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Leela

Leela (2002)

January. 01,2002
|
6.5
| Drama Romance

Leela is the story of Leela, an aware, liberal woman who struggles with the true meaning of independence. It is also the story of Krishna, born of Indian parents in America but uncomfortable with his hyphenated existence. Leela then is a universal story of two paths that cross each other and pause a moment before moving on.

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Reviews

Hellen
2002/01/01

I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much

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GazerRise
2002/01/02

Fantastic!

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Senteur
2002/01/03

As somebody who had not heard any of this before, it became a curious phenomenon to sit and watch a film and slowly have the realities begin to click into place.

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Justina
2002/01/04

The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.

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Pro Jury
2002/01/05

*** This comment contains spoilers. *** LEELA (2002) is a modern day (India) Indian-in-America movie. LEELA attempts to have a realistic plot played out in a realistic manner. The film seeks to have common real-life dialog. The film tries to have the highest level of competent visual direction. LEELA tries to be great in every way. Sadly, this good intentioned movie pretty much fails across the board.As a modern drama, LEELA is not horrible, but it is also no where near great either. LEELA rates above a student film, but below a Hollywood level production. LEELA is missing dry, sober, real-life dialog at moments when it needs it most. Maybe the script is fine at these moments, but the delivery is just not realistic. No raw emotion.The condom-walk-into-the-room segment was the weakest scene among many. There were no great slice of life scenes, in my opinion.

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twenty_one_grams
2002/01/06

I really won't take this flick to be mere one of the kinds which come under the category of ABCD, Flavours and other contemporaries. Take it as a story and you will appreciate as how subtly it puts across a narration which is so very engrossing and emotional. Every character has been beautifully etched out. Leela (Dimple) wants to be more than a muse to her flamboyant husband. She decides to give meaning to her living and get in connection with herself. She goes to States as lecturer in one of University. Meets Kris. He may be one of those cliché characters, but wait and you'll find him having restrained sensibilities. And then there is Chaitali (Deepti Naval) estranged from her ex, having a boy friend whom she veils from her own son Kris for she does not want to be looked down upon her own son. Then there is this tumultuous relation between Naushad and Leela where latter finds solace in Kris. Kris is devastated to find hypocrisy of her mother. Chaitali embroils finding a relation between aged Leela and her son Kris. The story works on so many layers. And the lines in the beginning encapsulate every emotion entailed "once touched by fire, nothing remains same". Look for few scenes which are so mesmerizing. When Kris confronts Naushad for ill treating Leela and trying to justifying his love for Leela. And Naushad retorts back with determination in wow that he and Leela have sacred. Look for climax where Leela tries to justify herself to be neither a creation of Naushad or muse of Kris. Chaitali and Kris coming closer and redefining relationship between them. This is rare of cases that you get to see narration with beautiful songs interspersed composed by Jagjit Singh and written by Gulzar. Every composition stands out and has a depth of its own. Renditions by Subha Mudgal and Jagjit Singh bring out emotions of characters wonderfully. Direction and narration is something to look forward to. The story has this subtle content to it. The urdu diction by Vinod Khanna is perfect. He looks flamboyant and devoted husband at same time. Dimple and Deepti have such gravity to their performances. This movie heralds a new beginning where characters are more real and plausible. I hope to see more of these kinds in year to come. But then Somnath next venture was not well received at Osean's Film Festival in Delhi 2005.

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abhi-9
2002/01/07

This seemed to be a good movie, I thought it would be a good movie, and throughout the movie I was hoping it would be a meaningful use of my time, and yes, I have to admit that the acting talent of Dimple Kapadia and Deepti Naval where truly commendable, but despite the best effort this movie falls short of effectively conveying a meaningful message, which it seems is it seemed was what Somnath Sen is trying to do. The final point comes short and the ending seemed kind of unsatisfactory after all that happens; a bit like real life in that respect but movies unlike real life ends in about 2hrs and the ending should leave the audience satisfied, if indeed that was the director's intention. This falls short in that respect and that is what disappoints me the most.Another aspect that concerned me was the national stereo-typing of the American characters - they all seem to be carved out of the same block. Seems to me that most American characters in Indian English movies are based upon how common Indians themselves perceive Americans to be like and it is clear that no effort has been made to bring any sense of depth or complexity to any American in the movie.These two aspects put together they make for a disappointing story.

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Jugu Abraham
2002/01/08

I do not know anything about Somnath Sen, the director of the film. If this is indeed his first film, I congratulate him for pulling together a good cast and some fine production quality that lifts up the film.However, the script is nothing more than a reworking of "40 carats" and/or "Summer of '42". If the film is aimed at the Indian or South Asian community in Asia, the film will draw some attention. This is because the line up of the commercially accepted Indian movie actors--Dimple Kapadia, Deepti Naval and Vinod Khanna--will pull the crowds out of curiosity to see them act in an English movie. Compared to an average Indian film, the camerawork, editing, and music of this US film are all used with considerable finesse. Sen's work stands out for these factors not the screenplay, the performances or the story. Ms Kapadia and Ms Naval prop up the film as they are both beautiful and evidently quite talented. I wish they could act in films of some top-notch European director!

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