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Movie Review – Shor Se Shuruaat: Unraveling The Sounds

Sujatha December 16, 2016
shor-se-shuruaat Cast: Atul Kulkarni, Sakshi Tanwar, Sanjay Mishra, Rasika Duggal, Asimah Mishra, Chandan K Anand, Vijay Varma, Sahel Phull, Shikahar Misra, Abhishek Pandey Direction: Pratik Rajen Kothari, Rahul V Chittella, Arunima Sharma, Satish Raj Kasireddi, Amira Bhargava, Supriya Sharma, and Annie Zaidi Production House: Humara Media Labs (Preety Ali, Vinay Mishra and Pallavi Rohatgi) Duration: 2 hours 05 min Genre: Drama The greatest appeal of Shor Se Shuruaat is the simplicity of its concept. Seven short stories revolving around one single theme - Noise. Having watched short story compilations in Dus Kahaaniyan, Darna Mana Hai, Darna Zaroori Hai and such, we’re certain that Indian filmgoers are sufficiently prepared to receive anthology films. Shor Se Shuruaat, however, is an experiment even by Bollywood standards. Seven budding film directors were chosen and mentored by seven experienced and most respected directors in the business, to produce seven different tales centred on the same central theme. Starting from exploring the deafening cacophony in our souls, to understanding absolute silence from the sounds of sleep, to the repetitive noisy advertisements that punctuate our lives, these seven stories explore the auditory world that determines our lives.  Movie Release 2017

The Seven Stories

Azaad Director: Rahul Chittella Mentor: Mira Nair   Yellow Tin Can Telephone Director: Arunima Sharma Mentor: Homi Adjania   Aamer Director: Amira Bhargava Mentor: Zoya Akhtar   Dhvani Director: Supriya Sharma Mentor: Nagesh Kukunoor   Decibel Director: Annie Zaidi Mentor: Sriram Raghvan   Hell O Hello Can you hear me? Director: Pratik Rajen Kothari Mentor: Shyam Benegal   Mia I'm Director: Satish Raj Kasireddi Mentor: Imtiaz Ali  

About Shor Se Shuruaat

The greatest challenge of reviewing an anthology is that neither appreciation not criticism can be pronounced uniformly. While some of the stories like Dhvani and Yellow Tin Can Telephone are deeply insightful and rich in narrative, the others simply fail to leave any lasting impact. Some of them are futuristic while others are dark; some are life-affirming while others are damning. While much of the credit is due to new and upcoming directors, the touch of experience is also discernible in many of these tales. Having said all this, it is important to pronounce why Shor Se Shuruaat may not be a great success. It is not the regular run-of-the-mill Hindi flick. Nor does it come packed with star power, or for that matter, any directorial brilliance to keep the audience tethered to their seats. It is a movie made for an audience willing to experience sound, and experiment with noise, after having watched it. Shor Se Shuruaat is indeed a "shuruaat", a beginning. Not many directors, even brilliant ones, have risked exploring short films as a means of artistic expression. We’re hoping this will change the attitude of both the production houses and directors and the audience in India towards short films.

Rating:

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