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J Neelam, Vinod Talwar, Dilip Gulati and Kishan Shah directors of the golden age of 'B-movies' take you for a behind-the-scenes look at the making of their films.J Neelam, Vinod Talwar, Dilip Gulati and Kishan Shah directors of the golden age of 'B-movies' take you for a behind-the-scenes look at the making of their films.J Neelam, Vinod Talwar, Dilip Gulati and Kishan Shah directors of the golden age of 'B-movies' take you for a behind-the-scenes look at the making of their films.
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Thank you Amazon prime for making something like this. I was never a low budget film audience and judged everything created in that era. This docu-series throws light on many ignored aspects like commerce, cheesy entertainment, employment, & passion evolved in making these kind of films. It was fun to watch behind the scenes caos and struggle to make a low budget film. It was also great to see Arjun Kapoor saying "yes" to be part of such a concept and supporting all films industry. I think it definitely elevated the making and the production value of the project. This series successfully managed to maintain the seriousness of the topic and entertaining.
I was not a big fan of 90's B or C grade movie but those films were certainly fun to watch. Especially for their witty and hilariously illogical dialogue.
The series which is created by Vasan Bala is about those B or C grade movies and their producers directors. The series revolves around life of four such directors - J Neelam, Vinod Talwar, Dilip Gulati and Kishan Shah. They are asked by the creators to return to film making after two decades and make four B grade movies, the type of movies they were making in the 90's.
This documentary-styled series is based on that only - it gives a peek into the lives of those directors and how they are living their life, which is not very luxorious. They are delighted as the creators of the series gave them a chance to make a movie.
The series shows us how they make movie with such low budgets and what are their struggle and with all these happenings, the directors discuss the business and politics that were affecting this kind of cinema industry back in those days.
I personally feel this is a good series which is based on reality and the lifes of four directors who were in their prime once but now living a low life. People who used to love those type of pulp indian cinemas would certainly love this series.
Even people who have interest in movies and how the movies are made, the ecosystem of movies, would also love this docu series.
The series which is created by Vasan Bala is about those B or C grade movies and their producers directors. The series revolves around life of four such directors - J Neelam, Vinod Talwar, Dilip Gulati and Kishan Shah. They are asked by the creators to return to film making after two decades and make four B grade movies, the type of movies they were making in the 90's.
This documentary-styled series is based on that only - it gives a peek into the lives of those directors and how they are living their life, which is not very luxorious. They are delighted as the creators of the series gave them a chance to make a movie.
The series shows us how they make movie with such low budgets and what are their struggle and with all these happenings, the directors discuss the business and politics that were affecting this kind of cinema industry back in those days.
I personally feel this is a good series which is based on reality and the lifes of four directors who were in their prime once but now living a low life. People who used to love those type of pulp indian cinemas would certainly love this series.
Even people who have interest in movies and how the movies are made, the ecosystem of movies, would also love this docu series.
Anyone familiar with classic cinema would love this unscripted documentary. More then recollection of old B grade in ecknowleged film makers it did had that touch of good documentary.
Story of people who once tasted success gone into oblivion and given a chance to relieve the gone by days I think it was brilliant idea.
I am sure many artists would relate with the narrative and lives of these four directors.
Overall it's a good watch maybe genz would not correlate but still it shows how trends can come and go. Anyways am I the only one who wanted to really see what these guys made in the end lol. I surely do.
Story of people who once tasted success gone into oblivion and given a chance to relieve the gone by days I think it was brilliant idea.
I am sure many artists would relate with the narrative and lives of these four directors.
Overall it's a good watch maybe genz would not correlate but still it shows how trends can come and go. Anyways am I the only one who wanted to really see what these guys made in the end lol. I surely do.
Cinema marte dum tak is a documentary series directed by vasan bala.
The interior of 90s bollywood was full-on masala, so is this series. The b-grade compartment really flourished in that decade, holding the able hands of j neelam, kishan shah, dilip gulati and co. This series presents a very enjoyable and pulpy side to a docu series. This not only throws facts at you but also narrates it through a spicy lens, mostly due to the eccentric quartet of director.
It talks about giving a status to the lesser known smutty side of bollywood but also recognized the problems. The public enjoyed it, it earned loads of bucks but no denying the fact that young girls who did not have an iota of what they are doing were forced in it. This is a harsh reality. There is a fine line between heroic and glorify. This series does show the quartet as heroes but never glorifies them, it celebrates them, their work but never undermine the flaws. And this is what makes it a brilliant piece of work. Hats off to vasan bala, the true lover of every kind of cinema.
I rate it 10.
The interior of 90s bollywood was full-on masala, so is this series. The b-grade compartment really flourished in that decade, holding the able hands of j neelam, kishan shah, dilip gulati and co. This series presents a very enjoyable and pulpy side to a docu series. This not only throws facts at you but also narrates it through a spicy lens, mostly due to the eccentric quartet of director.
It talks about giving a status to the lesser known smutty side of bollywood but also recognized the problems. The public enjoyed it, it earned loads of bucks but no denying the fact that young girls who did not have an iota of what they are doing were forced in it. This is a harsh reality. There is a fine line between heroic and glorify. This series does show the quartet as heroes but never glorifies them, it celebrates them, their work but never undermine the flaws. And this is what makes it a brilliant piece of work. Hats off to vasan bala, the true lover of every kind of cinema.
I rate it 10.
Cinema Marte Dum Tak (2023) :
Series Review -
Have you seen any "C-grade" film in your life? Why am I even asking it? Naturally, we have all seen such films in our lives at least once. I don't know where this idea came from for Cinema Marte Dum and Amazon Prime's team, but I just want to step back for a moment, think, and clap for them. Cinema Marte Dum Tak will introduce you to the faces who made those films in the late 80s and 90s and earned a cult following in some rural parts of India that are unknown to the media and other audiences. It's a hilarious docuseries. You'll have at least a couple of dozen loud gags and go gaga over the nostalgia that you now hate but once enjoyed before you started to understand quality cinema. That isn't a p*#n for sure, that's some adult stuff made with utter honesty forced by the circumstances of filmmaking: low budget, box office pressure, and personal life.
Cinema Marte Dum Tak starts with a quirky song that has lusty lyrics. "Pseudo Saiyan vodo Saiyan camera ka piche, thermocol ki vaadiyo me juice ke cheeten.. juice.. juice ke cheete." I mean, who writes such lyrics? The next lines are even more hilarious, and I'm not going to spoil your excitement. So, the docuseries takes us to old footage from C grade cinema, which you usually laugh at as utter nonsense. Then you meet the legends behind those masterpieces: Vinod Talwar, Dilip Gulati Kishan Shah, and J. Neelam. They start narrating their struggle, mindset, and efforts behind making those films, and you start believing every word they say because it's so 'humanly true'. The four directors are given a chance to make their last film, and they are delighted. The films' names are "Shanti Basera," "Blood Suckers," "Sauten Bani Chudail," and "Jungle Girl". Yes, you are supposed to laugh, and please don't feel awkward because those four are open hearted and too bindass to tolerate your shyness.
Created by maverick filmmaker Vasan Bala (who recently delivered a fantastic murder mystery called "Monica Oh My Darling), the six-episode reality docuseries is a first-ever peek into the dazzling and independent ecosystem of the 90s B and C grade pulp cinema industry. Co-directed by Disha Rindani, Xulfee and Kulish Kant Thakur, Cinema Marte Dum also features interviews of Raza Murad, Mukesh Rishi, Harish Patel, Pahlaj Nihlani, Kanti Shah and Rakhi Sawant, amongst others, who share insights on this lesser-known chapter of Indian cinema. The young Bollywood actor Arjun Kapoor also makes an appearance as a host in the final episode, where he makes those four directors speak their hearts out and share some emotional segments.
Luckily, I saw the first two episodes in a packed theatre with the cast and media-a group that understands cinema. I had a riot, to say the least. Claps, hoots, painful cheeks and stomach, and tears in eyes out of loud laughter. That's how I reached home and then saw the rest of the episode. The next two episodes also had me bursting into laughter. It's so much fun-chaotic fun, outright blasting fun fest-oh my my, how can I explain it. Then, the last two episodes. (4th and 5th) are sucked out of comedy as the Dracula/Vampire from "Blood Suckers" has sucked all the fun instead of blood. The 4th and 5th episodes are more dramatic and emotional-sort of debatable too-but that's what you owe them (the directors). All those rape scenes, ugly and obscene faces from low-budget horror flicks, juicy bikini scenes, bed scenes, bath scenes, and cheap dialogues from old B and C-grade films are there to make you giggle, but with a "bits" of extra (portion) nostalgia. "Haath me leke khada kar, chote ko bada kar." You'll also get adult entertainment as such.
Cinema Marte Dum Tak is a unique concept for a documentary genre, and it's unfiltered, unrated, and uncut, which makes it more hard hitting and real. You have to have some knowledge of that kind of cinema and the media headlines surrounding it to connect deeply with the narrative. But the main essence of Cinema Marte Dum Tak is paying homage to the people who were lost in the midst of stardom, PR, and front page material. The movies were dumb, but the directors weren't. They just had a specific mindset to make those films for a certain section of audience in certain districts of India that are far away from our modernization and urbanisation. Cinema Marte Dum Tak gives them a platform to speak up and open our eyes about whatever image we had created of them. As a whole, it puts you on a map of cinema to show the right path about where we were and where we are headed. Cinema is a medium for people, and people aren't bound to one category. Today we have multiplexes and Hollywood films doing higher business than our own domestic films, but there's a section of the audience who still want to watch the steamy stuff online. Back then, there was no internet, no memes, no Facebook, no tik-tok, and no Instagram reels, so they had to fulfil their thirst with these so-called "B" and "C" grade films. Prime Video has more subscribers in urban centres, but I hope Cinema Marte Dum Tak reaches those people who used to watch these low grade films in theatres and that their legends, ie. The four directors, get enough recognition for the work they have done. Let them meet their Rajkumar Hirani, Neeraj Pandey, Sanjay Leela Bhansali, SS Rajamouli, Aishwarya Rai, and Sridevi.
RATING - 6/10*
Have you seen any "C-grade" film in your life? Why am I even asking it? Naturally, we have all seen such films in our lives at least once. I don't know where this idea came from for Cinema Marte Dum and Amazon Prime's team, but I just want to step back for a moment, think, and clap for them. Cinema Marte Dum Tak will introduce you to the faces who made those films in the late 80s and 90s and earned a cult following in some rural parts of India that are unknown to the media and other audiences. It's a hilarious docuseries. You'll have at least a couple of dozen loud gags and go gaga over the nostalgia that you now hate but once enjoyed before you started to understand quality cinema. That isn't a p*#n for sure, that's some adult stuff made with utter honesty forced by the circumstances of filmmaking: low budget, box office pressure, and personal life.
Cinema Marte Dum Tak starts with a quirky song that has lusty lyrics. "Pseudo Saiyan vodo Saiyan camera ka piche, thermocol ki vaadiyo me juice ke cheeten.. juice.. juice ke cheete." I mean, who writes such lyrics? The next lines are even more hilarious, and I'm not going to spoil your excitement. So, the docuseries takes us to old footage from C grade cinema, which you usually laugh at as utter nonsense. Then you meet the legends behind those masterpieces: Vinod Talwar, Dilip Gulati Kishan Shah, and J. Neelam. They start narrating their struggle, mindset, and efforts behind making those films, and you start believing every word they say because it's so 'humanly true'. The four directors are given a chance to make their last film, and they are delighted. The films' names are "Shanti Basera," "Blood Suckers," "Sauten Bani Chudail," and "Jungle Girl". Yes, you are supposed to laugh, and please don't feel awkward because those four are open hearted and too bindass to tolerate your shyness.
Created by maverick filmmaker Vasan Bala (who recently delivered a fantastic murder mystery called "Monica Oh My Darling), the six-episode reality docuseries is a first-ever peek into the dazzling and independent ecosystem of the 90s B and C grade pulp cinema industry. Co-directed by Disha Rindani, Xulfee and Kulish Kant Thakur, Cinema Marte Dum also features interviews of Raza Murad, Mukesh Rishi, Harish Patel, Pahlaj Nihlani, Kanti Shah and Rakhi Sawant, amongst others, who share insights on this lesser-known chapter of Indian cinema. The young Bollywood actor Arjun Kapoor also makes an appearance as a host in the final episode, where he makes those four directors speak their hearts out and share some emotional segments.
Luckily, I saw the first two episodes in a packed theatre with the cast and media-a group that understands cinema. I had a riot, to say the least. Claps, hoots, painful cheeks and stomach, and tears in eyes out of loud laughter. That's how I reached home and then saw the rest of the episode. The next two episodes also had me bursting into laughter. It's so much fun-chaotic fun, outright blasting fun fest-oh my my, how can I explain it. Then, the last two episodes. (4th and 5th) are sucked out of comedy as the Dracula/Vampire from "Blood Suckers" has sucked all the fun instead of blood. The 4th and 5th episodes are more dramatic and emotional-sort of debatable too-but that's what you owe them (the directors). All those rape scenes, ugly and obscene faces from low-budget horror flicks, juicy bikini scenes, bed scenes, bath scenes, and cheap dialogues from old B and C-grade films are there to make you giggle, but with a "bits" of extra (portion) nostalgia. "Haath me leke khada kar, chote ko bada kar." You'll also get adult entertainment as such.
Cinema Marte Dum Tak is a unique concept for a documentary genre, and it's unfiltered, unrated, and uncut, which makes it more hard hitting and real. You have to have some knowledge of that kind of cinema and the media headlines surrounding it to connect deeply with the narrative. But the main essence of Cinema Marte Dum Tak is paying homage to the people who were lost in the midst of stardom, PR, and front page material. The movies were dumb, but the directors weren't. They just had a specific mindset to make those films for a certain section of audience in certain districts of India that are far away from our modernization and urbanisation. Cinema Marte Dum Tak gives them a platform to speak up and open our eyes about whatever image we had created of them. As a whole, it puts you on a map of cinema to show the right path about where we were and where we are headed. Cinema is a medium for people, and people aren't bound to one category. Today we have multiplexes and Hollywood films doing higher business than our own domestic films, but there's a section of the audience who still want to watch the steamy stuff online. Back then, there was no internet, no memes, no Facebook, no tik-tok, and no Instagram reels, so they had to fulfil their thirst with these so-called "B" and "C" grade films. Prime Video has more subscribers in urban centres, but I hope Cinema Marte Dum Tak reaches those people who used to watch these low grade films in theatres and that their legends, ie. The four directors, get enough recognition for the work they have done. Let them meet their Rajkumar Hirani, Neeraj Pandey, Sanjay Leela Bhansali, SS Rajamouli, Aishwarya Rai, and Sridevi.
RATING - 6/10*
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