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Page 3

  • 2005
  • 12
  • 2 Std. 19 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,3/10
7127
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Page 3 (2005)
A look at Mumbai's socialite party circle world through the eyes of a Page 3 journalist.
trailer wiedergeben2:16
1 Video
2 Fotos
Drama

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA look at Mumbai's socialite party circle world through the eyes of a Page 3 journalist.A look at Mumbai's socialite party circle world through the eyes of a Page 3 journalist.A look at Mumbai's socialite party circle world through the eyes of a Page 3 journalist.

  • Regie
    • Madhur Bhandarkar
    • Jay Dev Banerjee
  • Drehbuch
    • Nina Arora
    • Madhur Bhandarkar
    • Sanjeev Dutta
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Konkona Sen Sharma
    • Atul Kulkarni
    • Sandhya Mridul
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,3/10
    7127
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Madhur Bhandarkar
      • Jay Dev Banerjee
    • Drehbuch
      • Nina Arora
      • Madhur Bhandarkar
      • Sanjeev Dutta
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Konkona Sen Sharma
      • Atul Kulkarni
      • Sandhya Mridul
    • 30Benutzerrezensionen
    • 13Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 7 Gewinne & 16 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Page 3 (2005) Trailer
    Trailer 2:16
    Page 3 (2005) Trailer

    Fotos1

    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung45

    Ändern
    Konkona Sen Sharma
    Konkona Sen Sharma
    • Madhvi Sharma
    Atul Kulkarni
    Atul Kulkarni
    • Vinayak Mane
    Sandhya Mridul
    Sandhya Mridul
    • Pearl Sequiera
    Tara Sharma
    Tara Sharma
    • Gayatri Sachdeva
    Boman Irani
    Boman Irani
    • Deepak Suri
    Bikram Saluja
    • Rohit Kumar
    Upendra Limaye
    Upendra Limaye
    • Inspector Arun Bhosle
    Jai Kalra
    • Tarun
    Soni Razdan
    Soni Razdan
    • Anjali Thapar
    Anju Mahendru
    Anju Mahendru
    • Ritu Bajaj
    Suchitra Pillai
    Suchitra Pillai
    • Fashion Designer Sonal Roy
    • (as Suchitra Pillai-Malik)
    Kunika Sadanand
    Kunika Sadanand
    • Monaz Modi
    • (as Kunika)
    Navni Parihar
    Navni Parihar
    • Sheetal Tejani
    Madan Jain
    Madan Jain
    • ACP Uday Yadav
    Suhasini Mulay
    Suhasini Mulay
    • Pratima Bharve
    Maya Alagh
    Maya Alagh
    • Kurshid
    Dolly Thakore
    • Vijaya Agarwal
    Anjana Kuthiala
    • Self
    • Regie
      • Madhur Bhandarkar
      • Jay Dev Banerjee
    • Drehbuch
      • Nina Arora
      • Madhur Bhandarkar
      • Sanjeev Dutta
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen30

    7,37.1K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    9handsome_2005

    Beautifully themed, directed and acted movie. A must watch.

    Madhur Bhandarkar has given it all raw. But the best part is he hasn't forgotten to give the ingredients. It has come short and crisp to the viewer and it is the audience to make the choice now. Page 3 is a revelation of the naked truth irrespective of the crudeness attached to it.

    Madhavi (Konkan Sharma) is a journalist and enjoys her work. A simple and peaceful life adores her with a caring boyfriend and a nice roommate Pearl. She covers the Page 3 (Celebrity Page) of Nation Today, where she has a very supportive editor Deepak Suri (Boman Irani.) But life takes turn for her as she hits the first bump and takes herself away from Page 3 and goes into Crime bit. Omigosh! a whole new world was waiting for her there. She is shocked, excited, stunned with the revelation. Her reaction has resulted in losing the job. At the end she is back to Page 3. Now when she meets any celebrity in a party, she knows the actual looks of each, hidden under the illusive face.

    The movie has a message and it is crude. The audience needs to get it in their own color. The theme and the screenplay was fantastic. There are some very good thoughts applied to prepare the audiences. Like the foreplay-club is shown before the pedophiliac exhibition, the short suspense before gay-actions in bathroom. The dialogs are strong and the actors are really good at delivering it. Charu Mohanty's 2 words speaks volumes and he is very successful in uttering those two words with such ingenuity, it leaves an impact. The set selections could have been better. The songs don't stand anywhere; but they were needed in the background. Atul Kulkarni has a small role with high-impact. There were a few flaws visible. Atul Kulkarni explaining Konkan Sharma that honesty should be tagged along with intelligence. There could have been a better dialog as this sounds like a preach. The meeting between Thapar and his daughter doesn't call for acting. That scene looks very unprofessional.

    Overall it is a must-watch movie with selective options before the pedophilia incident. That may spoil your mood.
    8Aam_Aadmi

    Succinct expose of high-society shenanigans

    Yet again, Madhur Bhandarkar takes you on a ride to the wild side. And a remarkable one it is, literally and figuratively.

    Mumbai hi-society -- stars and starlets, glam dolls and witch doctors, business tycoons and broker types, yep the whole stinking lot -- are in sharp focus here. In typical tabloid fashion, their worlds unfold, with every colorful story a clever sub-plot in itself.

    A struggling starlet dumped by the producer after getting her pregnant, the stewardess and her high-profile husband, the pedophile businessman and his neurotic wife, the reporters and the police captain; all shades on display and countless hues in between.

    Bhandarkar does a swell job of digging up the dirt on the drama kings, the dancing queens and the living dead. Atul Kulkarni packs a punch, as does Boman Irani and Sandhya Mrudul. Konkona Sen Sharma is effective as the ex-crime beat reporter, but she could have been dolled up a little in keeping with the job change and the party circuit.

    Highly focused (running time 140 min) and refreshingly different film, well worth the money.
    8AishFan

    Mumbai high society exposed brilliantly!

    Page 3 is most definitely a very enthralling and captivating eye-opener that very cleverly exposes the hypocrite lifestyles of Mumbai's elite. From the fake kisses to the plastered smiles, Page 3 leaves no stone unturned in revealing the shocking lives of the rich and the famous. Backstabbing, gossip, corruption, and scandal lurk in every dark corner in the world of glitz and glam. Humanity and generosity are analogous to an oasis in the desert in this world where Social Darwinism is the prevailing mentality. Everyone is constantly craving for more money, more fame, and a higher reputation, driving them to do the most shameful things imaginable ranging from signing film contracts at a funeral to child molestation. Anything is possible in this metropolis where there is a such a wide gap between the social classes. The audience sees the ugliness of both of these classes through the eyes of the protagonist. She observes the suffocating atmosphere and the mind-boggling frenzy that the socialites live in. Bollywood, business tycoons, politicians, and the underworld are all intertwined in a completely convoluted mess! Kitne Ajeeb Hai is a nice track as is the peppy Kuan Main Doob Jaongi. Terrific film with excellent character development!
    7Peter_Young

    The dark page

    Page 3 is one of those films Madhur Bhandarkar makes to expose societal filth. It's partly compelling, but, like most of Bhandarkar's films, it is one-sided and overly pessimistic. This film is all about tabloid journalism, gossip, celebrities, exposing the lives of socialites, whose lifestyle is disastrously boastful, peculiar and repulsive. They party, they care for nothing but fame, they plan parties at funerals, they are craving for more money and a higher reputation, they will do anything to get due exposure in the media, to get their names boldly printed on the daily newspaper's social column known as "Page 3" with huge photographs which will be the center of people's discussions. They are attention seeking, salacious and hypocritical. The film industry is shown as sleazy, with casting couch being a common phenomenon among filmmakers. That's where our lovely heroine, a young social column reporter Madhvi Sharma, is thrown. All these people from Mumbai's elite depend on her articles and she is the right person to befriend at these parties if you want her to mention you in her article. Later in the film we learn that even those who are Madhvi's friends are no different from these high-society people. This was tough viewing for me, although the film is unquestionably brave and the issues it deals with are interesting.

    The film's music is average. The only passable songs are "Kitne Ajeeb" and "Huzoor-E-Ala", sung by the two melody queens Lata Mangeshkar and Asha Bhosle, respectively. Otherwise the soundtrack is bad. One song which was particularly horrendous is "Filmy Very Filmy". The film's writing is quite good. The second half is far better than the first, as it turns more matter-of-fact and exposes much more important issues such as terrorism and child abuse. That's where the film has to be applauded. It was sad to know that people prefer to ignore such crimes out of fear and Konkona Sen Sharma's character's disappointment was very easy to relate to. She is effective throughout the film and her acting in the last few scenes is particularly impressive. Atul Kulkarni's part is very small but he did full justice to it. Boman Irani is solid as the newspaper's editor. Sandhya Mridul is lovable as Madhvi's sassy roommate Pearl who marries an older man for money and is honest enough to admit it. The film's ending is really well-done, and provides a certain sigh of relief after the unimaginably tough revelations. Page 3 is a decent film, it is interesting and at times moving, but the level of interest and its general quality are marred by its exaggerated, overly messy and negative portrayal of the rich and famous.
    7abhishek-1

    The Write Word

    The Write Word

    What you see is what you get. Not really! What Madhur Bhandarkar's brave and brilliant 'Page 3' does is destroy the myth attached to the glam and glitterati that colour the pages of our newspapers and whose lives(read party habits) we follow with such maniacal fervour which only our intrinsic voyeuristic streak can explain.

    The page 3 phenomenon is as deplorable as it is enigmatic. How exactly did it gain such control over the printed word and when did it start to encroach into the front page is subject for another debate. Bhandarkar cleverly avoids that. He is concerned only with the mechanisms of this grotesque existence. And in doing that, he pieces together the various elements of this way of life. Like Robert Altman(although I'm not comparing Bhandarkar to Altman's genius), Bhandarkar uses myriad characters to further his motive. Whether it is a page 3 wannabe NRI, the gate-crashers, the newly-rich, an upcoming model, a socialite politician or an erotic novella authoress; all the characters are introduced with an objective and each of them has a separate character-sketch, even if their parts may be miniscule. And therein lays the film's appeal.

    Konkona Sen Sharma plays Madhavi Sharma, a young and talented journalist who covers page 3 for Nation Today. Initially content with her job, she soon begins to see the ugliness of this underbelly that is covered by its fake and cosmetic profligacy. But Bhandarkar resists the temptation to make this subject into a moral-policing movie and avoids concentrating on one character alone. Hence the movie is not only about Madhavi, but also equally about Deepak Suri(Boman Irani)- Madhavi's editor who passively accepts his role as a cog of a larger machinery, Anjali Thapar(Soni Razdan)- a socialite suffocating from the social pollution, Abhijeet(Rehan Engineer)- a homosexual make-up artist and Madhavi's roommates Pearl(Sandhya Mridul)- the sassy airhostess and Gayatri(Tara Sharma)-an aspiring actress. It seems like an impossible task to assimilate so many characters(and more) in one story, but full credit to Nina Arora and Manoj Tyagi for penning a tight screenplay. The dialogues by Sanjeev Datta and Bhandarkar have been written with great attention to detail.

    Any narrative, no matter how good, can fall flat with the lack of genuine performances. Thankfully, 'Page 3' brims with actors and not stars. Konkona goes through her author-backed role with effortless ease. Ditto Boman. Sandhya Mridul gets the best written part, but almost overdoes it. Atul Kulkarni is wasted though with an underwritten character. At times, the director seems too keen to incorporate as much as possible(paedophilia, homosexuality, etc.). But the contexts in which they are used do not make them look rushed.

    Ultimately, Bhandarkar's attempt is to satiate our voyeurism, but he takes it a step further. He takes us inside the photographs and exposes us to the gruesome realities of this sect of humanity that strangely seems to be living in a different and remote world. These are the same people that indulged in new-year's revelry while a few hundred kilometers away their fellow countrymen had been ravaged by nature's ferocity! Clever writing, skillfully incorporated songs, able performances and a genuine feeling of sincerity are what make this film worthy in spite of its lack of finesse and poor production values. 'Page 3' is an optimum way to enter a new year of cinema.

    • Abhishek Bandekar


    Rating- ****

    * Poor ** Average *** Good **** Very Good ***** Excellent

    29th January, 2005

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      The role of Madhvi was first offered to Kareena Kapoor, but she declined.
    • Zitate

      Madhvi Sharma: Next time, lock the door.

    • Verbindungen
      Followed by Corporate (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Filmy Very Filmy
      Written by Sandeep Nath

      Composed by Shamir Tandon

      Performed by Amit Kumar, BlaaZe and Tannishtha Chatterjee

      Courtesy of Virgin Records (India) Pvt. Ltd.

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 21. Januar 2005 (Indien)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Indien
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • Indiatimes
      • Official site
    • Sprachen
      • Hindi
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Seite 3 - Leben auf der Überholspur
    • Drehorte
      • Mumbai, Maharashtra, Indien
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Percept Picture Company
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 2 Std. 19 Min.(139 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 2.35 : 1

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