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Omkara

Omkara (2006)

July. 28,2006
|
8
|
PG-13
| Drama Crime

Half-caste bandit Omkara Shukla abducts his lady love, Dolly Mishra, from her family. Thanks to his cleverness, he gets away with the kidnapping. A conspiracy, however, forms against him when he denies his right-hand man, Langda Tyagi, a promotion. Ultimately, this plot threatens not only his relationship with Dolly, but their lives and those of their associates as well.

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Reviews

Perry Kate
2006/07/28

Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!

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Bergorks
2006/07/29

If you like to be scared, if you like to laugh, and if you like to learn a thing or two at the movies, this absolutely cannot be missed.

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Ariella Broughton
2006/07/30

It is neither dumb nor smart enough to be fun, and spends way too much time with its boring human characters.

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Fleur
2006/07/31

Actress is magnificent and exudes a hypnotic screen presence in this affecting drama.

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sid-coolking
2006/08/01

Saif Ali Khans performance was his career best...Konkana Sen Sharma was the essence of the film, Kareena Kapoor was average and Bipasha was great...Deepak Dobriyal was exceptional and Vivek Oberoi was also good...Naseeruddin Shah was nice in a small role...Lastly Ajay Devgn, who gave a knock out performance as he had given in the past and no one could essay it better...Vishal Bharadwajs Direction was excellent and same goes with his music...Film has lots of abuse and many people won't be able to understand because of the accent...Not to be missed and highly recommended...

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prashu_225
2006/08/02

An Excellent Masterpiece. This movie really made me proud of bollywood after long span of time. Although the story is an excerpt from Shakespeare's Othello, it has its originality and nativity. Vishal Bharadwaj had proved himself as a very creative and excellent director bollywood had ever produced. While watching Omkara, i really felt i was travelling through each n every scene of it, though i am a bit unknown to the very bhojpuri culture shown in it. The music had very much impressed me, every score was an appropriate one. Performances are what this movie makes great. Ajay, Saif have done a marvelous n terrific action and were applauded by each n every individual in India. Also, kareena, vivek were equally praised for their roles.Overall, I wouldn't give a 10 for any bollywood movie. But Omkara is definitely an exception. Its a 10(+). I have to change my mindset about Indian movies at least from now on(hahaha).MUST WATCH!!!

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Afzal Shaikh
2006/08/03

The first thing that deserves mention in Omkara is its authentic, carefully cultivated sense of place, as it relishes its location in rural Uttar Pradesh (UP), a dry, dusty land, distant from the first world civilisation that can be found in Delhi, UP's state capital. And Omkara's characters are suited to live on the land, wild and gauche, but also revealing depth and colour, modern in their own way, and speaking a mixture of Hindi with the local dialect, so much so it is hard to understand what they are saying half of the time (so for once even most Indians would probably benefit from subtitles). It is almost a place forgotten by time, and yet pockets like this still exist in the vastness of India.The superb location is telling for Vishal Bharadwaj's reworking of Othello, Shakespeare's famous Elizabethan play with its heady thematic mix of racism, illicit sex and power. Omkara retains the illicit sex and power, and cleverly adapts European racism towards African into India's residual but still rigid caste system, itself a racial system- after all the Sanskrit word for Caste is Varna, which means colour.The plot of Omkara concerns an extended family of dacoits, or bandits, headed by Omkara 'Omi' Shukla, played by Ajay Devgan, a half-caste who now heads the family by default as his father had no full-caste heirs. Omkara is a man of substance. True, he is a bandit who leads a gang of dacoits, but this being India, where there exists a nexus between politics and crime, he is a man of high local standing, and he is staunch allies with Baaisaab, a local politician (Naseeruddin Shah). But in India caste can still matter a great deal, and when Omkara marries the daughter of a powerful and proud local family of high caste, an explosive situation is narrowly avoided. Still, as the wedding is organised and an election nears, the situation is ripe for exploitation by Saif Ali Khan's Langda, the reprised Iago, a deceivingly simple lieutenant of the gang unhappy with his position.It should be clear that Omkara is not a traditional 'Bollywood' film. It is earthy, even grizzly, and shocking in its off-centre depiction of India. However it reintegrates distinctive 'Bollywood' elements by cleverly and imaginatively reworking them into the film. For instance, a brilliant 'Bollywood' song and dance- though refracted through a mujra club night.Moreover, Saif Ali Khan, Vivek Oberoi, Ajay Devgan, Bipasha Basu and Kareena Kapoor are mainstream stars and all are skillfully used, along with parallel cinema (India's Independent cinema) regular Shah. The cast as a whole give strong performances. However, Saif Ali Khan deserves special mention for rising to his role with such relish, matched with a deep insight into his character, the insidious, canny, deeply flawed but always charismatic Langda. My only problem with Omkara is that it seems to want to have its cake and eat it too. While it undoubtedly contains an Indian reality overlooked in mainstream Indian films, this gritty, though vibrant realism sits oddly with Omkara's visual indulgence, and the script's sense of doomed tragedy fails, in this one aspect, to modernise the original play, and makes Omkara seem almost fey and old fashioned. Combined, these elements of the film risk upsetting the modern viewer's willingness to suspend his or her sense of disbelief. Still, Omkara is a vibrant and original reworking of Othello in Modern India which signals the advancement of mainstream Indian Cinema.

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alkarania
2006/08/04

I always appreciate it when Indian directors try to make films that aren't just another tired Bollywood musical. There's nothing inherently wrong with musicals, but does every Indian film have to be one? That said, the whole premise of Omkara didn't quite work for me. Othello was a noble character - a soldier, a hero. You could understand why Desdemona would love him. Omkara was not noble - he was a gangster. Why did Dolly love him?It was harder to empathise with Omkara and his downfall after you see him being a thug. You wonder what the delicate and sheltered Dolly would possibly have in common with him.

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