Ram Gopal Varma Blog #178. Critical Point

IBN7 did a programme of having a discussion with me and the people coming out of the theatre after watching RANN.

There were a group of about 15 youngsters all of them having completely diverse opinions on various things in the film and I was reacting to their range of reactions. Just to hear in a group of 15 people one person saying he loved it and the other saying he didn’t like it so much, one saying that there isn’t enough of the media, another saying there’s too much of the media, one saying that the media is not shown correctly and the other saying that the media has been shown very properly was really fascinating for me but yes definitely understandable. That’s because each and everybody’s reaction comes from a space of their own sensibility, their IQ level, their expectations, their mood, and a host of other factors.

I remember the bygone Khalid Mohammed seeing “Satya” a month before the release and telling me that it was just about ok and for some reason he happened to see it again a day before the release and he gave it 5 stars. This would be because he saw the 2nd time in another state of mind or maybe he discovered something which he didn’t realize before. It frequently happens to any or all of us that we keep changing our opinions from time to time on many things depending upon our state of mind.

In the case of critics because an X or a Y who is also just an individual is working for a certain publication or a channel many of us tend to imagine that his or hers is the voice of many. But in reality they would be just one of the various people who have seen the film.

Enough said about criticism and critics.

My opinion is that for a reaction and a comment on anything not only on a film can only be reached upon only after taking into account the sensibility, the mind state, the agenda, the motivation and the background of the opinion maker. That I think is the critical point.

Just as an academic exercise I am posting 5 reviews of “RANN” here for you to compare the range of feelings, opinions and expressions.

Before you read the 5 reviews I also want you to read the views of some acclaimed filmmakers on critics.

Steven Spielberg
“In the days of Duel, JAWS and Raiders of the Lost Ark they (critics) often commented that my films have no meaning and they don’t reflect the world. And then when I started making movies like Saving Private Ryan and Munich they said I should get back to thrillers and lighthearted fun pictures”.

Martin Scorcese said this about reviews.
“After the reviews of New York, New York I felt as if the bottom had just been knocked out of me. Looking back I think what happened was that I didn’t know if I could ever make another film that meant something personally to me. That made me feel like maybe I couldn’t go out there and fight for a film like I did for Mean Streets or Taxi Driver or even Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore. After New York, New York I didn’t know if I had it in me anymore. And, if I didn’t have it in me, could I then become a regular director? A pro who goes in, not self-conscious, and who isn’t full of pride? But goes in humble enough to make a decent picture. I didn’t know what was going to happen, because I had spent a lot of time working on that film and it was badly criticized”.

David Cronenberg, the director of “Crash”, had this to say about criticism.
“I have a very strange relationship with film criticism in general and with film criticism of my own movies in particular. If it’s bad, I hate it, and if it’s good, it’s not good in the right way. It’s so rare that you get a critique of your film that you feel is accurate and so revealing. It has happened once or twice, but it’s more often the case that even the good reviews make you sick to your stomach because they are so wrong even when they’re saying good things. If I could avoid ever reading criticism of my movies, I would be a happy person. I’ve had the experience of having a great review for one movie and having the same critic completely destroy the next film. Then you feel personally betrayed. You know people say, don’t take it personally. Well, of course you take it personally. You’re making films personally, and an attack on those films has to be received personally. There’s no way to avoid it. You meet film critics socially. They want to be your friends, even though they’ve given you negative reviews, and to me that’s very perverse. That’s very strange. There’s something unhealthy, unreal, and inhuman about it. It’s an odd relationship I have with film critics, never mind the criticism”.

John Mctiernan the director of Predator and Die Hard, had this to say about critics.
“Critics are not genuinely trying to inform their readers about movies. It’s more about how important they are and that sort of thing. It also makes them vulnerable to manipulation. There are a number of people who invest a great deal of time in their press things. For a while I was this person critics liked. I was a young filmmaker, did inventive things, and came from nowhere. The fact that I was succeeding meant somehow that it was more likely they would succeed. That there would be air and life and new things in the industry, which usually translates to they’ll get a chance too. But now I am supposed to have become one of those horrible monsters, I work with the studios and I’m paid too much and I work on stupid movies. By and large I’ve been doing the same always as I’m still basically the same person. I was the hero then and a monster now”.

Rann
Nikhat Kazmi, Times of India January 2010
Critic’s Rating: 4 Stars

Story: Vijay Harshvardhan Malik heads a television news channel that swears by its ethical code of relaying news and only news. Naturally it begins to lose the TRP race to its rival channel that excels in sensationalism. The media baron’s ambitious son tries to win the TRP war by stooping to an all new law, ethics be damned.

Movie Review: It’s gritty. It’s grey. And it’s greatly topical too. Ram Gopal Varma returns to his let’s-dissect-the-real-world brand of cinema with the racy-pacy Rann that might run on predictable lines, nevertheless it makes for a gripping viewing with its behind-the-scenes dekko on the Breaking News, any which way, syndrome that seems to have overtaken certain sections of the media. And, like Satya, Company and Sarkar, which re-visited India’s mighty ‘n murky underworld through the lens of edgy semi-realism, Rann too rips off the mask of honest reportage from the TRP-obsessed television media that has fallen prey to presenting anything — mythology, folklore, fantasy and even falsehood — as news.

Of course, at the onset, we’d like to forewarn you: don’t go looking for some great revelation; for something new. Rann is a film that simply reiterates something you always knew. That, news is not always credible. That, the fine line between hard news and frothy entertainment is fast blurring. That, news is not brought to you by news hounds alone. There is a politician-businessman-news baron nexus at work that reduces the actual news reporter to a puppet on a chain. Not always, only sometimes. And `sensationalism’ isn’t only the new buzzword in the business of news; it’s fast becoming a synonym for it. Yes, you knew all that. And Rann doesn’t really want to tell a different story.

Where it does score is the way it tells the story: thriller-like, taut and testy. More importantly, it’s the performances that pump life and blood into the characters you recognise, lock, stock and barrel. The towering Vijay Harshvardan who heads the good channel is an icon and beacon of credibility in the cesspool of newsrooms that have fallen prey to unethical wheeling-dealing. He wants to stick by the truth alone, despite the falling viewer interest which seems to be gearing towards the rival channel run by Mohnish Behl who believes news is anything that sells. Honest big daddy’s biz mantras aren’t too popular with his kith and kin too. Specially with his son, Jai (Sudeep) and son-in-law, Ashwin (Jai). Unable to handle the competition, the duo gang up with the rival politician (Paresh Rawal), a wannabe PM, cook up some news, use scrupulous dad to telecast it on his channel, lending it an air of credibility. Bingo! They not only win the channel war but also end up bringing down an honest government. Of course, this apart, they grab a few 1000 crores from the corrupt politico as service fee. Anyone bothered about ethics here? Yes, the I-want-to-change-the-world cub reporter (Riteish Deshmukh) who still has stars in his eyes and morals in his blood.

Ram Gopal Varma not only manages to grab eyeballs from the beginning to the end with his taut narration, he orchestrates a veritable treat when it comes to performances from his ensemble cast. Leading the pack is Amitabh Bachchan, lending gravitas with his restrained portrayal as the media chief, making him almost noble and kingly. Watch out for his climactic speech. Can’t help but clap, can we? Veteran Paresh Rawal also revels in creating the picture of pure evil as the wily politician. But it is smaller players who walk away with your applause: Sudeep with his intensity, Rajat Kapoor with his snaky charm, Riteish Deshmukh with his bearded, clean-cut restraint, Mohnish Behl with his naked me-no-scruples mantra and Neetu Chandra in an itsy-bitsy, yet read-my-eyes role. Yes, Rann’s a riveting experience.

A word about Performances: It’s essentially an ensemble cast, where everyone puts up an impressive performance. Amitabh Bachchan’s honest TV media baron act is uplifting. Mohnish Behl’s unscrupulous media baron act is chilling. Riteish successfully tries a make-over as a serious journalist who believes the mike is mightier than the sword. Paresh Rawal is wily and fits the image of a corrupt politician. But it is Sudeep who grabs your attention with his shades of grey. Great act!.

Story: Rohit Banawlikar lifts the story straight from the here and now. Yes, topicality is there, yet the twists and turns are quite foregone. Nevertheless, the script holds because it is narrated well.

Dialogue: Amitabh Bachchan’s speech in the climax about clean journalism is the cherry on the cake.

Music: Seven music directors are credited to the Rann audio track, yet, not one song’s a winner. Doesn’t matter, because song and dance are unnecessary in this gritty drama.

Cinematography: Amit Roy uses his camera stylishly to create an impressive canvas that simmers and is permanently on the boil.

Styling: Straight out the newsroom and upper crust out of it!
Mayank Shekhar, Hindustan Times
New Delhi, January 29, 2010
Movie: Rann
Rating: 2 Stars

Exposes are cheap devices; explanations, precious. Most good art achieves the latter, great films do. This is neither an expose nor an explanation. It’s just an exercise in corniness, not very different from the subject of its scrutiny.

Television news, especially Hindi, has been diving deeper into a ratings mess since one, Prince, fell into a ditch in the early 2000s. Frivolousness is sold as news content. “Kaisa lag raha hai” clowns (like the funny Rajpal Yadav in this film) pose to us as reporters. Trivia has a viral spread. Even advertising is passed off as news. Certainly, this is a threat to our sensibilities. And these are serious issues. They deserve mainstream reflection on news-media as both a business and an institution. This film is about none of that.

It’s about the manufacturing of news itself: a Wag The Dog, if at all. The nation’s leader of opposition seems more the Pandey (Paresh Rawal), a municipal politician. He has for hangers-on a bummer for a businessman (Rajat Kapoor), and assorted henchmen. The Prime Minister could well be your local corporator. Mr Pandey plants a video, accusing the PM of being the mastermind behind a terror attack. It plays on a leading TV station. An allegation this strong would be investigated by the CBI; shock the state dry. Here, the talking heads on TV are bumped off. The PM conveniently loses his job. Leader of opposition takes over. National politics hasn’t seemed less complex.

For a film that’s determined to seek the truth behind the media, it’s unsettling how little they’ve cared to even enter a newsroom. An entry-level reporter (Ritesh Deshmukh) participates in policy discussions, fraternizes with the CEO, is sent out on assignments by the company COO. Crores pass hands to fund a new station, in return for a political favour. The CEO of the media firm is clueless. This could be a random gangster type flick – “dhanda par ganda hai yeh”! Since we know little of the underworld, realism on such movies is rarely an issue. My worry is, this silliness will be perceived as truth.

The hammy heir of this media empire meanwhile, the constantly sniffing leading man (Sudeep), comes in for unintentional humour. Bachchan, as always a stately, dignified presence, offers a moving monologue on the role of the fourth estate. He appears more a dramatist or a spiritual guru than a news-anchor. This final speech could’ve been delivered without the film itself.

Being a scribe and a film buff, journalism by association also, remains my favourite film genre: All The President’s Men, Shattered Glass, Frost Nixon, A Year Of Living Dangerously, Good Night Good Luck…I remember passing on a similar list to this film’s director once, when he’d asked if I could share with him some of the better movies made on or about journalism.

I suspect Varma merely watched Madhur Bhandarkar hits instead, and A-graded them with better framing, and Bachchan, of course.

Review By Subhash K Jha
Rann
Rating:  4 Stars

Think. Really  hard. What are we all doing with the opportunities that life  so generously provides us? In the mad  mindless rush  towards self-gratification, are we somewhere sacrificing  those values that brought us, kicking dragging and sacrificing  from  a hard-earned  freedom from colonialism  to  the new millennium where we, the collective civilization, are now poised at the brink of a moral disintegration?

Rann is that rare cinema  about the collective conscience which we often like to think has gone out of style.  Like Mehboob Khan’s Mother India  and   Hrishikesh Mukherjee’s Satyakam  , Rann  shows how  tough it is to hold your  head  high up  in dignified righteousness in a world where  ethics  crumble faster than cookies in  wide-open jar leftv out too long in the sun. Ironically there isn’t much sunshine in Rann. The film has been shot in an anaemic light, symbolizing a world that’s largely losing light.

Cleverly, Ram Gopal Varma situates his morality tale  in the cut-throat world of  the electronic media where  the TRP is God, and  deadlines  the devil. And may the voice  of the conscience rest in peace.

Without fuss or  wastage of time Varma introduces  us to the plethora  of  characters who colonize  the  bowel of  a declining   channel  run by the idealistic  Vijay Harshvardhan Malik(Amitabh  Bachchan) who believes there’s   room still for the straight and narrow  path  in a business where  grabbing attention is  the murder of  all  invention.

Varma plunges  us into the world  of  the  characters   that he knows only too well. The glistening sweat   on ratings-challenged eyebrows are captured through tight close-ups of  worried  faces that the camera(Amit Roy’s  sharply cruising  lenses moving from face to face  with obstinate restlessness) that give nothing and yet everything away.

The swirling swarm  of characters  reading, reporting creating and even manufacturing news, are so normal in their workaday concerns we almost miss  the  underbelly of  moral anomaly that has become a  way of life in present times.

As in  Varma’s Sarkar the moral battle lines in  the media-run tale of Rann are drawn between the idealistic patriarch and his US-returned hyper-ventilating son Jai(Kannada star Sudeep) who is  so nervous anxious and ambitious, you know he will eventually cause  trouble for his ideologue dad’s  news-worthiness.

Trouble arrives in the flabby form of a seedy politician Pandey (Paresh Rawal, re-embracing villainy with  lip-smacking relish) who  plunges into the TRP war on television with   no sense of propriety, legalese or the law.

“The law is made by people like us to protect people like us from being convicted,” Pandey pompously tells Jai before they both conspire with the help of a rival television tycoon (Mohnish Behl) to  trash the idealistic Harshvardhan’s reputation.

The plot  accommodates  more characters that a miniature touristic island in the holiday season (sans the sun). Not one of  the  characters need any explanation or occupy a  superfluous place in the plot. The narrative is taut restless and biting in its depiction of corruption in supposedly responsible places.  The artful opposition of real and doctored news is  planted  into the storytelling with  no  triumphant  flourish.  Varma’s concern for  the characters he puts on screen is  genuine  but non-judgemental. Each characters even the relatively-shadowy women, emerges as casualty  of   an over-competitive  society where morality  goes  out of  the nearest window.

While much of film’s inner fire burns outwards from the pithy and peppery writing(Rohit Banawlikar) the essential  core  of  idealism is preserved in the understated relationship  between   the idealistic young  rookie Purab Shastri(Ritesh   Deshmukh,eschewing comedy to come up with restrained and pacifying performance)  and his  mentor  Harshvardhan. Wish this bonding was built on.

As restless as his camera, Ram Gopal Varma gives no space to the complicated  labyrinth of relationships to grow . We are left to  gauge the depths and dimensions that underline  the furious flow of empathy and antipathy   between various characters  by reading between the lines. The first two-thirds of the narrative creates a gripping patchwork of television, drama and politics and how the three worlds often come together to destroy the basic fibre of  human morality.

It’s the last quarter of the narrative where Harshvardhan, after realizing he has been taken for a ride by his own son’s over-ambitiousness, that  packs in the maximum punch. Here Varma and his scriptwriter effortlessly shift the focus from one specific area of troubled activity (the  television)  to  comment  on the  compromised quality   of contemporary  life  .

Cleverly borrowing the  premise for its climax from  Mehboob Khan’s Mother India, Rann moves  aggressively but confidently   into its passionate finale  where  the patriarchal television tycoon  must expose  some  harsh home- truths to  cleanse his own conscience.Love for the country can never get dated when Mr Bachchan  is around.Even in  a world as devoid of human values as  shown in this film.

Rann takes us into  a  world where  right and wrong are more financial than moral issues, where the people who make news conveniently  forget  that the source is often the nadir of  the conscience.

Rann is a razor-sharp bitter and biting look at  the real world of  rapidly-moving moral issues.  Varma extracts superlative performances from the entire cast. From Ritesh Deshmukh’s  heartbreaking  idealism to  Neetu Chandra’s part as Jai Malik’s  secret Muslim love interest(the way Jai conceals her Muslim identity  from family and friends is disturbing and amusing)  , they all know what  the  director and his writer have set out to do.

As expected Amitabh Bachchan as the conscience of the plot, presides over the speeedened proceedings with a thoughtful and gentle performance. His climactic speech makes all of us sit up and think about the quality of work we do in order to keep up with the competition.

Luckily Mr Bachchan’s consistently excellent output is never dependant on the ‘competition’ around him. Ironically his character is forced to stoop in order to conquer the TRPs. Ram Gopal Varma who has been lately guilty of making fairly compromised films, rises above the morass of mediocrity with a meteoric force, letting other filmmakers know what he is capable of achieving if he sets his heart to it.

Rann defines the role of the electronic media in today’s context with remarkable virility and dramatic force. This is Ram Gopal Varma’s best work since Company.

By Minty Tejpal in Mumbai Mirror
Posted On Saturday, January 30, 2010
Rating: 2 Stars

More pose than expose

The emergence, over the last decade, of an aggressive electronic media with strong tabloid overtones, has been a hotly debated topic. Ram Gopal Varma, always quick to smell a stinky story, takes on this vexed issue head. Vijay Harshwardhan Malik (Amitabh Bachchan) is the venerated media owner of a TV news channel, 24×7, the news baron whose face  trusts implicitly.

He signs off his daily news bulletin with the words, Zara soch ke dekhiye. His own son, flamboyantly played by Sudeep, does think, but not along the same lines. For him media is about power and money, so he is worried about rival channel Headlines 24, run by ex-employee Mohnish Bahl, which is overtaking them every week, stealing their very TV show formats. Sonny boy thinks their channel needs to smarten up, but Paa just doesn’t listen. While Sudeep frets and fumes, turns out another family member, son-in-law Rajat Kapoor has ambitions of becoming India’s biggest businessman, by hook or by crook.

After that fine family, there are the employees. The corrupt CEO smoothly played by Suchitra Krishnamurthy, who sells show formats to the rival channel, Rajpal Yadav, who plays the resident news clown, and finally, new recruit Ritesh Deshmukh, who seems the one sincere journalist. Married to director Gul Panag, Ritesh sports a beard and drives a mere motorcycle, showing us yet again that honesty just doesn’t pay.

And then there is Paresh Rawal, a crooked politician who wears dark glasses and has red vermillion painted all over his forehead. As for the plot, it is fully Bollywood. Paresh, with help from son and son-in-law, engineers a fake news story which implicates the Prime Minister in a bomb blast. Amitabh runs the story, the PM is forced to resign and all hell breaks loose. Until intrepid journalist Ritesh investigates and reveals the sordid truth, giving Amitabh a chance to end the film with a long dramatic monologue on media and morality. Whew.

It is in the detailing that Rann suffers heavily. The spy cam story, upon which the entire film rests, is totally limp in its set up. Having personally been an integral part of Tehelka’s spy cam story that revealed corruption in defence deals, I can vouch for the fakeness of Rann. Though most of the cast, especially Ritesh and Rajpal, put in a good effort, Rann never quite engages fully. Most dialogues and news room set-ups seem imaginary; the camerawork is too wobbly and the background score is highly grating. Thus, instead of a sharp well-nuanced expose with fresh insights, we get just another Rann of the mill Bollywood movie, suitably rehashed. Disappointing.

Rann Movie Review in Glamsham.com
January 29, 2010
By Martin D’Souza, Bollywood Trade News Network
Rating – 4 Stars

One word. POWERFUL. Let’s hear a round of applause for a man who has taken much of the brunt in the recent past. RGV manages to catch you by the collar and shake you out of your wits. RANN is a powerfully etched movie, enacted with purpose by every member of the cast. It begins with the click of a remote and ends with another. A creative way to use the much-abused device within the screenplay.

Ramu takes care, to first craft each and every character, and then limit their roles within that framework. Not one character gets out of frame or does what is not expected of him or her. Truth is what we all want to hear and see but is truth what we actually hear and see on television, where TRPs are all that matters to channel bosses and ‘Breaking News’ the need of the hour? It does not matter how the news get ‘broken’. This is what Ramu is trying to expose on screen with RANN; the greed to be No 1.

Truth is all what Vijay Harsvardhan Malik (Amitabh Bachchan), head honcho of a television channel, is interested in. It does not mater if a rival channel headed by his ex-employee is forging ahead in the TRP race. He will not bow down on his principles. Viewer interest is first for him. His son, Jay, who has returned from the US, is all keen to see his dad change the way he thinks and catch up in the TRP race. His lust for the race draws him into an evil net at the centre of who is a corrupt politician who one day wants to be Prime Minister, Mohan Pandey (Paresh Rawal), and his own brother-in-law, Naveen Shankalaya (Rajat Kapoor).

Together they frame a story on how the current PM Digvijay Hooda (Alok Nath) is the one behind the recent bomb blast by getting his PA to speak at gunpoint. They record the shot and release it to Jay who impresses his father to play it before other channels get the news.

Purab Shastri (Ritesh Deshmukh) has grown up watching Harshvardhan on television and has been inspired to take up journalism because of him. Purab lands a job in his channel but is soon traumatized by the recent news. He begins his own investigation and stumbles on some startling facts, which he presents to Vijay Harshvardhan towards the end. The truth stares him hard in the face, but Harshvardhan does not buckle. He decides to bare the truth. And the truth sets him free!

Amitabh Bachchan and Paresh Rawal are the two pillars on which RANN stands. One an upright individual, the other, corrupt to the core. A menacing performance by Rawal. Amitabh lends his own charisma to the character, which identifies with the viewer. Sudeep as Jay is awesome. A complete actor. Ritesh surprises with his act of a besotted journalist out to uncover the truth while Rajat Kapoor lends that eerie charm. Mohnish Behl and Suchitra Krishnamoorthy both get roles, which are as powerful and central to the scheme of things. Neetu Chandra is proving to be quite a talent.

The background score elevates key scenes to lock you in your seats. Run to the cinemas. This one is a gripping saga.


Also I am posting a review of RANN by one Sukanya Verma on Rediff.com and also the comments of people who read that review. What I would really like to know is in what way any of those commentators are lesser qualified to write the review or in what way is Sukanya more qualified to write.

Incidentally she came twice to me to sell a story which I rejected.

RANN – Review by Sukanya Verma – Rediff.com
January 29, 2010 19:18 IST
Ratings: 2 Stars

The horrors of Rann.
You just can’t give up on Ramu, can you? He’s made some masterpieces of his time. Not just engaging, box-office propositions but genuine works of art. He’s influenced filmmakers, the art of story-telling, value of technique, visuals, background score and timing.

Over the years, however, his oeuvre can easily be divided into two sections — pre and post Ram Gopal Varma Ki Aag. It’s like the man is constantly being pulled inside an unending abyss of mediocrity. But like I said, you just can’t give up on a man like Ramu.

He could be the subject of a movie, perhaps a slightly dramatized, animated version of him like Ed Wood? Only Ramu’s not a bad filmmaker just an out-of-form creative. Alas, India doesn’t have a Tim Burton. Yet. The point behind all this scrutiny is Rann , at last, promised to be something befitting from the filmmaker. And, well, it’s not. What can you say about a film where the only thing in place is Amitabh Bachchan’s perfectly knotted tie? It’s like this. Stuffing falafel filling inside, a rava dosa might produce an exotic junk food fusion but confusing genre-styles in filmmaking can lead to utterly crappy results.

That’s one of the foremost flaws of Rann. To think it’s an idealist drama about a noble media baron (Amitabh Bachchan) unwittingly manipulated by an influential industrial-political nexus (Paresh Rawal , Rajat Kapoor sleepwalk through their roles of a corrupt politician and cunning businessman) with unconditional support of his own kin (Sudeep) to fulfill their greedy goals. But it is packaged like an out-and-out horror film minus the exorcist. For one, everyone with the exception of Ritesh Deshmukh (emulating Big B’s initial look and poker-faced confidence from Trishul), Suchitra Krishnamurthy (surprisingly restrained, fits the part too!) and Mohnish Bahl (plays it marvelously suave and sly), playing the good, bad and ugly of electronic journalism over-acts.

Pray, why does Gul Panag not screech a single line without raising her eyebrows till they cannot move up any further? Why does Sudeep play a media shark like a dope addict? Also, for a reasonably rich guy, he uses a noticeably down-market mobile model. His girlfriend’s (played by Neetu Chandra) sole utility is to model sexy lingerie and keep asking ‘What’s wrong?’ Then there’s Neena Kulkarni playing the classic one-dimensional housewife we’ve witnessed in many of RGV’s films. Worse though is that this is not much of a Bachchan vehicle as the publicity would like us to believe. AB, like us, is clueless about what’s going on and just steps up in the last few reels to shoot up the calibre of this otherwise hokum movie with his articulate presence and succinct speech. Although you can’t help but wonder how come a seasoned, dynamic professional like his Vijay Harshvardhan Malik is so easily duped into carelessly breaking major news on his channel without re-confirming or consulting his high-ranking team of editors and reporters? Also, while Ramu’s criticism on sensationalist media is pertinent and understandable, the concern is executed with such superficial, amateurish and half-baked views, it’s cringe-worthy. Instead, the spoofy bits that make light of the existent drama rendering headlines of Hindi-medium channels are far more insightful and funny. In any other movie, Rajpal Yadav’s over-the-top theatrics of a wannabe reporter would exasperate. But in this scenario, it actually works.

Coming back to the horrors of Rann, the background score is so dauntingly exaggerated and blaring, it’s hard to tell shocked from spooked. And the camera (Amit Roy), it’s more wayward than an untamed horse on the loose, especially when it goes on handheld mode. What’s stylish or symbolic about shooting two characters, having a normal discussion, like a wild game of ping pong?

My grouse doesn’t stop here. The close-ups! There are SO many of them. Fine, so our man loves to go macro on his protagonists but does he really have to make them feel like that annoying housefly on your nose?  I am quite sure a long shot is as necessary as Ramu’s need to focus on Big B’s biting lips, Paresh Rawal’s creepy wince and Sudeep’s fidgety fingers.

There are a couple of moments in Rann involving a seemingly anonymous call to super tense Sudeep or Big B coming to terms with the humiliating truth about his son are reminiscent of vintage Varma, Then again, a messy climax, witless and uninspired writing and shoddy, detail-free narrative ensure these memories are washed out as soon as they are formed.

Comments on Sukanya’s Reviews

Movie is good but not RGV’s
by santhosh gowda on Jan 30, 2010 02:48 PM 
Overall movie is good, but RGV needs come back movie.

Rann’s Success
by sanath on Jan 30, 2010 02:35 PM 
The very fact that Rann seems to be getting the skin of so many journos proves how well it has been made. For the first time have I seen a uniformity in the tone of reviews, and the common point that each person has very feeble points to try to convince the viewer not to see the movie.
I can still remember Raja Sen giving a 1 star for Bhool Bhulaiya and 2 stars for 3 Idiots and Masand demanding long term memory loss after seeing Ghajini – and to think the masses just loved these movies !!! Today a person has commented on Masand’s review – “I am happy and sad that I saw the movie before I read ur review..happy because I could see such a class movie, sad because I used to take ur word for granted, and now I wonder how many good movies I must have missed in the process !”
There used to be a time when we used to go for a movie for a relaxation after a hard day’s work without demanding logic for each and every scene. There used to be no controversies for every scene, and it was just a day out for the family. Nowadays, ppl tend to take the words of these self-appointed critics seriously and in the process cease to enjoy, and come back feeling cheated. It is high time ppl realized that movie is just a source of entertainment, a medium to entertain u and distract u from the other problems u face in life – Nothing more, nothing less !

what is it in reality!!!!
by Mitul Desai on Jan 30, 2010 02:23 PM 
Can anyone guess —- In reality, What / who are the news channels / media personnel targetted in this movie!!!!!!

Rann …It is for intlectuals only
by Nisha Goyal on Jan 30, 2010 01:31 PM 
RANN is only for intellectuals….

Rann is Excellent
by Nisha Goyal on Jan 30, 2010 01:26 PM 
It is excellent in every part.. great performaces by all, direction. back ground music & screenplay…what else could be in a good movie… Rediff is pathetic….

Re: Sukanya is inadequate while reviewing Rann !
by DEEPAK AGARWAL on Jan 30, 2010 01:28 PM 
“Imagine a film critic walking into a movie with a pre-supposition that she was going watch Mr Bachhan in the whole movie from first frame to last frame ! Can she be an objective and unbiased critic ?”
Well the way films publicity was completely built around big B and his climax speech i dont think that anybody’s fault….i couldn’t care for the rest of things tho..

Pathetic Review
by Don Kernash on Jan 30, 2010 01:11 PM 
Shame to this reviewer. She is into media and doing her best to stop people to watch the movie which has exposed their dirty news politics.

People dont listen to this crap
by binoy mathew on Jan 30, 2010 01:02 PM 
Have you all noticed one sentence in her review – (Why does Sudeep play a media shark like a dope addict? Also, for a reasonably rich guy, he uses a noticeably down-market mobile model.) – Cant a rich guy use a cheap mobile model, is there anything wrong with that??? Shameless and Brainless reviewer

Re: People dont listen to this crap
by prabhat mohanty on Jan 30, 2010 01:10 PM 
She has no idea how guys with pented anger against the system (here the father) acts. She misses the characterization that Sudeep is frustrated not able to realize his own dreams because of his father’s ideals.

its time to realize
by Mitul Desai on Jan 30, 2010 01:01 PM 
its high time to realize for ndtv & aajtak & for thier rude, bias reporters.

Re: its time to realize
by Nisha Goyal on Jan 30, 2010 01:28 PM 
You are right….RANN has exposed them

Re: Re: its time to realize
by Mitul Desai on Jan 30, 2010 02:20 PM 
the anger of bias media personalities is clearly visible even when they are debating or reviewing this film – it proves the objective of making this film.
RGV could had even included showing how the worst news channels are getting awards for best news channels.

Grow up and open up your mind
by Universal King on Jan 30, 2010 12:28 PM 
I think she has no understanding on movies. Seen the movie it is touching the sensitive issue. Great acting and nice subject.
Sukanya please don’t behave like to supporter of Opposition party. Go and watch the movie first.

Movie Review
by Gaurav Jhamb on Jan 30, 2010 12:03 PM 
Amitabh Bachchan is spectacular yet again, especially towards the finale. His speech and the way he delivers it are remarkable. Sudeep is terrific. To stand up to giants like Bachchan and Paresh Rawal is no mean achievement. Riteish is only getting better and better with every film. In fact, he surprises you constantly. Paresh Rawal, seen in an RGV film after a long, long time, is at his vicious best. Rajat Kapoor is incredible. Mohnish Bahl gets the role of a lifetime and he sinks his teeth into it. This film should open new vistas for him. Gul Panag is natural and so easy on the eyes. Neetu Chandra does her part well. Suchitra Krishnamoorthy is too good. Rajpal Yadav contributes to some funny moments. Neena Kulkarni and Simone Singh are perfect for their parts.
On the whole, ‘Rann’ is truly a well-made film.

This Shud be ur Last Review!!
by deepti ananth on Jan 30, 2010 11:56 AM 
Who ever hired u to write reviews, I want to catch him n beat him into pulp…
If u cannot appreciate a good movie,,then be it.. dont write crap bout it… I hv enjoyed every bit of the movie,, and all the Actors hv done a commendable Acting!!
Lastly, Go to Hell…

poorest review EVER!
by Chuck Kommana on Jan 30, 2010 11:55 AM 
Sukanya, one sentence – you have no eligibility to review ANYTHING, forget movies. Just because you know how to write few sentences in english, doesnt mean you can start writing CRAP. After reading your review, i get a feeling, either you are a sore looser or a frustrated woman in life. when you write a review, you probably should think there could be several people with different thinking read, and you have to address atleast one section if not more. You review is just a waste of time. Get a life… Grow up!!!

Fantastic Movie…Great Experience
by r nihar on Jan 30, 2010 11:52 AM 
I saw this movie in AMC Mercado, SFO. I felt awed and a very good movie. Not commercial not art movie, its totally in ramu’s style. Am not sure how rediff would give such a meaning less rating…am not even sure if sukanya verma exists and is real but your review can go directly to my Trash Can.. I would rate this movie at 3.5

Media is worried by Rann
by abhijeet kashyap on Jan 30, 2010 11:31 AM 
they are downplaying this movie, as this exposes these media people working

Dont consider this review
by hit N on Jan 30, 2010 10:53 AM 
Either she wants to become like raja seen to creat cheap publicity or they did not like the fact that this movie is against media.. guys you will not find good review on any media-internet site except site related to movie.

Billu Barber
by antipakanticongress on Jan 30, 2010 10:38 AM 
Wake up man, you are not writing review about billu barber.
Movie is amazing one.

Media will hate this movie
by ramaraju kalyanrammurthy on Jan 30, 2010 10:36 AM 
This review is biased as expected, media (every form) will try to showcase this movie as flop .I watched this movie I rate 3.5 stars.

Sukanya ( Get well soon )
by satish varma on Jan 30, 2010 10:34 AM 
Hi Sukanya,
After this review what i understood is you might be seeing movie first time in your life after coming from Amazon forest. I know how much pain it took for you to write bad review for good movie. End of the day you have to get your salary in your account from your rediff boss.
I understand you…….All is well…All is well…

movie is brilliant.
by uma prasad on Jan 30, 2010 10:33 AM 
the movie is sensible stuff. but i feel the reviewer herself require some sense for watching n reviewing a movie.

Reviewer doesnt understand hindi
by brookie on Jan 30, 2010 09:32 AM 
One thing is sure the reviewer doesnt understand hindi at all…. he/she must take a translator (rajsen?) lol… anyways if you cant watch a movie based on a sensible point, better stop reviewing it. Keep watch those khans and write loads of praises and ratings you *&%@*#.

Awesome….
by pavan datla on Jan 30, 2010 09:00 AM 
Rediff always lacks in the reviews….
3 idiots was given 2.5 and now Rann is 2…
I will not come to rediff for movie reviews again….i feel good now..

Its not ur mistake Sukanya!
by pranav jha on Jan 30, 2010 08:27 AM 
You seem to like only romantic movies. Being a lady, u r actually not expected to praise a sensible issue based story. So keep watching SRK movies and give them 5 stars.

look out for a new job Sukanya
by pranav jha on Jan 30, 2010 08:07 AM 
Guess, movie review is not your cup of tea! do sometging else that you are better at.

Excellent Work
by Sreyas V on Jan 30, 2010 07:59 AM 
Rann is one of the brilliant movie from RGV. Amitabh Bachan, Sudeep and Deshmuk acting is outstanding (of course, it is RGV movie). Technically the movie is top notch. Climax 20 minutes deserve to Big B.

Foff
by arun verma on Jan 30, 2010 07:40 AM 
We don’t need your F’uped review. We will see and decide.

Rediff is biased as always
by Krish on Jan 30, 2010 05:46 AM 
Everybody knows that rediff reviews are always against Amitabh. It likes everything connected with SRK only. Nothing new. Rediff never changes. You can find plenty of news praising Shahrukh Khan all the time. I watched Rann and like it. I never expected Rediff to appreciate this effort.

Dont be against RGV always
by medisetti sivaprasad on Jan 30, 2010 05:17 AM 
RANN is worth watching. RGV has put in lot of efforts in camera and screenplay. You watch the movie again to understand the effort and work. Or just stop writing reviews.

Throw this editor out!!!
by sandeep g on Jan 30, 2010 05:10 AM 
Rann is worth watching movie. RGV has put off lot of effort to bring media life on screem.Its quite daring.Please can somebody ask Sukanya to watch only SRK’s movie and dont comment rubbish.First of all she should understand that this is real man story.What business she has got here watching this movie.

Sukanya justifies and verifies the Movies intentions
by avinash jha on Jan 30, 2010 03:56 AM 
hahaa.. i heard this movies is about media hypes, irrresponsible media person and all!!
so doesn’t sukanya verifies the need of this movie with her irresponsible, illogical, nonsense review :) how true this movie is..hehee

Rediff Review!! Aboslutely disgusting!!
by Ramesh Menon on Jan 30, 2010 03:23 AM 
I’ve always noticed that rediff review is always nonsensical. Every review of Rann said it was a pretty good movie, atleast deserving 3 stars. look at rediff… 2stars!! I’m quite certain they gave “Blue” 3 stars… Phewww!!!

Sukanya I think you have gone crazy
by sunny mishra on Jan 30, 2010 02:59 AM 
Sukanya I think you have gone crazy because this movie is all about media Hype, negligence and irresponsible behaviour towards country.
You should better be in your limits and before writing these irresponsible comments about any movie or other stuffs you should think atleast 100 times and write. The people of India is very sensible and mature and your this faltu ke criticism won’t effect anybody.
My advice to you is if do not like any movie than sit at home and do not go to see them, or if you want to go than atleast take care that someone very sensible person is there with you who can actually guide you through the entire movie.

Re: Sukanya ! Your analysis is terribly inadequate !!!
by amotnam on Jan 30, 2010 02:43 AM 
Wow. I found your review better. Well i have not watched the movie, but i see nowadays movie critics are getting quite suave and are missing heart/soul of junta. May actually work in their favor as they look for promotion into critics jury board of national awards or filmfare awards or star awards or ….. God who says there is lack of employment

Re: Sukanya ! Your analysis is terribly inadequate !!!
by harish math on Jan 30, 2010 09:18 AM 
Lovely work Mr.Mohanty…i still have not watched the movie…but i was going to watch it…and after reading ur bisection of sukhanyas review i m going today itself…hats of to u…rediff plz learn something

AWESOME MOVIE
by Shubham Singh on Jan 30, 2010 01:21 AM 
rediff has dissappointed yet again…rann is an awesome movie with powerful performances from all the actors…but why will rediff rate it high..it blasts the same kind of media like them…show the reality..

Movie is good. Period
by Vinod on Jan 30, 2010 01:12 AM 
I do not agree with Rediff’s review. I just watched the movie and it was really good. Glued to my seat during entire show. Same goes for rest of the audience during the show. I cannot understand how the reviewer says everyone has overacted. Maybe she needs to take some lessons herself

what the hell is wrong with rediff
by yogi dattani on Jan 30, 2010 12:41 AM 
I just fail to understand wat pleases rediff reviewers?? i mean they are too much obsessed about what they feel the movie is rather than the actual experience is..cmmon now they gave 2star to 3 idiots and for some stupid hollywood movie they will give 4 star.. wat else do u expect..if u guys just dont like hindi movies y dont u stop reviewing it and let public judge the outcome..wat qualification does this reviewer has to review film?? has he or she ever made a movie..forget that has he or she even studied cinema academicalily?? dont write reviews based on your perceptions of how the film should be made cause you aint qualified to do so..

Re: what the hell is wrong with rediff
by amotnam on Jan 30, 2010 02:46 AM 
I think what rediff is missing is let user give their rating also and along with critics, you can see users average rating. For english movies, i always login to yahoo movies where i can see both users and critics rating. Funny it is, but some US movies actually dont send a copy to critics also ex slapstick comedies. And the critics rating says NA. Not sure if rediff critics barge into some theatre to do their reviews….hahahahaha…sounds funny and desperate if happening so.

Great movie!
by Madhwa on Jan 30, 2010 12:07 AM 
It is this kind of movies we need – to expose the “exposing” dirty, yellow Indian media! No wonder, Rediff put off reviewing Rann for a long time. Even before it was released, Raja Sen had already guessed its contents. As an eye wash, Rediff have come up with a lame late review of the movie! Pathetic rediff guys take money even from enemies of India to publish garbage. They have congress/left party workers as employees(Idont call these pathetic creatures journalists). Filthy rediff is feeling guilty after watching this movie. They praise craps like MNIK….

Rann is realistic
by rajeev goyal on Jan 29, 2010 11:02 PM 
It is realistic & awesome
Go & watch

L.a.n.n
by a a on Jan 29, 2010 10:56 PM 
if this was name will it be a hit or not

Re: L.a.n.n
by rajeev goyal on Jan 29, 2010 11:03 PM 
No need to change name
Rann is good movie & will work

I hope
by untu on Jan 29, 2010 10:11 PM 
more movies about corruption in media are made. Rann is an effort, a first, we must commend, but not complete about corrupt media. They [media] use other strategies.

Media is supposed to check the corruption in politics, but what if the media itself is corrupt and mixed with corrupt politics? What if the election is nothing but an agreement between media and politicians to split the post election loot of national resources?

media
by mahesh sawant on Jan 29, 2010 10:02 PM 
Rann is horror for media just because he has shown them the mirror .. how money control and biased they are ..how they show any non sense as breaking news for 24×7 .. how they work hand to hand with politicians .. media is no more the fourth pillar of democracy .. now it has became a virus who is slowly destroying it.

Re: media
by untu on Jan 29, 2010 10:05 PM 
Well said! I liked the part about fourth pillar.
We all need to watch this movie. It is time corruption in media be contained.

The best part of the movie for me
by untu on Jan 29, 2010 09:54 PM 
was when ritesh does a sting operation on media!
Sting those who sting others, awesome!
The problem with media is that it is drunk with power. It can destroy anyone just like that.

OHM what a stupid review….
by Siddharth Gollapudi on Jan 29, 2010 09:49 PM 
I saw this movie 2day…….nd it was quite good….nd certainly doesnt deserve the caption horrors of Rann………u guyz r writing absolute shit

Re: OHM what a stupid review….
by rajeev goyal on Jan 29, 2010 11:05 PM 
I agree with u

Corrupt Media
by untu on Jan 29, 2010 09:44 PM 
is the reason why Media Watchdog is extremely important.
Recognise yellow journalism, recognise fake reporting, staged reporting, misinterpretation of facts, slander, suppression of news/issues – expose and possibly sue them, as happened in US during the dark age of corrupt media.

To know more about corrupt media
by untu on Jan 29, 2010 09:37 PM 
Google yellow journalism. It was rampant in US during the initial years of media explosion – during the 80s if I am right. And now it is happening in India. How do we know if what they are reporting is true or false or partially true? How many of us do make the effort to verify the story? News is real time. By the time you verify the facts, the world would have moved on, but importantly with a lie.
To report the apt tagline of movie, hundreds of news channels, how many are telling the truth?

Re: To know more about corrupt media
by Vaibhav Rastogi on Jan 29, 2010 10:03 PM 
Thanks untu ! I was unaware of this term !

Please stop giving reviews
by Sudarshan Jasu on Jan 29, 2010 09:28 PM 
Dear Rediff reviewer, please stop giving ratings to new releases as you are posting this on your behalf and not on audience behalf. Your ratings and reviews are totally going wrong which is currently happened for 3 idiots and Rann. Please stop fooling peoples….

Rann 2…based on Rediff Reviewers!!!
by Rahul Balan on Jan 29, 2010 09:14 PM 
I have seen Rann n I really liked this film.It didn’t have any unnecessary deviations n songs r well placed for narration.It really shows how a media can influence the common man’s viewpoint n thus the decision.Now R:G:V shuld make a sequel to this based on Rediff Reviewers who R biased n going all guns against this film.Plus trying to affect audience’ choice by writing up such a stupid review.Plus the HEADLINES TODAY guy.the worst review ever I seen.H ebasically didn’t say anything abt the movie but just made fun of the title.It seems the whole media is against this movie for the very same reason…its subject!!

Re: Rann 2…based on Rediff Reviewers!!!
by Subbaram Ranganathan on Jan 29, 2010 09:34 PM 
clean adaptation of the novel’Almighty’ by Irwing Wallace….heheheh
Prof.Ranganathan, Pune

girly review
by Anuj Goyal on Jan 29, 2010 09:11 PM 
Girl u will love my name is khan, this is you call the true cinema, i am sure went over reviewers head. Well anyways, they must have potrayed something like Rediff’s gossip “sania’s breakup was a national issue on rediff”

Helplessness of common people versus Media
by untu on Jan 29, 2010 09:02 PM 
Media is the gatekeeper. What they report is fact and others, as if it didn’t happen. It shows issues to people in a manner that matches their agenda. And even if we don’t agree to it, we the people, we have no option. You send a letter to newspaper, if it does not match their agenda, they won’t print it. Electronic media TV, is one sided media. They preach, we listen. Even if they interview people, how many times have I seen people being cutoff if they disagree with media standpoint. And they call themselves as voice of people! Anyone fan of irony?
They like to criticise others but they don’t like others criticising them. They like it and print it when we say how great media is but not otherwise.

Re: Re: In a Democracy Media is the Dictator!
by untu on Jan 29, 2010 08:54 PM 
It should not surprise us if media gives bad review for this. See and you will know why.
There are lot more ways corrupt media operates than this movie exposes.

Rann
by logontoredif on Jan 29, 2010 08:32 PM 
the moive shows some harsh realities associated with media and their double standardness. Thats why they gave bad ratings to this movie. In my mind its a must watch movie

Watched RANN and I dont regret
by Abhijeet Shinde on Jan 29, 2010 08:32 PM 
Hi,As expected, suspected and…whatever..RANN is a good movie. Go watch and decide yourself. Its not Sukanya or Raja, Rediff is a Ramu hater. They like mushy mushy movies from Karan and Farah. They are all preparing to write a good review on MNIK.
Grow up rediff!!!

Donot Believe Rediff Review
by lakshmi rose on Jan 29, 2010 08:31 PM 
I have always seen rediff reviews have double standards. the class of the reviewers are of people who sit in the front rows and look for masala.
So do not believe rediff review. Go watch the movie.

Sukanya following Raja
by Anwar Ali on Jan 29, 2010 08:27 PM 
Sukanya wants to become popular like Raja by giving bad reviews to good movies. Sukanya you did it. The only problem is if you guys give bad reviews we rush to the theatres to watch the movie. So from this review I now know that RANN IS A MUST WATCH.

stupid review
by cattamanchi chaitanya on Jan 29, 2010 08:03 PM 
A review should be in a way where people understand .. what the hell of a review is this . I am sure this film will be good ..

Dont be surprised
by PicKool on Jan 29, 2010 08:01 PM 
Caution: Media or people working for it will try to bash RANN as it’s based on corruption in the media. Truth is hard to digest… isn’t it.

rann
by hitesh shihora on Jan 29, 2010 07:28 PM 
its excellent
4 out of 5

Another Best from ramu
by nalamothu Balachander on Jan 29, 2010 07:26 PM 
Another master piece from RGV, review is worst i have ever seen recently.
Make a Soul of encouraging good movies.
Think practically before writing reviews theoretically (mechanically).
Sukanya, For God Sake Stop writing reviews, please

rann away from sunkanya
by vivek iyer on Jan 29, 2010 07:20 PM 
rann away Sukanya…rann away as far as u can rann.

Must Watch..
by simanta talukdar on Jan 29, 2010 07:14 PM 
Sukayna: Ur review shows that u have a problem with Ramu. So ur review is biased. And to get a few eyeballs u have used words so that people come & read ur review.
Love to know what’s ur credentials as a film critic? I know there is nothing called a degree to be a film critic.

must to watch
by praveen muthanna on Jan 29, 2010 07:03 PM 
sukanya please go &take rest for one month. you are totally unfit for giving reviews in rediff. EVERY ONE REALLY PERFOMED WELL.BIG B & RITESH EXCELLENT.SUDEEP IS OUTSTANDING……

Title of the article shows the media face
by Ravi Shankar on Jan 29, 2010 06:48 PM 
The Title shows the biased view of the media. Media will talk about everybody but when you talk about media they go on the defensive

Please change your reviewer
by Priyesh Raj on Jan 29, 2010 06:45 PM 
I think movie RUNN is based on your reviewer’s story. They get money from some other persons and write irritatingly bad review of the movie. Please change them. First 3 Idiots and now RANN… when these guys will stopp… Wake up rediff

PEOPLE SHOULD SEE THE MOVIE, DONT GO ON MEDIA REPORT
by HINDUSTAAN ZINDABAD on Jan 29, 2010 06:41 PM 
THIS MOVIE SHOWS THE REAL FACE OF MEDIA.

its a Must Watch
by Abhijit on Jan 29, 2010 06:12 PM 
I do not agree. It is a must watch. Definitley will not appeal to the corrupt, ungrateful and the unconscientious. The only thing I missed from RGV is a great background score. else it is good.

ultimate goal of rediff
by shaikhhamid on Jan 29, 2010 06:11 PM 
rediff only wants ppls here to hit each and every article, and to keep them busy rediff even post this type of things…they knows very well that the moment they post the article ppls here will start abusing them….
and the article will automatically went to “the most commented article” category….:)
so guys rediff is smart and they meant busines…:)

Disgusting rediff
by sandeep g on Jan 29, 2010 06:10 PM 
Sukanya is good for nothing. This is a must watch movie.

Ohhhh
by Durga Prasad on Jan 29, 2010 06:09 PM 
This woman here knows Bullshitting.
Does not reviews here.
A meaningful movie given 2 stars.
Grow up kid–write better and think better.

Will she?
by kiran on Jan 29, 2010 06:07 PM 
Will reviewer read this discussion board? so that let her stop writing such reviews and misguide public

Rediff pays this joker for this shit
by shaheer shaikh on Jan 29, 2010 06:06 PM 
Rediff Reviews & sucks big time. Either their knowledge of movie is below average or they do this to draw attention. Every movie these jokers write off,, turns out to be a hit. They make a deliberate attempt to write of main stream movies and hail off beat movies even if they suck.

run for rann
by sitikantha satapathy on Jan 29, 2010 06:03 PM 
stupid review. A must watch film for every sensible citizen. kudos to Ramu for making such a meaningful cinema.

Horrific biased review
by Sandeep Gawli on Jan 29, 2010 05:57 PM 
It is a review which would not even get a single mark if one were to give points to the reviewer. It is completely biased, one sided and prejudiced. At times one wonders against whom are they so favourably disposed. Do these qualify to be called as mediapersons. Probably this movie should have been an eye opener for this biased, illiterate reviewer but unfortunately these people belong to the same band of media people against whom this movie is a bold tirade. Thanks to Rann such worthless, good for nothing writers can be exposed. truly Ramu you have exposed such reporters through your movie. Your movie is a success because of such reviewers/critics.

thanks again Ramu.. you had the guts to defy the norms and get out of stereotype and make a smashing movie like Rann. We are forever indebted to you to do something which nobody can do and i am sure this particular reviewer would give 3 /4 stars to typical candyfloss bolllywood brainless movies. No wonder she is devoid of brains..hahaha

Stop this utter scrap Rediif
by sayan mitra on Jan 29, 2010 05:52 PM 
I strongly feel that Rediff has hired specialized scraps for writing reviews …. when everywhere else its rated 4 stars or at least 3.5 stars (Times of India has rated this as 4 star), rediff manages to rate 2 star with some scrappy comments. May be this is how rediff draws attention & hence, very understandably, they are not in a position to gulp the truth about the media “nonsense” that has been portrayed in Rann. Anyhow, carry on rediff, you have a lot way to go … & keep on doing such brilliantly scrap reviews. This actually demonstrates that Indian Media is actually full of scraps.

It is great movie…
by Nisha Goyal on Jan 29, 2010 05:46 PM 
Rediff review is crazy & senseless….
this is a fabulous movie….RAMU has done great job…