Tag: cricket

Kantara : Chapter 1 – A review

One of my all time favourite movies has been Kantara , so obviously I had to watch any prequel , sequel or series (if at all) was released. That being said, I was not really in a happy mind space, before going to the movie. Luckily, everything changed once I sat in the multiplex, among the audience. (There was a silent anticipation in the theater, before the movie started,  probably because we were all waiting for the signature, Wooahh! call, by the Bhoot Kola performers)

Without further ado, let me jump right into the review.

 

Movie Name : Kantara : Chapter 1

Released On : October 2nd, 2025

QB watched On : October 4th, 2025

Starring : Rishabh Shetty, Jayaram,  Gulshan Devaiah,  Rukmini Vasanth and others

Directed By : Rishabh Shetty

Review:

The movie starts with the cruel king of Bangra, Vijayendra, who hunts down tribals and makes them his slaves in his kingdom.  Although he has everything,  he is not satisfied. He is after the spices found at the mystical Eswara Vanam, deep inside the Kantara forest.

Vijayendra, reaches the divine part of the forest, along with his probably 7 year old son, Rajasekhara and army following them.  The king and his army perishes, thanks to the Daiva Ganas in the forest, only the child survives, who later on becomes the king, played by Mallu actor Jayaram (My favourite).

Rajasekhara has ties with the dark magic users, the Kadapa people. Though his son Kulasekhara is born healthy, his daughter Kanakavathi had to be breast fed by a Kadapa woman, to cure her useless legs.

Meanwhile, the tribals find a newborn baby boy, seemingly with divine intervention, raise him as their own. No prizes for guessing he is Berme, our own Rishabh Shetty. He looks the part of a tribal, with raw power. (He even wears curvy, off-white earrings, which I later realised were probably the tooth of a wild boar, a subtle reference to the divine Varaha Roopam.)

The Bangra kingdom is now under the rule of a new king, Kulasekhara (Gulshan Devaiah), who is not much of a ruler. He is alcoholic, lazy, ignorant and arrogant at the same time. His sister Kanakavathi (Rukmini Vasanth), looking ethereal and exquisite is more of an active ruler.

The first half is about how Berme and his gang, ditch the forest, come to the kingdom of Bangra, learn trading etc. The fight scenes are interesting. There is a brief cameo by Rishabh Shetty’s wife too!

When Berme is captured by the king, we get to see Peppe, the son of a head port trader. (Sadly, the actor who played Peppe, Rakesh Poojari died even before the release of the movie, by heart attack. RIP. He was in his early 30s)

Coming back to the movie, the first half is rather slow and long, because, the director Rishabh had to give us an idea of the world surrounding Kantara.

Just before the movie goes into intermission, Berme and his friends come face to face, for the first time with Kadapa people. They are this gross looking people, whose face have more cracks than my feet. Their makeup is so good, I began to hate them, as soon as I saw them. (After seeing the Kadapa tribe, I understood what dark magic and dark thoughts make your face look like, UGLY!)

The movie makes heady progress, thanks to the closeness of Princess Kanakavathi and Berme. This triggers King Kulasekhara into waging a war on the mere tribals. He kills off most of them, but brings on the death wrath of Guliga Daiva, after killing Berme’s adoptive mother. (What you sow, is what you get!)

The next scene is what menace looks like. Berme transforms into Guliga Daiva and spectacular acting follows. (I would love to interview Rishabh Shetty’s costars about their feelings, being in the middle of his fabulous acting during these high octane sequences, I want to know everything!)

The scene that stood out for me is after Guliga Daiva leaves Berme, after the violence and all, we see Berme is shattered,  coming to terms with the deaths in his tribe. I loved the hopeless expression Rishabh could come up with, showing his helplessness. Bravo!

All this is a pre-cursor to the grand finale.

After being at loggerheads with the Bangra kingdom, the tribals of Kantara are ready to fight it out one last time.

This time around, the Bangra king has the help of Kadapa people, with Princess Kanakavathi in the lead.

All is well, that ends well. The final sequence is replete with many memorable scenes. Some stick into your brain, as if they were our own experiences. The hero Berme, is heroic, without being over-the-top. I can’t put into words the acting calibre of Rishabh Shetty. He is the soul of the movie. I like how the villains die in a jiffy, they can’t spar with the divine Guliga Berme!

Just like how the first Kantara made us sit up and notice, this one too forces us to watch it again and again anddddd again!

It took me more than 4 days to process the movie and form words for the review.

If my next post is late, you need to understand,  I am probably in my room, watching other movies directed and/or acted by Rishabh Shetty.

Can anyone blame me for that??

P.S:

1. I loved the screenplay. What will happen next, was my thought while watching the movie.

2. The attempt at comedy in the first half was unnecessary. But I am beginning to think that, that is Rishabh Shetty’s strategy, to give a slow start and end the movie on a high! ( even Kantara was like that)

3. While talking to Mr.Bee, I understood that Rishabh Shetty is to film industry, what M.S.Dhoni is to Indian cricket. Both are confident leaders and are willing to step up and get the job done!

When top order batsmen fail, Dhoni becomes a middle order batsmen and finishes off the game. Similarly, Rishabh Shetty finishes off the movie with his peak acting and fantastic direction.

4. I was apprehensive about Kantara: Chapter 1, because Kantara set such high standards, who knew if even Rishabh Shetty could top it? He is surely going to sweep the National Award for best actor and best director.

5. Let me add, the tiny detail of bringing important Kantara actors into this prequel too was a good touch. The cinematography,  music and VFX, take a bow!

Till the next post, cheerio!

The Unseen Bridegroom!

As I was busy surfing for new books to add to my e-library, I came across The Unseen Bridegroom, an ancient novel by Canadian writer,  May Agnes Fleming, I decided to give it a try. The title was interesting and intriguing at first glance.

Let’s just dive into the review.

Novel : The Unseen Bridegroom

Author: May Agnes Fleming

Published in: 1912!

Read on: March 1st 2025!

 

As I mentioned earlier, the title was interesting enough for me to download it, but it had an alternative title too, Wedded for a Week! If I had seen this other title of the same novel, I would’ve guessed it to be a story about some hot headed couple, marrying and divorcing in a jiffy and would have skipped reading it!

Anyway, the story starts with a millionaire heir, Carl Walraven, returning home to his widowed mother, after 20 long years! He ran away from home at the age of 19 years. I sympathise with the mother, who had to stay strong all along. While Carl Walraven is busy flirting with Blanche Oleander, to get himself a wife, there enters Miriam Dane, a gypsy looking servant lady wearing worn out rags. She threatens to expose Carl Walraven and his deeds, if he doesn’t adopt Mollie Dane, daughter of Mary Dane.

So, off he goes and brings home the 16 year old, golden blonde haired beauty, a stage actress, Mollie Dane. Everyone suspects that she’s Carl Walraven’s illegitimate child and still love her dearly. Carl then marries Blanche inspite of opposition from both his mom and Mollie Dane. (Turns out they were correct about Blanche, women’s intuition indeed!)

As a debutante in the high society,  Mollie captures the hearts of most eligible bachelors around her. Mollie is a loving and down-to-earth person,  but her only folly is, her flirty nature. She has Hugh Ingelow, Dr.Oleander and Sardonyx competing each other for her affection. She rejects all the three of them brutally, infront of a septuagenarian Baronet, Sir Roger Trajenna, whom she agrees to marry! She is in love with his title, money, social standing and old age too!

On the day of her wedding, she is kidnapped and held captive by a male in black mask, who agrees to free her, if she gets married to him! Within two days of captivity, she agrees to marry him. She is married off by a reverend (who was also forcefully kidnapped) and sent home within a week.

Once home, Mollie decides to find out who her husband is. She is ready to forgive her kidnapper, if he turns out to be Hugh Ingelow! (She comes to the realisation that she is in love with him during her captivity), but if the kidnapper were Dr. Oleander, she plans to kill him off, with Strychnine no less, since she hates and loathes him.

I am not going into details, but Mollie is kidnapped a second time, trying to find her masked husband and held captive again, the kidnapper being Dr.Oleander.  She is finally rescued by Hugh Ingelow.

The truth about birth of Mollie Dane is also revealed here, which is a little unexpected.

All is well that ends well and Mollie ends up marrying Hugh Ingelow.

What I liked:

1. The easy language and editing.  I didn’t have to skip any boring paragraphs or pages!

2. It tells us about the people in the olden days, their thinking and life before any major technical advances in America.

3. The 17 year old protagonist,  Mollie gets a redemption arc. She changes from flirty minx to a matured adult by the end. ( To make her change, the author put her through suffering!)

What I didn’t like:

1. The female lead is kidnapped twice, as if it’s normal! Was the period around 1912 not safe for women in America?

2. Mollie is forced to marry, which is regressive.

3. The description of the lead pair or the other supporting characters is not particularly good. I only know Mollie had golden blonde hair which was curly and that she is beautiful and that the male lead is handsome! With such description it is difficult to picture them while reading the novel.

When I read the Harry Potter series, I could imagine what everyone looked like and felt I was in their world, which is saying something about the author, because there were hundreds of characters in all the books combined!

P.S:

1. Just because I have listed some cons in this novel doesn’t mean it is a bad one. It only shows the evolution of English literature.

Jane Austen books are so big, with flowery language, that it gets boring to read and needs full concentration. But, her books are popular even now because of their ability to explain the people of that era in minute detail! ( Her observations are accurate and clever) Every writer has their strengths and weaknesses.

2. I have few more books of May Agnes Fleming and I can give better insight about her writing style, only after reading the other works.

3. Do you know about Stockholm Syndrome? It is the psychological state of mind, where the victim of crime such as kidnapping or abuse etc begins to sympathise with their kidnapper or abuser! It really does happen! In this novel, Mollie almost forgives the kidnapper, hoping it was Hugh Ingelow!

I have started watching a Chinese limited series and let’s see how this goes.

Till the next post, bubye.

Dadamoni!

As I begin to write yet another post, I am beginning to understand myself a whole lot better. I keep going back and forth between movies and book references in my life! ( It must be due to my upbringing, in a family where both books and movies were treasured alike!) Today, it is the movie influence that is apparent in my post title, Dadamoni.

Dadamoni is a Bengali term, where ‘Dada’ means an elder brother and ‘moni’ means a jewel. An elder brother who is as good/precious as a jewel! (If you have been Indian cricket fan, you will know Sourav Ganguly was referred to as Dada. But the original Dadamoni was the actor Ashok Kumar, the elder brother of the eccentric Bollywood singer Kishore Kumar da)

Since I am done with the introduction, lets jump into today’s cartoon…

The scene starts with an interaction between QueenBee and KBee. My aim was to teach KBee some basic words.  KBee had successfully repeated Amma, after me. Then I make him repeat Nanna, Anna and other two letter words. Then, I see GBee zooming away, running fast, passing us both, shouting at the top of his lungs ….

Jumping right away into bigger words!

Just when KBee was getting comfortable with two lettered words, I threw a bigger word at him, Dadamoni! (I am a para bhasha priya! One who loves other languages, more than their own. My bad!) It is safe to say that KBee found it difficult to even utter ‘dada‘.  He already calls his brother, anna.

Meanwhile, Mr.Bee in his office room…

Done with two syllable words already!

I would still prefer if KBee referred to GBee as Dadamoni, but, I am not going to force it upon him! Some words are just so beautiful, they remain with us. Dadamoni is one such word, which captured my heart, during my movie research, years ago.

Does anyone like Golden Oldies? Like the movies of Dev Anand, Ashok Kumar, Amitabh Bachchan, Rajesh Khanna and the likes?

P.S:

  1. My all time favourite actor has always been Shammi Kapoor.
  2. Dev Anand’s brother,Vijay Anand, played a detective in an old Hindi serial in Doordarshan, Tehkikaat. It was the first detective serial I had ever watched, not that I remember much. I hope to watch it again. I also watched Byomkesh Bakshi, a series in Doordarshan, starring Rajit Kapur and not the one starring Sushant Singh Rajput. (God I feel so old!)
  3. Some day I will surely write about all the detective movies and  series, I ever watched. It may end up being my longest post.  And, did anyone observe that today’s post has a lot of Bengali flavour!  😉
  4. I think Mr.Bee in today’s cartoon looks very young! I should have given him a stubble!

Until my next post, cheerio!

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