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PostPosted: Wed Aug 24, 2005 3:23 am 
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YRF distribution, in previews really appeared strong/effective..watch for Anupam Kher, I hope he REFINDS himself! :roll: 8)


Last edited by Zoran009 on Fri Sep 30, 2005 4:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 15, 2005 3:57 pm 
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Releases this october! :?: :idea: :roll:


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 23, 2005 3:34 pm 
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Kher seeks the Mahatma's blessings


Anupam Kher and Urmilla Matondkar, accompanied by director Jahnu Barua, paid tributes to Mahatma Gandhi, seeking his blessings before the release of Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara next week.

They arrived at Gandhi's Samadhi well before time and walked in to lay white wreaths at 5.17 p.m -- the time the Mahatma was shot by Nathuram Godse in 1948 as he was going for his evening prayers. They also lit a brass lamp at the Samadhi.

Later, speaking to newsmen who had arrived at the venue in large numbers, Kher said that they had come to Mahatma to pay homage and seek his blessings. "In the present day, his teachings are far more relevant than ever before. People armed with guns and explosives are seeking the independence that Mahatma managed through non-violence," he said.

Kher claimed that the film has been approved by the censor board without a cut. "There were seven of them and, after seeing the film, all agreed it was brilliant. I must compliment our director Barua, who also wrote the script, for doing a good job," he added.

Urmilla said that, right from childhood, she had been impressed by Gandhi's teaching and had tried to imbibe them in her life. "I am delighted to be part of the film," she said.

Barua, in a brief conversation, said that he started writing the film ten years ago and couldn't find a financer. He approached Anupam Kher to act as the teacher initially but, because of lack of funds, Kher eventually became the director. "This film was to be produced by NFDC. But they expressed their helplessness and I chipped it to save it because I didn't want Barua's efforts to go wasted. Once I was there, I gave the script to Urmilla and asked her to read it. She called from Allahabad to say that the role of teacher's daughter was suited to her," Kher narrated.

Urmilla complimented the director as well, for making his cast work without feeling that they were actually shooting a film.

Photograph: Sondeep Shankar


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 23, 2005 3:35 pm 
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Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Maara´ Unit Visits ´Rajghat´
By: Abid
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The unit of Anupam Kher's Jahnu Baruah directed 'Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Maara' visited 'Rajghat' the 'Samadhi' of the father of the nation yesterday (Thursday) . After paying their respect and floral tributes , the publicity campaign of the movie commenced from there .


The movie starring Anupam Kher and top bollywood actress Urmila Matondkar , is all set to release on Sepember 30 and will be releasesd by Yash Chopra's company Yash Raj & P.P. Associates in Delhi


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PostPosted: Sat Sep 24, 2005 6:12 pm 
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Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara





By IndiaFM News Bureau, September 22, 2005 - 14:24 IST

Maine Gandhi Ko Nahi Mara is a film of an ageing man and his symbolic connection with the father of the nation. Through an engaging story of a retired old man and his daughter in a typical middle class backdrop, the film works out a larger Gandhian symbolism. Maine Gandhi Ko Nahi Mara is a film that connects two disparate events together. One, of a small middle class family in present day Mumbai struggling to come to terms with the fact that the head of the family is now suffering from early dementia and Two, the assassination of the father of the nation, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi.

Professor Uttam Chaudhary (Anupam Kher) is a retired Hindi teacher who lives with his daughter (Urmila Matondkar) and young son in the city of Mumbai. He is suffering from what is laughingly called ‘old son’ – brief periods of forgetfulness, blanks in memory. Little does anyone realize that the problems are much deeper, and that this is just the beginning of a journey that will end in a man becoming a prisoner of his mind.

As his memories start to fade, a childhood trauma surfaces – a memory of being accused of murdering Gandhi. The more his life is whitewashed, the stronger this one memory remains.

In the middle of this professor Chaudhary’s daughter is a positive force. A single woman, working not only to support the family monetarily, but is also the only lifeline that can save her father from drowning in the universe his mind is creating.

The film structures the narrative by telling a simple story of a man’s illness and his daughter’s love, understanding and commitment to find her father’s treatment, overcoming a host of problems through her faith and determination.

The film is directed by nine-time national award winner Jahnu Barua. The supporting cast comprises of Parvin Dabas, Rajit Kapur, Boman Irani, Sudhir Joshi, Raju Kher, Vishwaas Paandya, Prem Chopra and Waheeda Rehman.


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PostPosted: Wed Sep 28, 2005 4:02 pm 
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After much off-screen controversy about being ousted as Censor Board chief, Anupam Kher has decided to return to what he does best: acting.
Kher stars in Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Maara, a unique film directed by nine-time National Award winner Jahnu Barua.

Here's a preview of the film, which hits theatres on September 30.

Don't Miss:
'Gandhiji is revelant in today's times'


< Next >


Design: Uday Kuckian

http://specials.rediff.com/movies/2005/sep/28sld1.htm

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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 2:53 pm 
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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 2:55 pm 
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Rediff.com wrote:
Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara is a masterpiece :o
Sukanya Verma | September 30, 2005 18:33 IST

An old man stands at the feet of the vast sea. A loving daughter searches for answers in the magnanimity of its waves. A story unfolds through the confines of a cosy house.

The empty dining table waits to serve its inhabitants. A tall ladder that has seen various ups and downs. Open windows, flying curtains -- mute spectators to the increasing problems of a once happy family.

This is Uttam Chaudhry's (played by Anupam Kher) home. An acclaimed scholar of Hindi and now a retired professor, Chaudhry is a man of principles and values. He believes in the strength of courage and striving for success. You can sense his integrity when he fondly renders the lines of his favourite poem -- Himmat karne walon ki har nahi hoti (Those who try never lose).

Meet Urmila, Gandhian thinker

The rapport he shares with his children -- Ronu (Rajat Kapur), Trisha (Urmila Matondkar), and Addy (Addy) -- is that of warmth, affection and respect. While Ronu is abroad chasing the American Dream and Addy enjoys the privileged existence of an average happy-go-lucky collegegoer, it is Trisha, an NGO worker, who takes after her father in character and heritage.

The normalcy of this seemingly happy nest is soon shattered. Professor Chaudhry suffers from frequent bouts of forgetfulness. What looked like a case of absent-mindedness before appears to be turning into a serious illness.

He forgets he has retired, and reaches college only to discover it's a chemistry lecture. He has a hard time coming to terms with the fact that it has been one and a half years since he lost his dear wife. He loses it altogether when Trisha's potential father-in-law places an ashtray and used teacup on a newspaper issue, which has Mahatma Gandhi's photograph.

Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara in pix

The professor's condition completely deteriorates and he starts blaming himself for being the man accidentally responsible for Gandhi's assassination. Obviously there cannot be any truth in his claims. On the ill-fated date, January 30, 1948, Chaudhry was only eight years old.

So what is his condition? Alzheimer's? Dementia? Schizophrenia? Scientific definitions offered are plenty, but the root cause of this sickness is much more deep-rooted than it appears. That's what makes Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara such a superbly multilayered presentation.

Director Jahnu Barua shows us various facets of the tragedy. He explores the fear and uncertainty that a victim of this disease goes through. At the same time, he doesn't ignore the trauma and helplessness of a daughter fighting a losing battle or the cowardly attitude of the young brother who doesn't want to take responsibility and wants to send his father to a mental institution. The filmmaker shows a family dealing with an unusual situation without being judgemental about any of its characters.

'Gandhiji is relevant in today's times'

It also shows society's unacceptability and hypocritical attitude towards members of such families. Trisha's spineless boyfriend (Vishwaas Pandya), an NGO employee himself, deserts her to marry a girl of his parents' choice. The parents are concerned whether Trisha's father's condition is hereditary.

If on one hand it layers the ordeals faced by professor Chaudhry and Trisha, it is also a metaphoric play on the concept called Gandhi that holds little meaning to the common man today. Everyone is busy making money at the cost of conscience. Virtues like honesty, non-violence, tolerance -- that were once the hallmark of strong moral fibre -- are mere feel-good words now. How did Gandhi fade away? How did the Father Of The Nation get reduced to just a road, a stamp, and a statue? 'You remember me only on two days, October 2 and January 30,' cries Chaudhry on behalf of his beloved leader. Maine Gandhi Ko Nahi Maara raises these questions and more.

The tenderness and poignancy in Barua's treatment is reminiscent of Richard Eyre's Iris, which was based on the true story of the English author Iris Murdoch and her wonderful relationship with her husband John Bayley as she dealt with the terrifying Alzheimer's disease.

If Dame Judi Dench was fabulous as the unfortunate Iris, Anupam Kher is nothing short of brilliant. His portrayal deserves applause in superlatives. There is nothing made-up about his performance. Restrained with sensitivity and awed with a guilt-ridden past, Kher gives complex dimensions to professor Chaudhry. And thank god, Kher and not NFDC, the original choice, produced this movie. He gives Barua the canvas the film undoubtedly deserved.

Urmila Matondkar isn't far behind. Her credibility as a versatile actress is further established in her reserved albeit realistic delivery of emotions. Rajat Kapur and Addy lend conviction to their parts. Even in brief roles, Samir Soni (as the doctor), Boman Irani and Waheeda Rehman leave a graceful impression.

Technically, Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Maara stands out for its flawless photography by Raaj A Chakarvarthy. The imagery of his shots have their own silent tale to tell. If you think Bappi Lahiri is all about disco, his soulful background score has the last laugh.

Dialogue and screenplay writer Sanjay Chauhan gets the heart of Barua's script just right. His meaningful dialogues make a point without being theatrical or overtly persuasive.

In the end, this reviewer wants to make two requests. One to the remarkable Barua: Please make more Hindi films. One to the Indian government: Please make this film tax-free.


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PostPosted: Fri Sep 30, 2005 3:45 pm 
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I told u that!! that 2minute review was so powerful, that whole Mangal seemed S**** in front of that! :(

and as expected moron writes it off!

Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara





By Taran Adarsh, September 30, 2005 - 15:14 IST

When an accomplished actor teams up with an acclaimed director, you expect nothing but the best. Actor-producer Anupam Kher and director Jahnu Barua's first offering together MAINE GANDHI KO NAHIN MARA is an effort that makes you think, while raising several pertinent issues.

But let's make one thing clear at the very outset! MAINE GANDHI KO NAHIN MARA doesn't deal with Mahatma Gandhi, but his ideologies. The film peeps into the mind of an aged man who believes he had mistakenly shot the Mahatma. In that respect, yes, MAINE GANDHI KO NAHIN MARA steps into a new territory as far as Bollywood is concerned.

But, to be honest, MAINE GANDHI KO NAHIN MARA would've been ideal as a play/stage or tele-film. The concept isn't exciting for movieplexes and even if a section of moviegoers do appreciate the effort, its appeal would be restricted to just a handful of people.

Besides, even the mature audiences that go for a film like MAINE GANDHI KO NAHIN MARA wouldn't be in complete agreement with the conclusion to the story. The entire courtroom episode in the post-interval portions makes it too theatrical, too abstract.

At best, MAINE GANDHI KO NAHIN MARA will be remembered more for Anupam Kher's bravura performance than the experience in totality!

Professor Uttam Chaudhary [Anupam Kher] is a retired Hindi teacher who lives with his daughter Trusha [Urmila Matondkar] and son Addy [Addy] in Mumbai. He is suffering from brief periods of forgetfulness, blanks in memory. Little does anyone realize that the problems are much deeper and that this is just the beginning of a journey that will end in a man becoming a prisoner of his mind.

As his memories start to fade, a childhood trauma surfaces -- a memory of being accused of murdering Mahatma Gandhi. The more his life is whitewashed, the stronger this one memory remains.

Amidst all this, Chaudhary's daughter is a positive force, the only lifeline that can save her father from drowning in the universe his mind is creating.

MAINE GANDHI KO NAHIN MARA talks of Alzheimer's disease, an issue that hasn't been tackled on Hindi screen before. All the same, the film talks of the Gandhian ideologies that the generation of today has, perhaps, forgotten or overlooked. The film also delves into the parent-kid relationship and the feeling of being 'unwanted' that a senior citizen experiences at times.

The first hour builds the drama beautifully and a number of sequences make a sweeping impact. Starting with the sequences between Anupam and Urmila on breakfast table to Anupam's sequence with the barber and of course, the 'disclosure' at the interval point. Director Jahnu Barua catches your hand and makes you experience a cinema that's refreshingly different, realistic, unadulterated.

If Barua's screenplay was most absorbing in the first 45 minutes, it slackens considerably in the next 45 minutes. The post-interval portions are engaging in bits and spurts, like the flashback portions [Raju Kher explaining the Mahatma Gandhi episode is remarkable]. But the basic thought of making Anupam shed his guilt by cross-examining in court seems far-fetched, inappropriate, totally uncalled for. Yes, a path-breaking subject deserves an equally different conclusion, but the finale is difficult to absorb. The lawyer [Boman Irani] screaming at the patient [Anupam Kher] appears very harsh and overtly dramatic. In fact, the patient could've collapsed during the dummy courtroom proceedings. Therefore, a faulty finale!

Jahnu Barua's direction is competent when you look at the on-screen performances or handling of certain emotional moments. But, as the screenplay writer of this enterprise [along with Sanjay Chouhan], Barua gets abstract in the latter part of the film and that is its biggest undoing. In fact, a psychiatrist hiring junior artistes or stage actors to cure a patient of Alzheimer's looks ridiculous and spoils the impact to a major extent.

Bappi Lahiri's background music is soothing, especially the usage of piano at various moments in the narrative. Raaj A. Chakravarti's camerawork is topnotch.

MAINE GANDHI KO NAHIN MARA belongs to Anupam Kher completely. Roll out the red carpet to an actor of extra-ordinary range. To state that Kher lives the part with flourish would be an understatement. It's his most accomplished work after SAARANSH, a film that marked the 'birth' of Kher.

Urmila Matondkar is superb as the caring daughter. Note her expressions when she bursts out at her father soon after the all-important meeting with her fiancé's parents or when she realizes that her fiancé has ditched her and married someone else -- she deserves distinction marks here!

MAINE GANDHI KO NAHIN MARA has a number of actors, but those who register an impact are Prem Chopra, Parvin Dabas, Raju Kher, Divya Jagdale [the maid] and Vishwaas Pandya [the fiancé]. Waheeda Rehman is wasted. Boman Irani goes over the top, which does come as a surprise. Newcomer Addy is first-rate.

On the whole, MAINE GANDHI KO NAHIN MARA is the kind of cinema that may meet with diverse reactions. While the critics, the festival circuit and mature audiences [a tiny segment of moviegoers] may go for it, the majority might find the experience too theatrical. At the box-office, the film caters to a niche segment, but beyond the boundaries of a handful of cities [that too select multiplexes], the film won't meet commercial success.

Rating:- [critique] * *

Other wise *only


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 Post subject: MIND BLOWING
PostPosted: Mon Oct 03, 2005 3:19 pm 
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Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara
Mind-blowing!

By Prema K. ©2005 Bollyvista.com


Continued: Next Page >>



Credits
Producer/s: Anupam P. Kher
Director: Nine-time national award winner Jahnu Barua
Cast: Anupam Kher, Urmila Matondkar, Parvin Dabas, Rajit Kapur, Boman Irani, Sudhir Joshi, Raju Kher, Vishwaas Paandya, Prem Chopra and Waheeda Rehman

'Saaransh' was a landmark in Anupam Kher's career. Everybody, including him, regarded that as the role of a lifetime. Anupam Kher's character and performance in 'Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara' disproves the theory that an actor can never get another role that matches up to the best of his career.

The film is superb; very well-made. But let's quickly add that this is no entertainer. Actor-producer Anupam Kher and director Jahnu Barua's 'Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara' makes you cry and think a lot, and also makes you laugh in a couple of scenes.

Professor Uttam Chaudhary (Anupam Kher) is a retired Hindi professor who lives with his daughter Trusha (Urmila Matondkar) and son Addy (Addy) in Mumbai. His other son Ronu (Rajit Kapur) lives in the U.S. Uttam is suffering from brief periods of forgetfulness. His condition is worsening slowly. He is diagnosed as suffering from a brain disorder, Dementia. He is also suffering from guilt of having killed Gandhiji. This guilt resurfaces as his memory is fading.


1 | 2 | 3 Next Page


http://www.bollyvista.com/article/a/29/5635

**May lord save us from CROOKS like YRF/XEROS etc et all


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PostPosted: Wed Oct 12, 2005 6:01 pm 
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Tushar Gandhi Lauds ´Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara ´
By: Abid
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Tushar Gandhi , the great-grandson of Mahatma Gandhi , sent an SMS to actor-producer Anupam Kher after watching his film , 'Maine Gandhi Ko Nahin Mara '. The message read : "Deeply touched by the film and moved , brilliant performances . By the end , I felt guilty . Congratulations Jahnu Barua , unit and yourself ."


**DU, any news on this dvd? YRF isko rok kar kiya karega miyan :roll:


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