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Which film premiere will you prefer to see at Toronto Film Fest
WATER, assuming Lisa Ray attends the premiere 0%  0%  [ 0 ]
WATER, even if lead actress doesn't attend 56%  56%  [ 5 ]
MISTRESS OF SPICE, assuming Aish attends the premiere 11%  11%  [ 1 ]
MISTRESS OF SPICE, even if Aish not there 33%  33%  [ 3 ]
Total votes : 9
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PostPosted: Fri Jul 08, 2005 3:06 pm 
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viewtopic.php?t=7799&highlight=mistress
Deepa Mehta's Water is opening the Toronto Film Festival in September.

Another high profile film of interest to South Asians is also premiering there.

MISTRESS OF SPICE.

Now, which film do you think will attract bigger crowd?

1) MISTRESS OF SPICE that sure should have Aish in the premier

or

2) WATER that sure will have Deepa Mehta and Lisa Ray present.

------------------------------------------------

My guess:
Water will be heavily patronized by the English speaking Canadians.

Spice will be patronized by Canadians and South Asians 50-50 .

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http://www.rediff.com/entertai/2005/jul ... ronto~fest

Ash's next to premiere in Toronto fest

Arthur J Pais | July 08, 2005 15:02 IST

Aishwarya Rai's second international project, Mistress Of Spices, based on Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni's best-selling novel of the same name, will premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival that starts on September 8.

The film is about a San Francisco woman (Rai) with magical powers and her dilemma over a man (Dylan McDermott) she has fallen for and who could end her healing touch. It is co-produced by Gurinder Chadha, who directed Rai in Bride & Prejudice. The new film is directed by Chadha's husband, first-time director Paul Mayeda Berges.

As a tribute to Chadha, whose Bend It Like Beckham was discovered at TIFF and became one of its hottest films several years ago, a free screening of the hit 2002 comedy is slated on July 30 by TIFF.

TIFF, which draws big-time Hollywood filmmakers and distributors, will start with Deepa Mehta's Water. The film had faced the wrath of conservative Hindu groups and its shooting in India was stopped a few years ago following threats to the film unit. The groups were angry that Mehta's film questioned orthodoxy and the treatment of young widows many decades ago in holy cities such as Hardwar.

When she cancelled the shooting and appealed for support from artists across the world, Star Wars creator George Lucas and sitar maestro Pandit Ravi Shankar joined a number of artists in condemning threats against an artist.

Mehta's film, shot in Sri Lanka recently with a cast led by Lisa Ray, Seema Biswas and John Abraham, will open the 30th edition of TIFF.

The festival will also see the premieres by filmmakers such as Ang Lee and David Cronenberg.

The preliminary list of films announced a few days ago includes Ashok Amritraj's Shopgirl, starring Steve Martin (he also wrote the novella of the same name), and Buddhadev Dasgupta's Kalpurush, starring Sameera Reddy, Rahul Bose and Mithun Chakraborty. Dasgupta, a favourite at TIFF, will have his film shown in the Masters section.

Like Water, both films will have their world premiere in Toronto.

Amu and Dreaming Lhasa are two more films from India. The 10-day film festival is expected to screen more than 300 feature films, short films and documentaries from more than 80 countries.

"Over the years, TIFF has increasingly become a festival of a very high stature -- a launching pad for Oscar nominations and films that catch the attention of leading distributors in Hollywood and Europe," says Amritraj.

Steve Martin had played the lead in Bringing Down The House, a comedy co-produced by Amritraj, which grossed about $200 million two years ago, making the $35 million film one of the most profitable films of the year.

Amritraj describes the new film, which reportedly cost $25 million, as a funny and poignant love story in the modern age. The film, directed by Anand Tucker who is based in London and whose father was an Indian airline executive, catches a glimpse of the lives of three very different people on diverse paths. But they are all searching for the same thing.

Mirabelle (Claire Danes) is a 'plain Jane' overseeing the rarely frequented glove counter at Saks Fifth Avenue in Beverly Hills. For a long time, she has been struggling to keep up with even the minimum payment on her credit card and student loans, When she meets a rich, handsome but older man Ray Porter (Steve Martin), she hopes for a miracle. But she is not all that free to choose her destiny, it seems. For she is also being pursued by Jeremy (Jason Schwartzman), a bachelor who is not quite as cultured and successful as Ray.

Mehta's new film is the final piece in her trilogy on the elements, following Fire (1996) and Earth (1998). Set in pre-Independence India against the backdrop of Mahatma Gandhi's rise to power, Water tells the story of eight-year old child-bride Chuyia exiled to a widow's ashram. The project angered some Hindu groups already incensed over the story of two lesbians in Fire.

"But I knew I was going to complete the film (Water) somehow," says Mehta. "It was clear to me there were ways to make the film and have it released worldwide."

Dasgupta takes on family intimacies and global politics in Kalpurush. "I have been wanting to make this film for a long time," says Dasgupta. "It is perhaps the most intriguing, complex and intimate film I have made. But is not out of the reach of the filmgoers."

Rahul Bose plays a man struggling to come to terms with the memory of his powerful father, which leads him into long-held secrets. Dasgupta has also said his film unmasks a grasping Bengali middle-class, and also offers a critique of the ever present influence of America.

In Shonali Bose's Amu, a 21-year-old Indian American woman returns to India to visit her family and in turn is forced to confront the secrets and lies of her past. The film will be shown in the Contemporary Cinema section.

The Discovery section that highlights new directors will present Dreaming Lhasa by Ritu Sarin and Tenzing Sonam. The movie is about a young woman, who grows up in New York City and returns to Dharamsala, home to the exiled Dalai Lama, to make a film about its Tibetan community.

Dreaming Lhasa takes a dramatic turn when the woman meets a monk who has escaped from political imprisonment in Tibet. Their journey into Tibet's fractured past becomes the woman's own voyage of self-discovery, the filmmakers say.


Last edited by rana on Sat Dec 24, 2005 3:31 am, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Fri Jul 08, 2005 4:29 pm 
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Well, you will have CHUPDI and DO DO!! :lol:

Lisa Ray's film with Seema Biswas(Look forward to)

and Traish in her CHADAA!as Bonus material.. :roll:


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PostPosted: Fri Jul 08, 2005 6:27 pm 
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I'll definitely be seeing Water there, but I have no interest in watching Mistress early.


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PostPosted: Tue Sep 06, 2005 1:38 pm 
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http://www.nowtoronto.com/minisites/tif ... lay_id=562

WATER
Director: D. Mehta
Rating: unrated
Venue: PARAMOUNT 3
Program: Gala presentations
Starring/Country: CAN*
Run Time: 1h54
Show times:
Fri September 09/05 - 09:45 AM
Thu September 08/05 - 07:15 PM

http://www.nowtoronto.com/minisites/tif ... lay_id=518

THE MISTRESS OF SPICES
Director: P. Mayeda Berges
Rating: unrated
Venue: PARAMOUNT 2
Program: Special Presentations
Starring/Country: UK
Run Time: 1h32
Show times:
Fri September 16/05 - 03:30 PM
Sun September 11/05 - 06:15 PM ??
Tue September 13/05 - 12:45 PM

Some confusion on Sept 11 show. Festival site lists for RYERSON??

http://www.e.bell.ca/filmfest/2005/film ... hed&id=172

Film Title:
Mistress of Spices

Programme: SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS
Director: Paul Mayeda Berges
Country: United Kingdom
Year: 2005
Language: English
Time: 92 minutes
Film Types: Colour/35mm
Rating: 14A


SCREENING TIMES:
Sunday, September 11 6:15 PM RYERSON ??
Tuesday, September 13 12:45 PM PARAMOUNT 1
Friday, September 16 3:30 PM PARAMOUNT 2

---------------------------------------------
Gala tickets already on sale since Aug 27.
Reg Tickets go on sale from Tomorrow (Sept 7).

----------------------------------------------------------

Any further info if any lead actors/ actress appearing in any of the shows for these two films??

Are theatres any good??

Ticket prices are steep.
After counting all service charges, gala event (Water) will cost $ 40 aprox and special presentation (Mistress Spice) $ 20 aprox??
Worth it only if lead actors make appearances??


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PostPosted: Tue Sep 06, 2005 3:55 pm 
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either none or both.

none cause i don't want to waste time/$

but both because it might be worth the time/$ to go throw my filthy chappals at their filthy faces :!: :!: :!:






:D


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PostPosted: Tue Sep 06, 2005 8:18 pm 
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I was so confident that I'd get tickets to Water, as I participated in the advance draw for tickets this year. Even though I got all my other selections, Water sold out almost immediately. I'm going to wait in the rush line on Thursday night as I've had luck in the past. I'll let you all know my thoughts on the film if I'm lucky enough to score tickets.


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PostPosted: Tue Sep 06, 2005 9:28 pm 
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kamran wrote:
I was so confident that I'd get tickets to Water, as I participated in the advance draw for tickets this year. Even though I got all my other selections, Water sold out almost immediately. I'm going to wait in the rush line on Thursday night as I've had luck in the past. I'll let you all know my thoughts on the film if I'm lucky enough to score tickets.


If you can't get tickets TIFF, I'm sure Deepa Mehta will have another premiere in Ottawa, like she did for Bollywood Hollywood. BH tickets were easily avail on the phone, but I chose to wait and show up at the current window instead. I regretted. Never thought Deepa Mehta was that famous in English film community. This time I'll grab Water premiere tickets as soon as they become avail.

Too bad, Film actors were not at the Ottawa premiere (DM was present and did field questions from the audience), where as TIFF Gala premiere should have full cast.
-------------------------------------
There are a few other Indian films as well, plus Mistress of spice from UK.

MISTRESS OF SPICE

Kamran, or anyone, please do let me/ us know if you come to know if Aish is appearing for Mistress premiere. Thanks.


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PostPosted: Tue Sep 06, 2005 9:39 pm 
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Location: Chennai, India
kamran wrote:
I was so confident that I'd get tickets to Water, as I participated in the advance draw for tickets this year. Even though I got all my other selections, Water sold out almost immediately. I'm going to wait in the rush line on Thursday night as I've had luck in the past. I'll let you all know my thoughts on the film if I'm lucky enough to score tickets.


Excellent to have a zulmi reporter :) - hopefully you can get through and see it . Please keep us posted on your thoughts.


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PostPosted: Tue Sep 06, 2005 10:22 pm 
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There is another show of DM's WATER as per TIFF site:

http://www.e.bell.ca/filmfest/2005/film ... asp?id=313

Film Title:
Water

Programme: VIACOM GALAS
Director: Deepa Mehta
Country: Canada
Year: 2005
Language: Hindi
Time: 114 minutes
Film Types: Colour/35mm
Rating: 18A


SCREENING TIMES:
Thursday, September 08 7:15 PM RYERSON
Thursday, September 08 8:00 PM ROY THOMSON HALL
Friday, September 09 9:45 AM PARAMOUNT 3

Where is the GALA premiere??
I guess, Roy Thomson Hall ??


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PostPosted: Tue Sep 06, 2005 11:19 pm 
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Location: vancouver, canada
i heared on some local tv show that aish is planning to come to the premire of the film, to bad its in toronto i really want to see water and esp mistress of spices, does anyone know if john abraham is coming to the water premir? if he does get your ear plugs ready lol, btw does anyone know when these two films will be out in the cinema halls?


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PostPosted: Wed Sep 07, 2005 3:12 pm 
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they showed john abraham arriving with a ton of chicks screaming at the airport on the english news ( for some odd reason) does anyone know if malika sherawat is going to be there since they myth will be shown there also


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PostPosted: Wed Sep 07, 2005 6:05 pm 
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John Abraham must be coming for WATER Gala premiere??

BTW, advance booking started this morning. It has been impossible to reach by phone, or by web, so far. Just managed to access Web order page now. Has no "order box" for Water or for Mistress of Spice for any of the shows.

Does it mean all advanceable tickets sold out, before one could even access them?? Hard to imagine for Mistress Of Spice shows. May be advance tickets are not being offered for these two films??



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PostPosted: Thu Sep 08, 2005 1:04 am 
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rana wrote:
Does it mean all advanceable tickets sold out, before one could even access them?? Hard to imagine for Mistress Of Spice shows. May be advance tickets are not being offered for these two films??


Basically, it means that all these shows are "Rush Only" status; Water definitely was sold out in advance, I know that for sure. Mistress of Spices, believe it or not, was a hot choice; many people I talked to in line had selected it.

Try standing in the rush lineups outside the theatre. I've had extremely good luck in past years, as I've said before. I remember last year that Zhang Yimou's House of Flying Daggers was tremendously popular, and yet I scored tickets by waiting in line (and I wasn't even amongst the first twenty people!).

EDIT: And yes, rana, GALA shows premiere at Roy Thompson Hall (tickets are around $31 though!).


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 09, 2005 4:00 am 
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Just got back from the 7:15 show (not only did waiting in the Rush Line pay off - I even got in free!).

Too tired to write an entire review, but here are some quick thoughts:

- This is undoubtedly her best film; she's avoided sensationalism and preachiness (for the most part) and delivered a somber and uncompromising tragedy about oppressive and hierarchical structures that are doomed to repeat themselves unless we have the courage to stop them.
- Major influence here is obviously Ray's Pather Panchali; the widowed matriarch is a familiar figure here, and Chuiya's (the little eight-year-old widow) innocence and mischieviousness recalls the way Ray followed the brother-sister team of Apu and Durga.
- Cinematography is stunning! The visual look of the film totally immerses you in this world; when it finished, I was taken aback to see myself back in a clean, air-conditioned theatre.
- The cast is uniformally excellent; Seema Biswas is flawless in depicting a character torn between her conscience and her faith. Sarala as the little girl is excellent as well, handling range with the talent of a pro. John Abraham adds strong support; he disappears into the role beautifully. Lisa Ray is adequate, however; she is too beautiful for this role, so much so that it stretched credibility at times. Raghuvir Yadav (as a eunuch) rocks in a small role, and Waheeda Rehman and Kulbhushan Kharbanda (!) have cameos.
- However, the flaw in this film is that Mehta all-too-often spills the subtext into the screenplay. Her images speak for themselves, but characters reitterate what we've already realized long before. What's more, the underlying political thread surrounding Gandhi, independence and modernization is too transparent and obvious. I much preferred the film's inital "fly-on-the-wall" approach, simply documenting the daily ongoings of an ashram.
- Still, this is a potent and effective effort.
- Mehta does leave us ultimately with a small shred of hope, but we can never forget the images of hellish inequality that came before... As one widow in the ashram put it - which may be the understatement of the year - "Life is such a disappointment".

Overall, a B+, or three out of four stars.

I took pictures (of Mehta, Abraham, Biswas, Ray and Sarala), but they came out pretty bad. If you want me to post them anyways, let me know.


Last edited by kamran on Fri Sep 09, 2005 10:49 am, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Fri Sep 09, 2005 5:54 am 
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thanks for the review dude, sounds good

is the new naseer shah film also playing at the fest? - that one abt the gujrat riots


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