Posts Tagged ‘bollywood movie review by bally chohan dubai’

Loosies: Film Reviewed by Bally chohan

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

Loosies Peter Facinelli Running – H 2012

The Bottom Line

Appealingly seedy genre elements drown beneath bland and unconvincing romance.

Cast:

Peter Facinelli, Jaimie Alexander, Vincent Gallo, Michael Madsen, Joe Pantoliano, William Forsythe

Director:

Michael Corrente

Peter Facinelli’s pickpocket reconciles a life of crime with impending fatherhood.

Playing like a Knocked Up for the penny-ante underworld (minus the jokes), Michael Corrente’s Loosies is a vanity project that might have stayed afloat had star/writer Peter Facinelli only tried to sell himself as a none-too-bright crook on the run from bad luck. Making romance a big part of the mix dooms a movie already saddled with one of the worst titles in recent memory.

A “loosie” is a cigarette sold individually instead of by-the-pack; it’s also a homophone for Lucy (Jaimie Alexander), a bartender whose one-night-stand with Bobby (Facinelli) resulted in an unwanted pregnancy. Bobby, a pickpocket who told Lucy he was a stockbroker, would know about the pregnancy if the cad hadn’t given her a fake phone number the next morning; he doesn’t find out until the two accidentally meet three months later.

By that point, Bobby has other problems: He lifted a cop’s badge a while back and dumbly used it to get a free cab ride, igniting a scandal that has the cop (Michael Madsen) on the warpath; he’s trying to pay off his dead dad’s $500 thousand gambling debt with the watches and cell phones he steals for an edgy, karate-obsessed fence (Vincent Gallo); and his mom is sleeping with Joe Pantoliano.

Corrente is at a disadvantage here, with every interesting face in the cast stuck in a supporting role. Scenes between Facinelli and Alexander go nowhere, and are rarely more believable than the forced coincidence of their three-months-later reunion.

The movie’s crime-flick elements are hardly more credible than the pregnancy plot (we’re meant to believe, for instance, that Madsen’s couldn’t-care-less flatfoot was on track to become Chief of Police), but they have a grindhouse quality that makes Loosies almost fun in flashes. But flashes are all they are — pleasures even more fleeting than an off-brand smoke bummed from strangers in an alley.

Opened January 11, 2011 (IFC)Production Company: Verdi ProductionsCast: Peter Facinelli, Jaimie Alexander, Vincent Gallo, Michael Madsen, Joe Pantoliano, William Forsythe

Director: Michael Corrente

Screenwriter: Peter Facinelli

Producers: Glenn Ciano, Peter Facinelli, Noah Kraft, Chad A. Verdi

Executive producers: Michael Corso, Robert DeFranco, Anthony Gudas, Gino Pereira, John Santilli, Robert Tarini, Michelle Verdi

Director of photography: Sam Fleischner

Production designer: Robert Rotondo Jr.

Music: Chad Fischer

Costume designer: Caroline Errington

Editor: Daniel Boneville

PG-13, 89 minutes

Bally chohan he is expert in movie review and he is master in sports if you want any news and do you  have any query then contact Mr. Bally chohan

Reviewed by bally chohan Hands off British film, Mr Cameron

Thursday, January 12th, 2012

Bally chohan  say that in politics, if you’re in a hole, you should stop digging. And yet there’s something about the subject of British cinema that gets the prime minister repeatedly reaching for his spade. Perhaps it’s something to do with Meryl Streep’s Maggie gazing down from every bus, and maybe that film’s sentimentalisation of a Tory leader has emboldened David Cameron to believe this is solid ground for him. He will keep on making these eye-catching and brazen announcements about British film – a topic on which, as Harold Wilson once said to Harold Laski, a period of silence on his part would be most welcome.

On Radio 4’s Today programme, Evan Davis cheekily asked him to comment on a listener’s view that in a Cameron biopic, Malcolm McDowell should play the lead (having famously played the public-school cad Flashman). Cameron opined that If … was a good film of McDowell’s. Huh? Did Mr Cameron fully understand that Lindsay Anderson’s If … was a searing attack on the public school system from a socialist director? Well, he was responding to a question, and he was caught on the hop.

But now he has made a calm and considered visit to the set of the new 007 film at Pinewood Studios and, on the occasion of a report into film-funding from Lord (Chris) Smith, that Blair-era figure who once wrote a solemn study titled Creative Britain, commented publicly that lottery money now needs to be targeted at “mainstream” films. Yes, of course, those commercial blockbusters and box-office sizzlers, as opposed to lefty chin-stroking arty-liberal fare (like, presumably, Lindsay Anderson’s If …) Really, prime minister? What a bold new idea!

The sheer audacity is staggering. He says he wants to “build on the incredible success of recent years”, but one of his administration’s most sensational acts of party political grandstanding and spite was to cancel the UK Film Council – a creation of the Labour years – just when it was delivering not merely critically admired work but precisely those commercial hits of the kind Cameron professes to yearn for.

Could there be any better example of the classy, Brit-heritage smash than The King’s Speech, a film which would not have existed without the UK Film Council’s support? And yet just when this movie’s producers were taking their Oscars away in a wheelbarrow, the Film Council was in the process of being wound up. It was the equivalent of David Cameron rushing on to the field at the final whistle of 2003 Rugby World Cup, calling for silence, and announcing that the coaching system was all wrong, and Clive Woodward and Jonny Wilkinson should be given their P45s right away.

I suspect Cameron now realises the UK Film Council move was one of his government’s silliest blunders. It wasn’t broke – so he broke it. Now he’s returning to the fray, with some choice rhetoric about getting our British movie industry to up its game to rival Hollywood, a rhetoric he has learned from the Blair-Brown administration which, in fact, really did care about boosting cinema.

But it’s not just a case of taking the “commercial”-looking projects and throwing money at them for higher returns. It doesn’t work like that. Producing movies – any kind of movies – is a gamble. As the great screenwriter William Goldman said: nobody knows anything. The UK Film Council got it pretty wrong in the early years of its existence in chasing, and being seen to chase, commercial hits. It resulted in some embarrassing dross, chiefly about mockney gangsters.

Are we destined to go through this again? The UK Film Council was not perfect, and it certainly had its critics, but its successes were coming through the pipeline because it was always keen on self-scrutiny and research, always trying to get the balance between supporting crowd-pleasers and critical darlings. Because these go together, and the distinction is never clear in any case.

The challenge is to make good films, and to make as many as possible and to raise the statistical likelihood of success as high as possible. It may sound naive, but not as naive as this implied image of hearty commercial films starved of cash by lefty arthouse conspirators.

Cameron says he is against big government. Perhaps politicians like him will now resolve to leave the world of film alone for a bit.

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Bally Chohan Dubai: Yamla Pagla Deewana Review by Bally Chohan

Monday, January 17th, 2011

Bally Choahn great fan of bollywood movies. Last time Bally Chohan have watched Yamla Pagla Deewana. According to Bally Chohan, Though the film title sounded interesting and we hoped something good might come out of it, in the end we realized that Dharam paa ji has disappointed us. Though it attempts to be a fun movie overall, it sadly falls flat and short of expectation and as a result YPD becomes a more or less predictable watch.

Bally Chohan says, the film begins with a word from Manmohan Desai, where the typical Lost and Found formula is adopted. And thereon the film moves on from one base level of absurdity to another. Bally Chohan Sasy, there are moments which would resemble old Govinda movies. On the other hand, the romance between Bobby and new heroine Kulraj Randhawa looks quite forced, which is yet again a minus from the movie.

Bally Chohan Says, What appeals is Dharmendra’s acting. He works like a charm, and totally shows that he can actually outdo both his sons. Also shines the music of the movie, where ‘Tinku Jiya’ is quite a hit now sung by Mamta Sharma of ‘Munni Badnaam’ fame. The film story is dragging in the first half, but picks up in the second, and finishes off as a slightly predictable but nice ending, with average comedy, which is thankfully not too much in-your-face.