LOGO
Reply to Thread New Thread
Old 07-26-2006, 07:00 AM   #1
AlexClips

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
420
Senior Member
Default Parineeta
Anyone saw Parineeta? I read a REview in HIndu recently. Seems the movie isn't upto the novel. I adore Vidya Balan, anyway.
AlexClips is offline


Old 04-30-2006, 07:00 AM   #2
Zvmwissq

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
522
Senior Member
Default
I havent read the novel ..but the movie is good.Manages to bring in a feel of 1970s calcutta and Vidya Balan is Great.Definitely worth watching.
Zvmwissq is offline


Old 01-23-2006, 07:00 AM   #3
lierro

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
469
Senior Member
Default
I havent read the novel ..but the movie is good.Manages to bring in a feel of 1970s calcutta and Vidya Balan is Great.Definitely worth watching.
1970s did u say?? Woww! then I gotta see this movie......'cos I luv watching '70s movies........esp. when I can see lots of old cars in them.....
Btw, I rem. reading in the paper once tho, tat this movie was set back in the '60s......?
Neways tat actress Vidya Balan looks quite good in the trad. garb as well!
She doesn't hav much S.Indian features in her tho.......
lierro is offline


Old 05-05-2006, 07:00 AM   #4
Hitfaromarf

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
426
Senior Member
Default
She looks like a South Indian. She's got her roots in Palghat, but settled in Mumbai.
Hitfaromarf is offline


Old 07-03-2006, 07:00 AM   #5
KernJetenue

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
468
Senior Member
Default
Vidya, I feel is even better looking than Ash. But the bedroom scenes with Saif & Sanjay Dutt could have been avoided.......I wish it wasn't there. I'm a bleady, old-fashioned South Indian...........lol!
KernJetenue is offline


Old 11-17-2005, 07:00 AM   #6
sabbixsweraco

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
486
Senior Member
Default
But the bedroom scenes with Saif & Sanjay Dutt could have been avoided.......I wish it wasn't there. I'm a bleady, old-fashioned South Indian...........lol!
Hmm.......well, atleast ur not the only one!
Btw, um......reading this post of urs, I now feel rather uncomfy/am havin 2nd thots abt watching the movie..... d'u mind telling me a synopsis of the story plse.??
sabbixsweraco is offline


Old 06-09-2006, 07:00 AM   #7
glazgoR@

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
529
Senior Member
Default
Well, the truth is I couldn't see the movie fully. The first disc stopped after an hr. The second stopped after 30 mts. That's the tragedy! I will be firing the guy at the videoshop, who promised that this is a master copy. Its better not to see a movie than see half....Sigh!


Regarding the scenes, when asked in an interview, she says the scenes were so important that it could not be removed from the film. But there are so many ways to show that, tactfully, rite?
Like a flower crushed in between the sheets or the clothes piled up in a corner. or the disfigured sindhur in the forhead ?

Why should I worry if her parents aren't? LOL!
glazgoR@ is offline


Old 10-08-2006, 07:00 AM   #8
mylittlejewelaa

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
605
Senior Member
Default
10 things about Vidya Balan

Vidya Balan had to undergo 40 screen tests before she was chosen for Parineeta
1. After seeing her performance in Parineeta, Vidya has bagged three roles in Bollywood.

2. Vidya had to go through 40 screen tests and 17 make-up shoots before she was chosen for the lead role in Parineeta.

3. She has acted in more than 25 ad films, most of which were directed by Pradeep Sarkar. She is best known for her performance in Equal sugar free ad which was again directed by Pradeep Sarkar.

4. She made her debut as a model in a Surf Excel advertisement in 1998.

5. She is trained in Carnatic music; this quality helped her bagging the role of Lolita in Parineeta, where her character revolves around music.

6. She decided to join films the day she interacted with Shabana Azmi while in college. She idolises her and has taken many acting tips from her.

7. Vidya Balan did her schooling from St Antony’s School and later on joined St Xavier’s College from where she graduated in sociology.

8. She comes from a middleclass family from Chembur and has an older sister.

9. While shooting with Saif Ali Khan for the movie, she became a good friend of Saif and shared a good rapport with him. Vidya is also close to Saif’s children.

10. Vidya is spiritually inclined. She went to Shirdi before the shooting for Parineeta commenced and visits a Sai mandir near her house in Chembur everyday.
mylittlejewelaa is offline


Old 09-26-2006, 07:00 AM   #9
Natashasuw

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
525
Senior Member
Default
Now I rem. where I saw her when u mentioned the surf excel ad!
Didn't she always act as a wife/mother in various ads.....inc. one for Maggi noodles & also a Kawasaki(?) bike ad.......its this ad where she acts as a housewife receiving her husband home when he's on leave from the Army......then while listening to the radio tat night, he gets orders to return the next morning......and takes his son out on his bike to make him happy.....?
I always thot she looked good in a trad. garb.....but didn't know she was so young! Well, going by the standards of today's movies, I'm personally a bit unhappy tat she decided to go for the film industry......neways, to each their own.......!
Oh, and yea I managed to read the story synopsis online!
Also its only just now tat I got to know therez another heroine (Raima Sen) in Parineeta besides Vidya!
Natashasuw is offline


Old 01-05-2006, 07:00 AM   #10
gtyruzzel

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
430
Senior Member
Default
Yes, Raima Sen and even Diya Mirza are doing side roles in the movie.

You are right . She's the same one in as the Army wife- I think it was an Album. She was there Ponds Face cream also. Yes, even I think she looks too traditional & a bit old for her age. Anyway........I like her.


What I don't understand is how can there be 40 screen tests? If u r rejected once after a screen test, how can you be tested again?
gtyruzzel is offline


Old 10-23-2005, 03:28 PM   #11
PerfectCreditForYou

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
362
Senior Member
Default
I saw the movie- its good. They have captured the Calcutta in the 60s feel.
PerfectCreditForYou is offline


Old 12-20-2005, 07:00 AM   #12
effebrala

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
594
Senior Member
Default
I saw this movie yesterday.. Its 'old wine in a old bottle' (i mean set in the 1960's)...I mean most of the movie is very predictable but the director has done a good job in keeping the audience interested... Vidya balan has done a great job and Saif has matured well as an actor.. Its the usual Sanjay dutt and nothing new to offer... The 60's background and the one song was what made it different from a typical hindi movie..
effebrala is offline


Old 11-10-2005, 02:31 PM   #13
PhillipHer

Join Date
Jun 2008
Age
59
Posts
4,481
Senior Member
Default
The 60's background and the one song was what made it different from a typical hindi movie..
Um.....ne '60s cars/scooters seen in it as well?? Herald? 'Old' Fiat? Lambretta??........If so I'd be eager to see it!
PhillipHer is offline


Old 11-11-2005, 01:17 AM   #14
softy54534

Join Date
Apr 2007
Posts
5,457
Senior Member
Default
Well..they do show a few old cars..though Im not sure about the makes.These are cars which have the doors opening the other way around...if you know what I mean :P
softy54534 is offline


Old 11-11-2005, 02:32 AM   #15
Searmoreibe

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
384
Senior Member
Default
Well..they do show a few old cars..though Im not sure about the makes.These are cars which have the doors opening the other way around...if you know what I mean :P
Oh, those must be the 'old' Fiats (Italian-made) of the '50s/early '60s.......the front doors open backwards (called as suicide doors back then! ).......I'm guessing those were the ones in the movie as those were the only cars in the '60s w/ such doors.........my friend in Pune recently got one of those.......
But I wish they'd used atleast 1 Herald! They looked much better!
Btw, I rem. u saying in tat other thread tat ur family had a cream/black Herald in the early '80s.........was it w/ 2-doors??
Searmoreibe is offline


Old 11-11-2005, 02:58 AM   #16
CamVideoQl

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
459
Senior Member
Default
Yup it was..I remember we had to push the front seat in front for me to get into the back seat .Now we have a honda 2 door coupe(here in the US) and when ever I sit in the backseat im transported to those long gone herald days :sigh: .
CamVideoQl is offline


Old 11-11-2005, 04:37 AM   #17
Draftcasino.com

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
353
Senior Member
Default
Yup it was..I remember we had to push the front seat in front for me to get into the back seat .Now we have a honda 2 door coupe(here in the US) and when ever I sit in the backseat im transported to those long gone herald days :sigh: .
Yea, I know....
I had a Black 2-door Herald a few yrs ago......my 1st car! Only it was my mother who had to crawl in & out of the back seat when I took my parents out in it (as I'd refuse to touch their Maruti! ).......unftly it got badly rusted in the last 2 yrs of my stay abroad plus I wasn't in a position to maintain it so I had to sell it this yr- for scrap!
Hope to be able to buy another one in future as time/money permits.......
Draftcasino.com is offline


Old 11-11-2005, 05:06 AM   #18
Sarbrienna

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
377
Senior Member
Default
They also showed cakes being made in the old way- plugging the batter filled vessel.

But Diya's clothes were too modern even by today's standards. I mean off shoulders & all. Did women in 60s wear those, however modern?

Ms. Balan is amazing! Both acting & her looks! I'm sure she is a promising new comer.
Sarbrienna is offline


Old 11-11-2005, 05:22 AM   #19
KRbGA0Bg

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
485
Senior Member
Default
But Diya's clothes were too modern even by today's standards. I mean off shoulders & all. Did women in 60s wear those, however modern?
Hmm.......afa I've seen, not until the late '60s......until then blouses were all high-neck/bottle-neck! These were common again in the '80s........
KRbGA0Bg is offline


Old 11-11-2005, 02:15 PM   #20
evarekataVame

Join Date
Oct 2005
Posts
590
Senior Member
Default
The director has overlooked this point? Or could it be that the Brits left some of their culture behind, which was promptly copied by the affluent?
evarekataVame is offline



Reply to Thread New Thread

« Previous Thread | Next Thread »

Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:02 AM.
Copyright ©2000 - 2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2
Design & Developed by Amodity.com
Copyright© Amodity