Monday, October 5, 2009


Wake Up Sid is the coming-of-age story of a slacker named Sid, played by Ranbir Kapoor. In a wonderfully done title sequence, debutant director Ayan Mukherji shows us Sid struggling with accounting the night before his final exam. He’s had four cups of coffee and stays up till 3 am but he doesn’t get past the first question.

Unfortunately the film doesn’t maintain this crackling momentum and becomes a patchy, predictable story held together by the sheer prowess of Ranbir. Ayan, working from his own story and screenplay, skillfully creates Sid’s state of arrested development.

This is the kind of collegiate who sleeps in Sponge Bob sheets, doesn’t last one week in his father’s bathroom furnishing business, which he describes as full-on
pakao, and has no ambition or plans for the future apart from getting drunk. Sid meets Aeysha, played by Konkona Sen Sharma, a slightly older, more mature and focused girl, who moves to Mumbai from Kolkatta to create an independent life for herself.

The two, polar opposites, become friends though she’s quick to explain that he is not her type. She is looking for a man, not a boy. Eventually, Aeysha helps Sid grow up. He discovers that life is a little more complicated than the comic books he reads.
Wake Up Sid has honesty and freshness. Ayan creates some genuinely tender and moving moments.

There is a lovely little scene in which Sid makes an impromptu cake for Aeysha’s birthday. And Sid’s confrontation with his parents packs a wallop. However, Ayan isn’t as successful at stringing together the moments.

The pacing in the first half is very slow. Towards interval, the film gathers an emotional momentum but afterward it becomes slack again. The bigger problem is that the crisis of the characters never feels sufficiently awful or urgent.

This is a Karan Johar production so reality is severely air-brushed. Nothing really bad ever happens to Sid or Ayesha. Within days of arrival she finds a lovely, airy, affordable flat and a job at the city’s hippest magazine, Mumbai Beat. Within months, the magazine’s super-cool editor is dating her and she has her own column.

Sid doesn’t get too sweaty either. He gets an internship at the same magazine, which becomes a job as assistant photographer. After one dressing-down from Ayesha, he also starts to clean the house, do the dishes and even wash the dirty laundry by hand. It’s all so quick and convenient that Sid’s struggle to find his voice and identity seems half-baked.

Acid Factory




White Feather Films has always been there trying to transform bollywood into next generation film house. In Acid Factory director Supern Verma with Sanjay Gupta is narrating the story about convoluted reality.

Acid Factory is a moral dilemma within and a cat and mouse game on the outside. The film is about a group of characters whose sense of past has vanished. It’s about the innocent guy who perceives himself to be a criminal.

Acid Factory is a complex web of memory, crime and morality. Faltering memory may alter truth. Characters believe that reality could be an illusion.

Girish Dhamija writes dialogues for this film which seems to be for the brainy type or for people who watch film seriously. Virag Mishra is the lyricist wile Sandeep Chowta creates music. The sound department is handled by Oscar winner Resul Pookutty.

Cinematography is by Sahil Kapoor and the film is edited by Bunty Nagi.

Acid Factory is produced by Sanjay Gupta under the banner White Feather Films.

Paleri Manikyam


Paleri Manikyam is an upcoming Movie from megastar Mammootty, directed by Ranjith. The movie also stars Gowri Munjal, Srinivasan, Vijaya Raghavan, Mukesh, Siddique, Salim Kumar, Kalpana, Swetha Menon, stage India Vikraman Nair, Sasi Kalinga and a number of drama artistes selected after a camp conducted by Ranjit with the help of veteran actors.

The movie will be an Investigative Thriller. Mammootty and Ranjith are joining once again for this much expected movie.

The movie is based on a novel by T.P Rajeevan named Paleri Manikyam - Oru Pathira Kolapathaka Katha.

Earlier part of the film is shot in Delhi, while the later parts are shot at Paleri near Calicut and also Palakkad.