English French German Spain Italian Dutch Russian Portuguese Japanese Korean Arabic Chinese Simplified

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Jai Maharashtra, says Gauri Khan

Share This Post

Gauri Khan is doing what she does best -- managing the home turf for husband and Bollywood Badshah Shah Rukh Khan.

While Khan is attending the Berlin Film Festival, where his movie My Name is Khan received a red carpet premiere Friday, Gauri was out Saturday thanking Mumbaikars for the overwhelming response to the film.

"I think the best way would be to say 'Jai Maharashtra'. We love Mumbai and Shah Rukh is really excited and will be coming to the cinemas tomorrow along with (director) Karan (Johar)," Gauri, with daughter Suhana in tow, told reporters at the Inox theater in Mumbai.

The movie generated quite a controversy after the Shiv Sena called for its boycott to protest Khan's advocacy of Pakistani cricketers in the Indian Premier League (IPL).

"I thank all fans on behalf of Shah Rukh and Karan," Gauri, who is the co-producer of the movie, added.

"MNIK" was screened in all theatres in Mumbai, Pune and across Maharashtra Saturday.

On Friday, only 13 theatres in the city, including six multiplexes and four single-screen halls, had released the film. The movie was originally set to be released in 63 theatres.

THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER REVIEW: My Name Is Khan

Share This Post


Bottom Line: Shah Rukh Khan comes to America (although in a Bollywood film) and shows why he is an Indian mega-star.

The thing about some Bollywood superstars is that they are actually fine actors as well as charismatic performers. So it's not surprising in "My Name Is Khan" to see Bollywood mega-star Shah Rukh Khan -- he's light-years beyond a mere superstar in Hindi cinema's cosmology -- challenge himself to expand his acting range and possibly his international fan base. In convincing fashion, he plays an Indian in America battling the double whammy of living with Asperger's Syndrome and as a Muslim man in the post-9/11 world.

The film is getting released in India, North America and many other territories Feb. 12, but its North American distributor, Fox Searchlight, adopted the puzzling strategy of playing the film out of competition here at the Berlinale but refusing to screen it to U.S. press ahead of its release. With Shah Rukh Khan as your star, you can get away with this since worldwide grosses for his films tend toward the stratosphere. But it's a pity that the non-Indian press are discouraged from shouting out the news about a film that delves compellingly into Americans' anti-Muslim hysteria.

True, the film veers into melodrama and contrivances in the second half. Yet its director/co-writer Karan Johar is, here and in other films, trying to bring fresh ideas to Hindi commercial cinema with a little less masala and a dash more reality to its fantasy stories.

Johar, Khan and co-star Kajol, who all worked on Johar's smash hit "Kuch Kuch Hota Hai" (1998), reunite on this much more serious project that finds Khan as a man with a disability who nevertheless wins people over through a loving personality that peeks through his emotional shortcomings. For the first half, the film plays a dicey game of skirting sentimentality without ever quite crossing that line into pure hokum.

Khan is Rizvan Khan, who is on the road in a quest to meet the president of the U.S. to deliver this message: "My Name is Khan, and I am not a terrorist." In flashbacks beginning with his early life in India, where a doting mother helped nurture and give strength to a child (played well by Tanay Chheda) suffering from a form of autism, the film recounts its hero's journey up to this point.

A younger brother, who never felt as appreciated since he was a normal boy, emigrated to San Francisco and achieved success. Upon their mother's death, his older brother joins him but the two never really adjust to one another.

Against all odds -- which more or less is the theme of most Bollywood stories -- he woos and wins the love of a beautiful single mom (Kajol). Only one problem: She is Hindu. The brother cuts him off, but Khan basks in the love of his new bride and her young son.

Then Sept. 11 happens. The film pictures Americans as unable to tell the differences between Muslims and Hindus or Arabs and Indians. Which is not exactly wrong, when it comes to certain redneck elements, but locating these hatreds in left-leaning San Francisco demonstrates a certain lack of comprehension on the filmmakers' part as well. Perhaps they just liked the idea of cable cars in their movie.

So a somewhat predictable tragedy tears the new family apart. Worse, Khan's wife blames him of all people, an exasperating plot turn that lessens her as a character and makes no sense at any level.

The movie then become a pilgrimage of redemption where the hero must fulfill his wife's demand to tell the country and the U.S. president that even though his name is Muslim he is not a terrorist. This has a certain Capra-esque quality so it might have worked, but the linchpin to his redemption seems to be a poor rural and black county set in the Deep South that defies any credibility whatsoever. These are also the only sequences that clearly take place on a soundstage set. Everything here screams: Fake!

Nevertheless, the film and especially Khan hold on to their integrity through conviction and warmheartedness. Without any gimmickry, Khan captures the nervous ticks and emotional barriers that an afflicted individual must battle against daily. It's a showy performance but in the right kind of way.

The production seems to grow bigger as the movie progresses as Khan's odyssey must include a Guantanamo-like imprisonment and a hurricane. Even Barack Obama (Christopher B. Duncan) puts in an appearance.

This is a movie not built for subtlety, but it does tackle a subject American movies have mostly avoided -- that of racial profiling and the plight of Muslim-Americans. It also allows Shah Rukh Khan to display his talent to an even wider audience. It's well worth the 162-minute journey.

Rating: 4.5/5

UK BOX OFFICE UPDATE: My Name Is Khan stands at £ 300,000

Share This Post

MY NAME IS KHAN should set new records in the international territory. In U.K., the film collected an impressive £ 164,134 from 86 sites on Friday [5 sites unrecd.]. Adding the Thursday previews and Friday business, the total stands at £ 290,627 [approx. Rs. 2.12 cr.]. The Saturday and Sunday business are expected to be huge.

INDIA BOX OFFICE UPDATE: My Name Is Khan collects approx. Rs. 8 cr. on opening day

Share This Post

According to our calculations, MY NAME IS KHAN took a huge start in the domestic market. The first day [Friday] closed at approx. Rs. 8 cr. nett, which excludes a big chunk of Mumbai-Maharashtra territory. Had the film opened smoothly in Mumbai-Maharashtra region, the business would've easily been Rs. 11 cr. +. For, the business from Mumbai city-suburbs and Pune plexes is generally huge and adds a big chunk to the booty.

As per early indications, the first day business is as follows:-
Delhi, U.P. and Punjab: Rs. 3 cr.
Rajasthan: Rs. 43 lacs
C.I.: Rs. 29 lacs
C.P. Berar: Rs. 37 lacs
Eastern Circuit [Bengal, Bihar, Assam, Orissa]: Rs. 1.10 cr.
South India [Nizam, Mysore, Andhra, TN, Kerala]: Rs. 1.30 cr.
Mumbai circuit [Gujarat, Saurashtra, Goa; limited release in Mumbai and Maharashtra]: Rs. 1.5 cr.

The exact figures from Fox are awaited.

Let the love flow: Shahrukh Khan

Share This Post

Shahrukh Khan has been moved by the incredible show of love his fans and the people of India have shown by giving an overwhelming response to his latest movie My Name Is Khan, despite the call for the boycott of the film from the Shiv Sena.

Though the superstar is in Germany for the Berlin Film Festival, he’s been tweeting his reaction to the amazing response MNIK has got at home.

“Power to u all and pray for our film and me. give our team strength to see us through this...let the love flow. hit us hard with it!!” (sic) SRK writes on Twitter.

When the media reports of fans thronging to see MNIK in India reached SRK, he tweeted: “I am humbled by this show of love & kindness. So don’t know what else to say. Overwhelmed & promise will make India proud with my hard work”.

An hour later, he added: “I realise today...I am just a film hero...You all in the theatres are the real deal. God, feel so loved & humbled. Hats off to all heroes.”

Mahesh Bhatt, others watching My Name Is Khan!

Share This Post

Shah Rukh Khan starrer 'My Name Is Khan' has become the buzzword in Bollywood.

Karan Johar
I am overwhelmed and moved to tears with all the support our labour of love is getting...thank you..Thank you...your hand on our head makes us.

Abhishek Bachchan
Wishing Karan and Shah Rukh and the entire team of MNIK all the best for the release. Its going to be memorable! Full on!

Vishal Dadlani
Funny coincidence, the 3rd name on the censor board certificate for MNIK, is "Rizwan Khan"!

Dabboo Ratnani
Watching My Name Is Khan at Inox, Crystal Plaza, Jaipur with Manisha Ratnani and my in-laws.

Sonam Kapoor
Got three tickets for the late show, thanks to SRK... Will be watching it again!! Brilliant...

Genelia D'souza
Hi Karan, loads and loads of love and only the best wishes ever, because what’s happening is purely unfair and I'm sure MNIK will still be the winner. SRK, just want you to know that we love you dearly and will stand by you because you are right and we believe you are.

Rahul Khanna
MNIK gets my highest compliment - it made the 2 hour drive to the screening well worthwhile. Congrats Karan, SRK and Shibani Bathija!

Taran Adarsh
SRK, Karan, Aalif Surti... 'MNIK' opens huge. The morning and noon shows are extra-ordinary. At places, better than '3 Idiots'. Wow!

Mahesh Bhatt
I have come to Fun to watch MNIK. My presence here should speak volumes about my stand!
The house is full! And the audience is loving the film. SRK is superb so is Karan.

Madhur Bhandarkar
Hey KJo & SRK, Hope the combo of you both works yet again and MINK be another blockbuster & rock the world...Best Wishes- MB

Farah Khan Ali
I am dying to watch MNIK and plan to take my son with me to the movie...Lucky all who have seen it

No trouble for My Name Is Khan on Day 2 of its release

Share This Post


ON A HIGH: A group of youngsters showing their tickets of My Name Is Khanoutside a cineplex in Thane.

My Name Is Khan entered the second day of its release on a much happier note.

In the absence of Shah Rukh Khan, his wife Gauri Khan made an appearance at many theatres in South Mumbai to thank SRK fans for their support.

"The best thing to say would be Jai Maharashtra. We love Mumbai and Shah Rukh in really excited, and will be coming to the cinemas tomorrow to meet his fans," she said.

Mumbai certainly earned the praise as it came out in great numbers once again, to watch the film with the crowds lining up outside theatres from early in the morning.

Most of the crowd was of college students who had bunked their classes to watch My Name Is Khan.

The robust security outside theatres still continues. Though there were a few sporadic protests in some areas of Maharashtra, the Shiv Sena was nowhere to be seen on the streets of Mumbai and the cine-goers appreciated the efforts of the Mumbai police.

"What is the fear of Shiv Sena when the Mumbai Police is there?" said movie buff Nirmal.

Clearly, the city has spoken is a very clear voice.

Shah Rukh on “My Name is Khan’ Role: ‘There’s Nothing Heroic About It’

Share This Post

Early in his film career, Shah Rukh Khan made a risky choice to play negative roles in the 1995 films “Darr” and “Baazigar.” It turned out to be an artistic breakthrough for Khan, who soon found himself center-stage in the world of Hindi cinema.

Today, he stands poised at another artistic breakthrough — making his debut on the global stage with his first film to be distributed by a major Hollywood studio, when Fox Searchlight Pictures releases Karan Johar’s “My Name Is Khan” Feb. 12 in American theaters. And true to form, Khan has done it with a markedly unconventional role.

Khan plays Rizvan Khan, a Muslim Indian man with Asperger’s Syndrome. Like many people with the disorder, Rizvan can’t grasp irony and takes people’s comments absolutely literally. He falls in love with Mandira (Kajol), a Hindu woman with a young son, and when tragedy strikes their family in the fallout after the Sept. 11 terror attacks, Mandira shrieks an ultimatum to him in a grief-fueled rage. Rizvan takes her demand literally, and decides to travel across the United States on a mission.

On the way, Rizvan comes across a hurricane-ravaged small town in the American south, where he finds he can make a difference and help others.

“Actually, the idea was to take a character who is considered by many to be less than ordinary — normally, we make films about ordinary people who do extraordinary things — and then let him do just ordinary things which would look huge for a person with this kind of disability,” Khan told India-West from New York Feb. 2.

“He does very small things along the way, meeting small obstacles, and he crosses them with a simplicity that’s very endearing. One of the aspects is that he’s made friends in a small town that was hit by a hurricane and he helps people out in the most simple way. There’s nothing heroic about it.

“We just wanted you to feel that just doing that much is enough: to be a good human being. That’s the message that comes across.

“You don’t need to be a superhero with super powers. The only super power you need is humanity. Just goodness. He’s helping people as his journey progresses in different places: he helps a prostitute fixing the heel of her shoe, from that to rebuilding somebody’s tractor, to just helping a little kid who’s gotten hurt on his knee. Small bits, but they seem very important the way we’ve done it in the film.”

Khan feels that Karan Johar’s filmmaking style will be welcomed by American audiences.

“What we have tried to do is to not just try and tell a story from Indian angle or from the way we narrate stories, but to try and speak the language the Western world is used to,” he said.

“The subject matter is rather topical and it’s a love story — which always has a universal appeal — and being shot in America, and having portions of the film spoken in English, helps remove barriers, too. It’s not such a different-looking film — it’s a little longer and has a few songs, though they’re in the background. Maybe there is a huge section of the Western audience that likes to experiment or see films from India. They might find this more acceptable than the regular song and dance drama that we do!”

Khan says he goes through periods where he wants to play it safe, and other periods when he is ready to take artistic chances. The “Khan” script came along when he was in the mood to take a risk.

“Given the state of mind I’m in, I can do a couple of films a year or three at most, and sometimes a story is told to me and I’m ready for it and I go, ‘Okay. This is good, I feel like I’m in this frame of mind.’

“ ‘Khan’ happened at that time, and of course the fact that Karan and Kajol and I have always dished out kind of good, entertaining cinema, it’s hard to say no to a friend who makes wonderful films with me and who is responsible for my career.”

Shah Rukh is ready to take on another creative challenge next month, when he begins shooting for Anubhav Sinha’s superhero thriller “Ra.One” in Mumbai. Contrary to past reports, the film will no longer be shot in Miami, since the city’s budget to help subsidize foreign film shoots has dried up.

“My kids have grown up watching my films and over the last four years, they’ve said, ‘Papa, why don’t you do a cool role?’” he told India-West..

“They feel a superhero is cool, a fighting kind of guy who flies and jumps. I think it’s only fair. I’m 44, before I break more bones, and injure myself further, I should quickly give it a shot and play a superhero. I’ll try and make a different film and make a statement with it in terms of the technology that India has to offer.

“Unfortunately, we may not shoot it in Miami; it’s too expensive to shoot in America. I may shift the film to London, which has subsidies for us, around June or July, but I plan to start off in India in March.”

For now, Khan will just sit back and watch as America, and the rest of the world, gets their first look at “Khan.”

“Karan has given me a great opportunity to do something as an actor which perhaps I could only dream of — hopefully, taking away the trappings of stardom from the characters that I normally otherwise play,” Khan told India-West.

“It’s not true in the case of ‘Khan.’ Maybe the other audiences will see Rizvan just as a character, and say, ‘Oh, this guy has done a good job.’

“They might get shocked when they see some of my older films,” he said, laughing. “‘Oh, he can do that too?’”

My Name is Khan steals the show as city cheers for SRK

Share This Post


Shah rukh Khan-starrer My Name is Khan today opened to packed houses in the city with scores of the actor’s fans wearing look-alike masks and cheering their way to cinema halls.

Many like Suren Laha even took a day’s leave from work and joined processions before disappearing into theatres for the first-day first show that began at 9.30 am.

“How does it matter what happens in Mumbai? What he said made perfect sense and we all support him. The film is wonderful and this has to be one of his best performances,” said Pratim Dasgupta, a city businessman who watched the film first-day first show at Swabhumi along with friends.

For theatre owners, the controversy surrounding the movie came as a blessing in disguise. “We have 60 shows in all four properties right now. There has been phenomenal booking and the weekend is a complete sold out. This morning, we had 90 per cent booking for the first show and the tickets for the rest of the day are sold out,” said Captain Virendra Marya, regional director (east), Inox.

'My Name is Khan' imbroglio gives Shiv Sena a bad name

Share This Post


Friday was Shivaratri, but not the Sena’s day. Cine-goers in Mumbai, which houses one of the world’s largest film industries, snubbed the Shiv Sena as they came out in huge numbers to watch Shahrukh Khan starrer ‘My Name Is Khan’. And that ended the high-voltage political drama that unfolded weeks ago after the Bollywood star voiced in favour of the inclusion of Pakistani players in IPL, leading the Sena targeting his movie.

But as Khan’s fans thronged the city’s multiplexes which suspended the morning shows in the wake of Sena staging protests outside the theatres, the battle was already won. Yes, the Maharashtra government made a serious attempt to ensure law and order by deploying unprecedented security coverage outside the cinemas and made many a symbolic gesture including the decision of the state chief minister Ashok Chavan and home minister RR Patil to watch the movie in a hall on the day one of the release, but ultimately, it was more a victory of the people than the state.

It’s however not the first time that citizens of India’s financial capital have fought back adversities and followed their heart. On many occasions, the entire country saluted the spirit of Mumbaikars who went back to work as usual even after they became victims of terror and flood.

In fact, it was not clear as late as Thursday night whether movie buffs would be able to watch MNIK in Mumbai threatres as multiplex owners were reluctant to take the risk even as more Sena activists were taken into preventive custody. Police even assured that the government would invoke the provisions of Bombay Police Act to compensate the victims and damages suffered to their properties.

By the time the movie was released, over 2,000 Sainiks were arrested as a preventive measure though sporadic protests continued in some part of the city. The state government used many other tactics to tame the Sena including issuing of a stern warning to Shiv Sena’s executive president Uddhav Thackeray that his security could be withdrawn if he broke the law.

In fact, the government had earlier withdrawn security coverage of a few Shiv Sena leaders who protested during Rahul Gandhi’s Mumbai visit last week.

Once the film was released in Mumbai after many a hiccup, the 44-year old actor said he was overwhelmed by the support of Mumbaikars. He tweeted, “I thank u all for this..apologise for giving stress over the last few days...& now truly know the meaning of being humbled. lov u all so much (sic)”.

Though politically the Congress scored a few brownie points by Gandhi’s stunt of taking a Mumbai local (train) to show solidarity with Mumbaikars, the Sena on the other hand was at the receiving end from day one of the controversy.

It first asked the actor to apologise for his comment which he had made in favour of Pakistani players before unleashing attacks on the softer target, MNIK. By the time the movie was released, the Sena was miles away from its own family members, RSS and BJP.

Even on Friday, BJP president Nitin Gadkari reiterated that his party did not support its ally in this entire saga of protest against the release of Shahrukh’s movie. Gadkari said his party did not buy the Sena’s slogan of Mumbai is for Mumbaikars.

After all, Khan’s magic overpowered the Hindutva bond of the larger Sangh Parivar. It is now left to see if MNIK becomes the genesis of someone’s identity crises soon enough. The imbroglio has already given it a bad name.

My Name Is Khan a never-before Shahrukh Khan-Karan Johar project

Share This Post


My Name Is Khan – the latest thing to create buzz in Bollywood. Apart from the fact that the film is a multi-budgeted movie shot in the visually pleasant exotic locations and that it is a Shahrukh Khan-Kajol starrer, what else can be noted as the positive points of the films? What are actually making the film the talk-of-the-town?

Let’s analyse…

1. Initially the hype has been because Shahrukh Khan and Kajol are paired after almost a decade. Who will disagree that they are the golden couple of Bollywood!

2. Bored of Karan Johar’s romantic movies? Try out MINK. It is way different from KJo’s earlier movies, including Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna.

3. My Name Is Khan has the main storyline based on post 9/11 days but presented in a totally different way which makes the main plot secondary highlighting the religion-bias, romance and relationship factors mainly.

4. There have been movies made on different disorders…Black, Taare Zameen Par, U Me Aur Hum etc. But these films have the tendency to have the spotlight on the disorder and to let the audience know about it. But MNIK keeps the disorder message parallel with the main concept and also lets the audience know what Asperger’s Syndrome actually is.

5. Perhaps the most important message…not all Muslims are terrorists!

6. And the heart of the movie… It is not that the King Khan has starred in the film, but it is because SRK is in a totally new image which makes you forget about the star and keeps the Rizwan Khan effect throughout the movie. It is the acting and the presentation of his character that Shahrukh portrays in a totally new avatar which overshadows his own self.

Enough reasons to watch the film, right? What are your views? Have some more reasons? Post them…

Blog Widget by LinkWithin