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PostPosted: Fri Aug 01, 2003 3:04 pm 
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((((Nagesh Kukunoor's 3 Deewarein is tightly written, well-directed and different))))



Without compromise

Anjum N | August 01, 2003 14:18 IST


I joined the 800-strong audience in giving actor-director Nagesh Kukunoor's 3 Deewarein a standing ovation after a special screening at Mumbai's Sterling Cinema on July 28. That most people in the audience had paid for their tickets, and the filmmaker was not inside to hear the applause, did not deter anyone from displaying their appreciation.

The film met with a similar response at a Delhi theatre on July 23, when it was screened at the CineMaya Film Fest. The festival organisers had to include an additional screening the same evening.

3 Deewarein was also screened at the Indian Film Festival of Los Angeles, where it was well received. At the Commonwealth Festival at Manchester, it was the gala presentation and nominated as one of top five films the festival's audience loved.

Welcome to mainstream filmmaking, Mr Kukunoor. We know you are here to stay.

Kukunoor's fourth film is based in the Musheerabad prison in Hyderabad where Jaggu (Jackie Shroff) and Nagya (Kukunoor) are imprisoned for the cold-blooded murder of their respective wives.

Jaggu, a lawyer, keeps himself busy by reciting English verses when he is not cooking for the inmates. Having killed his wife (Sujata Mehta), he does not believe he should try for a pardon. Nagya enjoys Jaggu's company though he cannot make sense of his English poetry. A Hindi-speaking middle-class youth from Hyderabad, he is convinced people will believe in his innocence someday and he will walk free.

Enter Ishaan Mehta (Naseeruddin Shah), a rogue from Lucknow accused of murdering a bank employee in the course of a heist gone wrong. Not one to give up without a fight, he is always on the lookout for an escape route.

The three slowly become friends.

Soon, documentary filmmaker Chandrika (Juhi Chawla) and her team visit the prison to film a feature on the life of the prisoners behind the 'three walls' and how jailor Mohan's (Gulshan Grover) reforms help them lead a happier life within the prison.

Chandrika herself is going through a troubled marriage with an alcoholic, abusive husband (Shri Vallabh Vyas).

How she picks up the three convicts as her case studies and how their lives seem related forms the crux of the story.

3 Deewarein holds one's attention right from the initial scenes when the three murders are shown. Without unnecessary dialogues or vivid blood 'n' gore, writer-director Kukunoor manages to paint a grim yet touching picture of lives gone wrong.

Cut to the prison, where the harsh lives of the prisoners and jailors are humanely portrayed. The film makes no attempts to show the convicts' backgrounds or create sympathy or hatred for them.

In an attempt to move away from his previous lighthearted comedies like Hyderabad Blues, Rockford and Bollywood Calling, Kukunoor sticks to his storytelling with utmost seriousness. That the film still manages to make you laugh throughout is thanks to his natural characterisations and simple lines. Note Nagya's enthusiasm for Jaggu's poetry though he cannot comprehend the language; Ishaan's friendly overtures to Nagya even though he keeps getting rejected; Ishaan's subtle use of Lucknowi mannerisms and slang without making any in-your-face gestures...

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The dark side of prison life -- loneliness, fear of being released without any guarantee of a livelihood outside, sodomy and AIDS -- has been dealt with very subtly.
In one of the best-filmed scenes, Chandrika speaks to the three convicts about their crime for the first time -- whether they did what they have been accused of, whether they repent their actions, whether they would still do what they did... The scene goes on for a few minutes, with the camera moving around Chandrika and a convict, cutting from one to the other, without letting the tempo drop or making one feel it could have been shorter.

The use of black and white footage to show the murders adds a sense of drama without making it too stark. Also, the twist at interval and the slow and suspenseful build-up to the climax, which includes a series of unpredictable turns, makes for interesting viewing.

3 Deewarein does not have any songs -- the trend seems to be catching on after Bhoot and Darna Mana Hai. Salim-Suleiman's background score blends into the film, as does Ajayan Vincent's cinematography.

Jackie, as an English-speaking convict, is convincing. Juhi's scenes with her rude husband are her best, though one must say her dialogues in her outburst scene would have sounded better in Hindi. Kukunoor is as convincing as the rest of his talented cast. But Gulshan and Vyas do not have much scope to perform.

The real scene-stealer, however, is Naseeruddin Shah. He shows why he is one of India's best actors. Adding layers of emotion and subtlety to his character, he makes the audience feel for Ishaan right from his very first scene.

But 3 Deewarein ultimately belongs to writer-director Kukunoor, who has the movie firmly under control. Tightly written and well-directed, he shows no nervousness handling a genre different from what he, or other Bollywood filmmakers, have handled before.

Hope he continues experimenting with such themes -- realistically and without compromises. Bollywood could do with more like him.

CREDITS
Cast: Naseeruddin Shah, Jackie Shroff, Nagesh Kukunoor, Juhi Chawla, Gulshan Grover, Vallabh Vyas
Producer: Elahe Hiptoola, Sanjay Sharma
Direction, Screenplay: Nagesh Kukunoor
Music: Salim-Sulaiman
Cinematographer: Ajayan Vincent
Editor: Sanjib Datta



http://rediff.com/movies/index.html


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PostPosted: Fri Aug 01, 2003 3:13 pm 
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Great reviews everywhere, but not playing in theatres?? this movie deserves a North American main stream theatrical run. But it's not running even in crappy theatres.

Rana




Edited By rana on 1059750873


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PostPosted: Fri Aug 01, 2003 4:08 pm 
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Trade PUNDIT..MORAN ADARSH..gives it */*****, stating, WONT WORK...


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PostPosted: Fri Aug 01, 2003 6:05 pm 
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I can't find any theaters that are playing this movie in the U.S. What is going on? Where exactly has it released? Only in India?


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PostPosted: Fri Aug 01, 2003 8:24 pm 
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One theater here isn't playing a single film this week, and the other is playing Saaya and some older films like Devdas and K3G. I hope one of them plays Teen Deewarein in the coming weeks.


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PostPosted: Sat Aug 02, 2003 5:35 pm 
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Sadly a film like this doesn't have a huge market here in North America, hence the no release in theaters. Hopefully we get a decent dvd of the movie but as you all know that's just wishful thinking. It will probably be some VS straight to DVD crap.


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PostPosted: Fri Aug 08, 2003 3:03 pm 
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Another excellent review:
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/cms.dll....=118473

Nagesh Kukunoor's much talked-about prison drama is everything that you expect it to be -- hard-hitting, gritty, absorbing, real and raw -- and more.

The finale is so imposingly conceived that you want to salute the director for simply taking the initiative of stretching the limits of mass entertainment.

Make no mistake, 3 Deewarein isn't a small art house film. Its vision of a prison is as grand as The Shawshank Redemption, though Kukunoor's intriguing jigsaw on life, death and love doesn't imitate a single moment from that famous Hollywood prison drama.

Kukunoor touches upon the theme of capital punishment without really making a central issue of the matter. His three heroes, Ishaan (Naseeruddin Shah), Jaggu (Jackie Shroff) and Nagya (Nagesh Kukunoor) are on death row.

More than their impending end, it's their life that interests Kukunoor.

Having got satirical laughter out of himself, and the audience, in Hyderabad Blues and Bollywood Calling, Kukunoor now spreads his discernibly strong vision of human caprice and destiny's damning jokes across the theme of great power.

3 Deewarein is a prison story that had to be told. The characters, big or small, are so palpable in their pain that one feels their presence long after the film finishes.

Desperate, anxious and desolate, the protagonists gather a glint of hope in their demeanour that spreads like a sheen of sunshine across this film's seminal skyline.

Each of the three prisoner-heroes has his own murderous story to tell. The minute Juhi Chawla playing a small-time filmmaker Chandrika, steps behind the prison walls, we know what's in store, and yet by a perverse passion for predictability, we want more.

Juhi Chawla's character holds the key to the drama. As the Florence Nightingale who isn't as frail and powerless as we initially believe her to be, Juhi makes you wonder where she's been hiding that immense sensitivity and depth all this time.

In some sequences, especially where her brutish screen husband (Shrivallab Vyas) abuses her, Juhi is a storehouse of reined-in versatility.

Kukunoor extracts first-rate performances from the whole cast. The three protagonists (Kukunoor included) get under the skin of their characters. Of course, as always, Naseeruddin has a head start. His role is markedly more special than the others. Shah plays the smooth-talking jail bird as though he had lived in a prison cell all his life.

As Juhi interacts with her incarcerated subjects she becomes conscious of her own life's impregnable walls and how seriously she needs to break them. In her realisation resides the film's main strength.

The interactive drama among Juhi and her three prison friends is absorbing and cinematically astute. Just when we begin to applaud Kukunoor for his sensitive portrayal of shipwrecked lives, he drops a huge boulder of cinematic surprises on us.

The end game of this narrative on crime and banishment may seem too clever. But Kukunoor knows what he's doing. Having brought his characters so close to our hearts he doesn't want to break them -- or our hearts. The flamboyantly victorious finale is the corkscrew twist in this dazzlingly tormented tale.

The colours of the prison are just that shade deeper than normal. Ajay Vincent's cinematography is rich but never overdone.

3 Deewarein is a remarkable piece of fictionalised life. It isn't squeamish about life's ugly truths -- the scene where one of the gentler prisoners is raped by the HIV infected prison bully makes us flinch.

But like Jaggu in the film the director looks for poetry in the squalor of existence. And finds it.




Edited By rana on 1060355130


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PostPosted: Sat Aug 09, 2003 6:27 am 
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was this "inspired by" the Shawshank Redemption?


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PostPosted: Sat Aug 09, 2003 3:35 pm 
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There are similar themes and moments to The Shawshank Redemption, but they are both different and excellent movies. 3 walls has a nice and clever ending that came as quite a surprise to me.

I loved N. Shah and Gulshan Grover's performance in it. Production values aren't that great - they never are in a film by Kukunoor but the screenplay holds much interest to the audience. Its a rare Indian film where content is taken into more consideration. Sadly this film is being released like any other Bollywood movie so it won't get the deserved recognition it warrants.


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