Nachdem sie ihrer Kinderhochzeit entflohen ist, muss sich eine junge Clubtänzerin, die auf den Straßen Bombays lebt, entscheiden, ob sie für ihre Familie sorgen oder der Liebe eines jungen M... Alles lesenNachdem sie ihrer Kinderhochzeit entflohen ist, muss sich eine junge Clubtänzerin, die auf den Straßen Bombays lebt, entscheiden, ob sie für ihre Familie sorgen oder der Liebe eines jungen Mannes nachgeben soll, der eine Kriegswaise ist.Nachdem sie ihrer Kinderhochzeit entflohen ist, muss sich eine junge Clubtänzerin, die auf den Straßen Bombays lebt, entscheiden, ob sie für ihre Familie sorgen oder der Liebe eines jungen Mannes nachgeben soll, der eine Kriegswaise ist.
- Auszeichnungen
- 4 Gewinne & 11 Nominierungen insgesamt
Cyli Khare
- Kamala
- (Synchronisation)
Amit Deondi
- Salim
- (Synchronisation)
Gargi Shitole
- Tara
- (Synchronisation)
Makrand Deshpande
- Mike
- (Synchronisation)
- …
Amardeep Jha
- Ms. D'Souza
- (Synchronisation)
Virendra Saxena
- Kamala's Grandfather
- (Synchronisation)
Shishir Sharma
- Anthony Pereira
- (Synchronisation)
Rajeev Raj
- Mishra Ji
- (Synchronisation)
Anurag Kashyap
- Raja Khan
- (Synchronisation)
Geetanjali Kulkarni
- Flower Seller
- (Synchronisation)
- …
Empfohlene Bewertungen
The Best thing of this film is that it is fully an Indian film in every aspect. It's designed beautifully by Gitanjali Rao. This movie gave me a nostalgic feeling. Because the animation used here is very similar to 'Krish Trish and Baltiboy' that I used to watch everyday in childhood. Every character is written very well. I fall in love with the character of TARA. The movie touched many social elements like poverty, child labour and also Kashmir issue.
One word that can describe this film is - BEAUTIFUL.
Available On Netflix.
© MandalBros.
One word that can describe this film is - BEAUTIFUL.
Available On Netflix.
© MandalBros.
Awesome innovative animation painted frame by frame, and a moving Romeo-and-Juliet-like story addressing several important elements such as labor issues (in a broad range of positions in productive chain: street commerce, child labor, increasingly extinct artisan craft, work in illegal dance bars...), religious conflicts, and cruel tradition of forced marriage for girls. The film may be summarized by the director Gitanjali Rao herself: it portrays street dwellers in Bombay, living in a day-to-day struggle for survival, steeped in deprivation, facing homelessness and lacking basic human rights, and Bollywood magic world is a way to escape and forget reality.
3.5
A visual treat. The animation is gorgeous and seamless. Each frame is a painted canvas. Very original. Can't rave more about it!
Music is very good. The characters are from real life and each has a backstory. Bombay (now Mumbai) is also a character in itself with its sea, its sub-cultures and its festival celebrations. The stories are not of the city's residents, but have been told from the perspective of the migrants who come to the city in search of work.
The ending is not good though, almost caricature-like and abrupt.
The relationship between the main leads Salim and Kamala remained unexpolred and seems more like infatuation at times.
I wanted to see more of the little girl's and that mute child's friendship . It was more adorable than the other stories.
Music is very good. The characters are from real life and each has a backstory. Bombay (now Mumbai) is also a character in itself with its sea, its sub-cultures and its festival celebrations. The stories are not of the city's residents, but have been told from the perspective of the migrants who come to the city in search of work.
The ending is not good though, almost caricature-like and abrupt.
The relationship between the main leads Salim and Kamala remained unexpolred and seems more like infatuation at times.
I wanted to see more of the little girl's and that mute child's friendship . It was more adorable than the other stories.
There is an idea posited by many philosophers that women think through their bodies. Filmmaker Gitanjali Rao explores this idea and others in her debut animated feature, Bombay Rose, which tells a story of forbidden love between young dancer Kamala and Salim, a Kashmiri orphan on the streets of Bombay.
The power of the female gaze is evident throughout the film, and it is this that enables Rao to represent the mechanics of the world from a sensual, feminist perspective. For example, when Salim is bathing or dancing, we are aware that we are seeing him through Kamala's watching eyes. Rao plays constantly with point of view, notably when she tells her story from the perspective of a rose - which itself represents Kamala, thematically.
Bombay Rose offers not only multiple viewpoints, but also a complex vision of reality itself through the hybrid use of different visual styles. Further, it fragments time, taking us from the linear reality of the everyday world into a space of dreams - into a stream of consciousness, you could say. Anything can happen in this realm of myth. Most critically, it is the one place where Kamala and Salim are able to express their love.
Through its rich visuals, the film reminds us that reality is vibrant and complex - in particular the city of Bombay, with its busy markets filled with intense colors. Bombay Rosefurther explores the plurality of India. On the surface, the film shows how women have been traditionally considered as commercial transactions between men - Kamala was sold in marriage, for example. When we dig deeper, however, we realize that Kamala, Tara and Miss D'Souza - three generations of resourceful, powerful, imaginative women - are the characters who actually advance the story of Bombay Rose. These are Indian women who have agency, and who have a voice.
Rao adds yet another layer of richness through her careful and effective use of music, most memorably when the story culminates in a tragic and sacrificial death, accompanied by the heart-wrenching Mexican song Cucurrucucú paloma - a song guaranteed to reduce me to tears at the best of times!
Above all, Bombay Rose deals with people in poverty. However, when tackling this subject, Gitanjali Rao refuses to adopt a nihilistic stance, unlike many other filmmakers. In Luis Buñuel's Los Olvidados, for example, or in a lot of Neorealist cinema, there is no redemption, only tragedy. Poverty brings fragility - it is part of being poor, a tragic dimension that you cannot escape from. But, even though Bombay Rose presents have-not characters from the poorest parts of the city, the film ultimately delivers a wonderful catharsis - a moment of rebirth, really. The final images are of an emancipated Kamala striding towards the camera, powerful and beautiful and assertive.
The Brazilian author Jorge Amado wrote: "Sadness is a plant which is omnipresent in the garden of the poor." There is sadness in Bombay Rose, but the film's greatest strength is that, even in the face of death, it exists in celebration of life.
Bombay Rose is released on Netflix on March 8, 2021, International Women's Day. Dr. Maria Elena Gutierrez is the CEO and executive director of VIEW Conference, Italy's premiere annual digital media conference. VIEW Conference is committed to bringing women's voices to the forefront in animation, visual effects and games. For more information about the VIEW 2021 program of events, visit the official website:
The power of the female gaze is evident throughout the film, and it is this that enables Rao to represent the mechanics of the world from a sensual, feminist perspective. For example, when Salim is bathing or dancing, we are aware that we are seeing him through Kamala's watching eyes. Rao plays constantly with point of view, notably when she tells her story from the perspective of a rose - which itself represents Kamala, thematically.
Bombay Rose offers not only multiple viewpoints, but also a complex vision of reality itself through the hybrid use of different visual styles. Further, it fragments time, taking us from the linear reality of the everyday world into a space of dreams - into a stream of consciousness, you could say. Anything can happen in this realm of myth. Most critically, it is the one place where Kamala and Salim are able to express their love.
Through its rich visuals, the film reminds us that reality is vibrant and complex - in particular the city of Bombay, with its busy markets filled with intense colors. Bombay Rosefurther explores the plurality of India. On the surface, the film shows how women have been traditionally considered as commercial transactions between men - Kamala was sold in marriage, for example. When we dig deeper, however, we realize that Kamala, Tara and Miss D'Souza - three generations of resourceful, powerful, imaginative women - are the characters who actually advance the story of Bombay Rose. These are Indian women who have agency, and who have a voice.
Rao adds yet another layer of richness through her careful and effective use of music, most memorably when the story culminates in a tragic and sacrificial death, accompanied by the heart-wrenching Mexican song Cucurrucucú paloma - a song guaranteed to reduce me to tears at the best of times!
Above all, Bombay Rose deals with people in poverty. However, when tackling this subject, Gitanjali Rao refuses to adopt a nihilistic stance, unlike many other filmmakers. In Luis Buñuel's Los Olvidados, for example, or in a lot of Neorealist cinema, there is no redemption, only tragedy. Poverty brings fragility - it is part of being poor, a tragic dimension that you cannot escape from. But, even though Bombay Rose presents have-not characters from the poorest parts of the city, the film ultimately delivers a wonderful catharsis - a moment of rebirth, really. The final images are of an emancipated Kamala striding towards the camera, powerful and beautiful and assertive.
The Brazilian author Jorge Amado wrote: "Sadness is a plant which is omnipresent in the garden of the poor." There is sadness in Bombay Rose, but the film's greatest strength is that, even in the face of death, it exists in celebration of life.
Bombay Rose is released on Netflix on March 8, 2021, International Women's Day. Dr. Maria Elena Gutierrez is the CEO and executive director of VIEW Conference, Italy's premiere annual digital media conference. VIEW Conference is committed to bringing women's voices to the forefront in animation, visual effects and games. For more information about the VIEW 2021 program of events, visit the official website:
I don't understand why bollywood artist are obsessed with spoiling a story with their ideologies. This could have been a beautiful visual nostalgic take on Mumbai, but script writer spoiled in by bringing in unnecessary primitive Hindi - Muslim angle and vilifying a particular Hindu character to give contrast to the Muslim protagonist. In the end it looked like a child's attempt to look and sound mature.
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- VerbindungenReferenced in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: The Dragon and the Train (2021)
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 37 Minuten
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