Category Archives: Film Reviews

The Intouchables: A Humorous Dive into a Sparkling Friendship.

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The Intouchables, originally a French Film, a winner of 38 “Best Foreign Language Film award”, a movie based on true events, an intricately fabricated profound work of art, surely is a medley of sparkling humor, subtle emotions, and a deep dive into nature of human relationships. It’s truly an irresistible delight for the connoisseurs of the finest cinematic experience.

The movie revolves around the two main characters — Philippe and Driss.

Philippe, played by François Cluzet, is a millionaire, and handsome aristocrat who is deep inside a free-spirited, fast-paced, adventure-loving, energetic and humor seeking person, meets an accident while Paragliding and happens to become a quadriplegic, a person who is paralyzed right from the base of his neck to the last toe on his foot. Philippe’s life, now due to the helplessness given by quadriplegia, is limited to mostly the walls of his mansion, the routine care of doctors and caretakers and the pity of the rest of the world. In summary, he is living hell in the midst of his affluence.

Due to the consistent exposure of pity, dependence, and helplessness, he happens to devote his life to intellectual activities, arts, music, drama, literary events, and epistolary relationships (distant conversations with a person through letters only). There is a lot of insipidity in his life. His true innate energetic and adventure-loving nature is now lost, which he has now accepted as his fate.

He happens to meet and finally hires Driss, Omar Sy, as his caregiver, who is totally opposite of what Phillipe is from the outside. Driss is black west African. He is impulsive, he is uncultured, raw, reckless, violent, free-spirited, fast-paced, humorous and aimless person. He comes from one of Paris’s poor, suburban high-rise ghettoes, and is seeking some money. He has also been recent to jail for 6 months for robbing a Jewelry store.

In spite of two of them being so different, what binds them together is their total love for honesty of character, sense of humor and contempt for stuffy hypocrisy. And, most importantly, Driss is actually the outward raw and honest manifestation of the innate character of Phillipe. What Phillipe likes about Driss the most is, he treats him like a normal human being with all his arms and legs, he doesn’t pity him, he doesn’t make him realize of quadriplegia all the time and rather he makes him feel good, makes him feel lively again and makes him laugh again. The laughter which was missing in Phillipe’s life for ages. This becomes the greatest binding force in their relation.

Philipe shares that he lost his loving wife the same time he got quadriplegia and his true disability is not having to be in a wheelchair, but it’s having to be without his wife.

Driss brings taste in Phillipe’s insipid life. They both learn and grow with each other. Phillipe learns to enjoy the daily life mundane things apart from his literary and intense interests and at the same time, Driss gets more responsible and civilized in the journey!

Both of them have performed phenomenally. Their every action and expression is praiseworthy. It’s an epitome of a true and deep friendship that grips, holds and takes the spectator on an around 2 hours long journey of humor and subtle emotions.

An inevitably must watch.

My Rating: 4.5/5.

Chapaak: The Splash of Acid!

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“No death, no doom, no anguish can arouse the surpassing despair which flows from a loss of identity” and this is what an acid attack does to a person. Even the spectators of the movie “Chapaak” begin to feel that death is better than surviving an acid attack. I watched this movie with my parents and they were terrified of being the parents of a daughter.

“Chapaak” is a very good cinematic depiction of such a Spine-Chilling and Blood-Curdling issue. The film is based on a true story of Laxmi Agarwal who suffered from an acid attack in 2005.

The movie successfully touches the core issues behind such a horrifying act i.e. a conglomeration of Patriarchy, Misogyny, Hate, and Violent Tendencies. The following dialogue in the movie summarizes the “Hate” aspect of it. It says “Acid first dissolves in the mind and then it comes in the hand”.

While keeping the issue of “Acid Attacks” as the main theme, the movie rightly and meticulously also shows the inadequacy in jurisprudence as well.

The profoundly inspiring part of the movie is when after having suffered a terrible acid-attack the protagonist, Malti, played by Deepika Padukone, recuperates physically and psychologically and is ready to face the world with not only courage, but also with love and humility. It reflects in the following statement.

The kind of severe assault, Malti suffered with, can make anybody very hard-boiled, cynical, and distrustful, but as the movie progresses, the way Malti responds to various situations and the way she leads her life makes the spectator, fall in love with the beautiful character of Malti, behind the Acid Burnt Face.

If you have ever felt excruciating physical pain in your life, then you are bound to relate to the piercing cries of Malti, played by Deepika Padukone, who also co-produces the film with Gulzar. Towards the climax, just when you are beginning to relax your shoulders, the movie shakes you like a leaf, by portraying yet another gruesome acid-attack incident. This denial of catharsis is what gives Chhapaak its uneasy and poignant effect.

A must watch.

My rating: 4 / 5.

                              Laxmi Agrawal before and after Acid Attack in 2005.

Further Explorations

  1. TED Talk by Laxmi Agrawal “He Threw acid on my face, but not on my dreams”.
  2. Loving The Faceless: 26-Year-Old Champions Acid Attack Victims | Champions For Change | CNA Insider
  3. Acid Attack Victims