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IMDbPro

Aquela Garota de Botas Amarelas

Título original: That Girl in Yellow Boots
  • 2010
  • Not Rated
  • 1 h 43 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,6/10
4,2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Kalki Koechlin in Aquela Garota de Botas Amarelas (2010)
CrimeDramaMistérioSuspense

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAfter her mother's and teen sister's deaths, Ruth travels to India to find her father. She works at a massage parlor for affluent male clients. She learns her father changed his name but is ... Ler tudoAfter her mother's and teen sister's deaths, Ruth travels to India to find her father. She works at a massage parlor for affluent male clients. She learns her father changed his name but is shocked when she finds out who he really is.After her mother's and teen sister's deaths, Ruth travels to India to find her father. She works at a massage parlor for affluent male clients. She learns her father changed his name but is shocked when she finds out who he really is.

  • Direção
    • Anurag Kashyap
  • Roteiristas
    • Anurag Kashyap
    • Kalki Koechlin
  • Artistas
    • Kalki Koechlin
    • Prashant Prakash
    • Naseeruddin Shah
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,6/10
    4,2 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Anurag Kashyap
    • Roteiristas
      • Anurag Kashyap
      • Kalki Koechlin
    • Artistas
      • Kalki Koechlin
      • Prashant Prakash
      • Naseeruddin Shah
    • 34Avaliações de usuários
    • 27Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 3 indicações no total

    Fotos2

    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal26

    Editar
    Kalki Koechlin
    Kalki Koechlin
    • Ruth Edscer
    Prashant Prakash
    • Prashant
    Naseeruddin Shah
    Naseeruddin Shah
    • Divakar
    Gulshan Devaiah
    Gulshan Devaiah
    • Chittiappa Gowda
    Puja Sarup
    • Maya
    Kumud Mishra
    Kumud Mishra
    • Lynn
    Shivkumar Subramaniam
    Shivkumar Subramaniam
    • Peter
    • (as Shiv Subramanyam)
    Divya Jagdale
    Divya Jagdale
    • Divya
    Thani
    • Thani, Henchman
    Kartik Krishnan
    • Main Cop (Bribe & At Ruth's House)
    Sankalp Acharekar
    • Sankalp
    Kim Calera
    • Samantha
    Pradeep Dalvi
    Pradeep Dalvi
    • Muchhad (at Fro)
    Deepak Damle
    • Sleazy Man (at Fro)
    Kashyap Das
    • Susu boy
    Makrand Deshpande
    Makrand Deshpande
    • Post Master
    Rajat Kapoor
    Rajat Kapoor
    • Man Who Steps Out of Elevator
    Anubhuti Kashyap
    • Maa Anubhuti
    • Direção
      • Anurag Kashyap
    • Roteiristas
      • Anurag Kashyap
      • Kalki Koechlin
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários34

    6,64.2K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    6jain-anirudh

    Average stuff. "Bold" end but quite average storyline and acting if you are looking for a mystery/ thriller

    I consider myself a big fan of Anurag Kashyap and think Gulaal to be one of the best movies made in Bollywood. In that perspective, I think this movie doesn't live up to expectations and is quite avoidable.

    The movie does well in taking you through the Mumbai underbelly from the eyes of an illegal foreign immigrant and inspires images from Shantaram. However, the story is too loose. If it was intended to be a mystery/ thriller, it doesn't have enough pace and coherence. It just keeps jumping back and forth b/w Kalki giving customers hand shakes and randomly following leads to locate her father.

    The best sequence in the movie is Kalki narrating her father's death to the gangster when he comes for a massage. The revelation at the end of the movie is shocking and disgusting but there is no build up to it which would make it sort of an inevitable end. It comes as if it's there in order to shock you rather than being the purpose of the story all along. The extremely unconvincing and weak performance of Kalki's father is the weakest link in the movie.

    The subject and the first 40-50 minutes are promising and this movie could have been much more. The last 20-25 minutes are a dampener, if you don't give too much thought to the shock/ disgust aspect of the end.

    To conclude - Just about an average, "art" movie that might appeal to you because of its "boldness" and being out of line with "societal norms". But very average story line, acting and direction.
    8etvltd

    a universal heart wrenching story recommended by myetvmedia

    Anurag Kashyap ("Water") delivers another stunningly controversial masterpiece with "That Girl In Yellow Boots". True to form as one of India's leading modern indie filmmakers, this film will bedazzle and shock you. Kashyap takes us on a colourful and dangerous journey through the underbelly of Bombay experienced through the eyes of Ruth (Kalki Koechlin).

    Kalki Koechlin (winner, best supporting actress Filmfare, "Dev. D") co wrote this sizzling script with Kashyap. Every character is remarkably fleshed out from Ruth herself to the thugs running drug rackets and the girls and their clients in the massage parlour. The growing reality of the size of the sex trade in India inspired Kashyap to conceive of this story and to collaborate with Koechlin on the script. ..
    thepuccacritic

    Ballsy attempt! Must watch!

    Steve Jobs, the 'ex' CEO of Apple Inc. once said, "It isn't consumers' job to know what they want." This mantra fits well for the new age cult filmmaker Anurag Kashyap, who has drawn a strong line between the mainstream and the parallel with all his movies as a director or a writer. Following those words, made them respected names in their arenas.

    His latest offering That Girl In Yellow Boots, co-written by Kalki, is "socially" not intended for the audience we see in this country. God knows how he arrived at the concept of this movie...may be after getting intoxicated and sunken into the pervert sex stories? After scripting this idea and actually materializing it into a feature film needs gutsy balls. Said it. Indian producers are obviously not that ballsy to produce it, only if they get time and money from puke-like sugar candies and silly remakes. So valid is the irony of this filmmaking: 13 days to shoot the entire film and 2 years to release it! Coming upon the movie, Ruth Edscer (played by Kalki) in her metaphoric Yellow Boots is trapped in labyrinthine Mumbai, in search of a man who she hasn't seen since childhood and he also happens to be her father. In this quest, she comes across men of all kind- some "Men is Dog" kind at foreigner's registration office, a generous Diwakar (Naseeruddin Shah) at the massage parlor with the name "Aspaspa" where she works without a permit, his druggie boyfriend Prashant (Prashant Prakash), gang-man Chittiappa (Gulshan Devaiya) are some to mention. The numerous male characterization sets layers for the story to proceed: Makarand Deshpande as post master, Ronit Roy as a humble but unhelpful policeman, Piyush Mishra as a rickshaw-wallah and also Rajat Kapoor.

    Fixed with the plot, the film runs for around 1hour 30 minutes with each frame mellowed with dark creativity of arts and lights (reason: low production this time, may be) adds a charm to the kind of the tale it is paced to tell. Rajeev Rai's camera work with some guerrilla technique shots, trademarks the Anurag Kashyap kind of filming. Editing by Shweta Venkat and the parallel storytelling carves to enter the dark psyche of the protagonist. The debut music director Naren Chandavarkar grips harder onto the film with the background score- a striking folk genre sung by Shilpa Rao to portray the lead Ruth.

    Performances of almost every character, as they appear on the screen, hits hard - be it Makarand Deshpande only for seconds or Naseer Saab in all his short appearances. The other support Prakash and Chittiappa are worth watch. And to find a humor in this dark tale, there is Maya as the manger of Aspaspa, played by Puja Swaroop. Kalki is thrilling as Ruth, speaks with silence and her eyes.

    Kashyap, as always, asks his audience to feel the movie rather than to enjoy it. And, once you are sunken into the concept he pictures here, you are shocked with its disturbing climax. With the Indian Censor Board passing this concept and National Film Development Corporation producing it, I see some maturity in them and expects the same from the audience. Digest this. Have Gelucil. No puking.

    An urge to the Bollywooders: If a director, known for his critically acclaimed work, risks it with his future on stake and has balls enough to throw an idea beyond the scope of Bollywood that producers will never risk, isn't it your job as a part of liberal cinema lovers to see the bar rising just at the cost of a movie ticket and some time? Like. Dislike. Your say. Ideas need to be projected.
    7kaustubh-rajnish

    Shocking for the sake of shocking

    With "That Girl in Yellow Boots", Anurag Kashyap moves into what is known as the International art-house circuit. Films here are generally about weird out of place characters stuck in emotional turmoil. Generally sexuality or the abuse of it is the undercurrent theme of most of these films. Most characters are depraved and yet seemingly deep. Most importantly most of it is about people who you will never meet or never know in real life. The situations and locations in the films will be so out of place that you will trouble identifying with almost all of them. These films are bold and more often than not for the sake of being bold.

    "That Girl in Yellow Boots" is all of the above. Shot extensively well it tells a poignant story of an English girl Ruth (Kalki Koechlin) who is illegally in India. She is searching for her father who left her and her mother a long time ago. To sustain herself and pay the bribes to the authorities she works in a massage parlor where she also earns a quick thou on every hand job she does. To add to this dreary existence is a cocaine addicted boyfriend (an unknown Prashant Prakash) and a Kannada gangster (a brilliant Gulshan Devaiya last seen in Shaitan) looking to get his money back.

    Many other world weary characters come and go. Like the annoyingly loquacious massage receptionist who keeps flirting on the phone (a superb Pooja Swarup), an old fatherly figure (Naseeruddin Shah) who only comes to the parlor for a good clean massage and a slimy inspector who keeps turning up and demanding money (for what reasons we are never told).

    Amidst all of this the film becomes a list of interlaced seemingly disconnected scenes of either Ruth massaging (read pleasuring) someone or searching for her father by finding his namesake who has the same occupation as her father.

    The film pretty much has a solid Kalki in every frame. She lights up at every opportunity that brings her nearer to her father and at the same time makes you realize her frustration as someone who is constantly meeting expectations of strangers. It is a wonderfully dark role and Kalki's silence at most times speaks volumes.

    Anurag Kashyap as usual frames each shot with much care but one can't help but wonder that he seems to have blurred the line between shocking us through realistic characters in extraordinary situations and shocking us for the sake of shocking.

    So in the end you might end up questioning why such unnecessarily outrageous, vulgar and sexually charged up tones are present in almost all representations in this grim mystery. Why is it that the boyfriend is such an extreme figure trying to rehabilitate himself by chaining himself to a window? Why is the gangster called Chitiappa, so that the C word can be repeated again and again? and not to mention the art decor house that Ruth lives in which seems overtly engulfed with decay. Or for that matter the shocking ending which folks would have seen coming half way through the movie (though not the identity of the person in question) I guess Anurag constantly is trying to break the barrier of how politically incorrect he can get with his movies and if the price to pay is a storyline or disconnected characters, then so be it. What he does not realize is that audience will only remember this for the shock value and not some artistic vision that the International Art-house Circuit often enjoys.

    But to his credit, there is one thing that the film does prove that Anurag Kashyap can handle complex emotional subjects with amazing control and not create something that could have easily slipped into a depressing and ugly snooze fest. In the end, TGIYB would be remembered as one of the also made for a director who would eventually be counted as one of the all time greats for Indian Cinema.

    Final Recommendation That Girl in Yellow Boots is worth a watch but to film freaks who like to be shocked and are looking for the discerning stuff esp. for fans of Gaspar Noe and Lars Von Trier. For other enthusiastic fans of the multiplex movies (read Shaitan, Dev D etc. ) this may not be the shoe they want to try on. Fans of commercial fare like Wanted and Dabangg might as well stay miles away from this lest they get nightmares.
    7kosmasp

    Looking for ...

    It really is a tough movie to watch. And not just because it switches languages, but because of the theme of the movie. You have a daughter searching for the father. So be prepared for a story that does drag and is not really filled with much excitement. No pun intended, especially considering on how she makes money and tries to get information out of people (again no pun intended with this either of course).

    So while on a mission we can see certain things in society, how she is being treated, how she behaves, what she has to do and to what lengths she is willing to go for the truth. You can say that there is feminism in there, but the important thing is, an individual trying to get to the bottom of things ...

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Anurag Kashyap stated "Naseeruddin did an interview with MTV in the US saying he wanted to do a film with me. I saw the interview and jumped. I asked him for a day. He came in the morning, shot all day and left after wrapping up all his scenes," .
    • Citações

      Ruth Edscer: Do you want a happy ending?

    • Conexões
      Features Love U (2003)

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    Perguntas frequentes13

    • How long is That Girl in Yellow Boots?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 2 de setembro de 2011 (Índia)
    • País de origem
      • Índia
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Official Facebook Group
    • Idiomas
      • Hindi
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • That Girl in Yellow Boots
    • Locações de filme
      • Aryanivas, Kalvadevi, Mumbai, Maharashtra, Índia
    • Empresas de produção
      • Anurag Kashyap Films
      • National Film Development Corporation
      • Sikhya Entertainment
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 43 min(103 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Dolby Digital

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