HAD to do a lot of explaining through the characters, and the film really falls apart in the end. I came out of the theatre with my head banging and the mouth getting tired of yawns.

PLUS POINTS: Great acting by Rani, Abhishekh, Preity and Amitabh. As I told earlier, the part after the interval till the title song is the best (and the only good) part of the movie.

NEGATIVE POINTS: SRK, SRK, SRK. Don't know why directors don't make him act in any other manner. The first half and the ending are boring too.

All in all, my rating : 6/10.
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8/10
A good fairy tale...
2 May 2006
I had almost decided not to watch this movie, what with all the people word-bashing its senselessness. But go I did... fortunately.

Yes, it's not great cinema... of great courage, making you cry... making you angry. But it is good cinema... and a faithful representation of the book. The book is a fairy-tale, simple to the core, and so is the movie.

And who says Aish cannot act? Just look at the finer nuances of her eyes and eyebrows when she is required to emote, and you will realize that this girl knows what it takes to enact a character which has already been "written about" in a book. Yes, she underplays the role... but that is what her character is, right? A woman who is poised, but sometimes the deepest feelings find their vent. I am surely impressed by Aish's restrained expression of feelings... and people who mistake this for an incapacity to act, God give them the subtleties of discernment.

Go watch this movie... not to come out exhilarated or flustered... but to enjoy a good fairy tale, for that's what it is.
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9/10
Beautiful, sensitive and thrilling...
3 February 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I am seeing this movie nearly 12 years after its release. I have been wanting to see the movie for a long time, and I am glad I finally did see it! The beauty with which the film progresses is simply benumbing. There are no unnecessary scenes, each scene growing into the next. The acting too grows on you. You never know what significant role is to be played by an apparently insignificant character.

What I loved about the movie is it's utter frankness in showing what's real, a complete departure from the normal fare turned out by the film industry in India. Some things just stay with you forever, and this film's one of them.

My favourite scene? The one when Alfred tells Susanna about Tristan and the 20 year old ( I don't remember her name). The expressions evoked by Susanna are heart-wrenching. And of course, how can I forget Anthony Hopkins? He was perfect for the role.

A must-see for people who want a paradigm of sensitivity enacted... Feelings, not emotions!
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8/10
Simply Simple... there lies its greatness.
9 November 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I had been wanting to see this movie for a long time. I knew it was not a hit... I knew there were many people pathetically ripping this film apart. But the trailers made me see nothing to complain. Finally I did see this movie... And by Jove, I was astounded by its utter simplicity. There are no melodramatic moments... no harsh musics raising a staccato. The movie begins... and ends... in the most unpretentious manner. And that's its beauty. Only one with the right "eyes" can see this movie.

Brad Pitt has given a finely nuanced performance, he is as subtle as is required. The other person who caught my attention is the traitor... his character shows the plight of many in the Indian subcontinent.

On the whole, this film gives a real account of what actually happened... no embellishments... no down-playings. If you are tired of all the superhero action flicks or the Almighty American Animations, this one is for you.
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