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IMDbPro

Road, Movie

  • 2009
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Road, Movie (2009)
Vishnu, a young man driven by wanderlust, escapes his father's faltering hair oil business.    
 
An old truck beckons, which Vishnu sees as his ticket to freedom.  He offers to drive the 
antique Chevy across the desert to the sea, where it has been sold to a local museum.  As he 
sets off across the harsh terrain, he discovers heÂ’s not merely transporting a battered vehicle, 
but an old touring cinema.   
 
Along the way, Vishnu reluctantly picks up a young runaway, a garrulous old entertainer and 
a striking gypsy woman.  Together they roam the barren land, searching for water and an 
elusive fair.  The journey turns dire when they are waylaid by corrupt cops and a notorious 
waterlord.   
 
The key to their freedom is the eccentric collection of films and the two forty-year-old film 
projectors in the back of the truck.  As in 1001 Nights, if the films are good, they live and 
move on.  If the films are boring, they face death in the outback. 
 
The journey proves transformative for each of the travelers, but especially for Vishnu who 
discovers life, love and laughter on the Indian highway.
Play trailer0:31
2 Videos
3 Photos
Road TripAdventureComedyCrimeDrama

A young man's journey across the mythic Indian landscape becomes a life-changing odyssey.A young man's journey across the mythic Indian landscape becomes a life-changing odyssey.A young man's journey across the mythic Indian landscape becomes a life-changing odyssey.

  • Director
    • Dev Benegal
  • Writer
    • Dev Benegal
  • Stars
    • Abhay Deol
    • Satish Kaushik
    • Tannishtha Chatterjee
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Dev Benegal
    • Writer
      • Dev Benegal
    • Stars
      • Abhay Deol
      • Satish Kaushik
      • Tannishtha Chatterjee
    • 25User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 nominations total

    Videos2

    Road, Movie
    Trailer 0:31
    Road, Movie
    Road, Movie
    Clip 2:01
    Road, Movie
    Road, Movie
    Clip 2:01
    Road, Movie

    Photos2

    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast15

    Edit
    Abhay Deol
    Abhay Deol
    • Vishnu
    Satish Kaushik
    Satish Kaushik
    • Om
    Tannishtha Chatterjee
    Tannishtha Chatterjee
    • The Woman
    Mohammed Faizal
    • The Boy
    • (as Mohammed Faizal)
    Yashpal Sharma
    Yashpal Sharma
    • Waterlord
    Virendra Saxena
    Virendra Saxena
    • Police Chief
    • (as a different name)
    Amitabh Srivastava
    • Aatma - Father
    Suhita Thatte
    Suhita Thatte
    • Mother
    Roshan Taneja
    • OPJ - Truck Owner
    Shradha Shrivastav
    • Sister
    • (as Shraddha Shrivastava)
    Hardik Mehta
    Hardik Mehta
    • Masseur
    Shabbir Hussain
    • Hair Oil Convention President
    Bharat Vaibhav
    • Head Constable
    Rajinder Grover
    • Waterlord's Driver
    Niraj Kothari
    Niraj Kothari
    • Developer
    • Director
      • Dev Benegal
    • Writer
      • Dev Benegal
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    6.71.7K
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    Featured reviews

    9apoorve-khandelwal

    Metaphors...Awesomely executed!!!

    The movie is awesome! A very brave attempt by the director!

    The worst thing that could happen to a director is getting extremely shallow reviews. And which, unfortunately, happened with Dev Benegal. Although critics/reviewers appreciated the movie,but I believe, almost all of them could not decipher the metaphors, woven to form the story, which actually was the backbone of the discourse.Every character, every event in the story is well crafted. So, in this article, I just plan to throw a few hints on the metaphors used in the movie. For the sake of exhaustiveness of this article, I would like to mention that direction, cinematography etc. etc. are superb.

    Superficially it seems that the story shows journey of a young boy, 'Vishnu' (Abhay Deol), from his home town to Samudrabad on road. But actually this was a philosophical portrait of 'The journey of life', and subtle metaphors were used as colors.Every thing is very cleverly shown. 1.Huge stress has been given on 'water'. Does 'water' signify water or something else? 2.What do those weird characters (group of water searching ladies, water lord etc.), portrayed by the director, signify actually? 3.Things, like the character of mechanic who always gives the right suggestion or the strange fair that suddenly appeared out of the blue an vanished in Shoonya, mean something ? Or probably are the side effects of Director's Block . 4.What does the 'Atma (means 'soul' in Hindi) Oil', that magically (and comically) solves every problem, signify? 5.At the very first thought, "Road, Movie", why this name?

    .....and the list of all those riddles, which should spontaneously pop up in the mind of keen and intelligent viewer, go on . Solving and linking these riddles brings to you a great philosophical discourse.Special mention: The way in which the magic of the mesmerizing virtual world of film been picturized is simply admirable.

    So Please go and watch out this awesome movie with the attention and respect that this movie deserves. (Originally posted at http://skepticeye.wordpress.com )
    9TheSupertramp

    Wander into it...

    Finally, "Road, Movie"- critically acclaimed director Dev Benegal's much awaited 3rd directorial venture comes to Indian screens after 'wandering' over from a number of film festivals.

    First look at the movie and you will know that the director isn't catering to a large strata of audience. The movie has a chugging along sort of pace, quite like the Truck that is the carrier of our protagonists. A feel of wanderlust will strike you if you have that sort of streak.

    The movie is basically about a journey of self-discovery (Vishnu's). The wanderlust struck oil businessman's son discovers in this journey the meaning of relationships. His companions in this journey are a mechanic (kaushik), a tea-seller boy (Faizal) and a nomad (tannishtha). Along the way there are skirmishes with the police and water mafia.

    The performances are sterling. Abhay deol plays to the hilt the selfish, city-lad. Mohammed faizal impresses as the tea-stall boy an Tannishtha Chatterjee is natural in her role of a wandering nomad. But the man who steals the show as the mechanic is veteran actor Satish Kaushik. Absolutely wonderful performance by him.

    Besides the cinematography is absolutely scintillating. Never has the rajasthan landscape been so beautifully picturised on screen. Michael Brook's background score is beautiful to say the least.

    A movie with international sensibilities but an Indian heart. Calling this Bollywood will be a shame. This movie belongs to world cinema. Quite easily this one belongs to the collector's shelf. Mr. Dev Benegal-- Take a bow, Sire!

    Go on this journey or rather 'Wander' into it.
    7tim-764-291856

    Colourful, contemporary Indian road movie...

    Dev Benegal's 2009 film was premiered on Channel 4, where I saw it. Radio Times, in their lazy and scant review, described it as 'plays out like an Indian Cinema Paradiso set in the deserts of Rajasthan', which is only partly true.

    Almost nothing can stand up to Cinema Paradiso, that being in my top 5 films of all time, but Road, Movie certainly has its charms. The centrepiece is a colourful, ageing truck that is also a mobile cinema. This van is the ticket to freedom for Vishnu, a restless young man, who wishing to escape being sucked into his father's hair oil business (yes, this is a gentle comedy) and he has a buyer for it; a museum in a town by the sea.

    To get there, he treks across the desert (gravelly, but still tough) and his journey and the characters he meets, including the mechanic called upon very early (it HAD to be a temperamental van!) who becomes the projectionist and general fixer-up of everything. There's also a young lad, a runaway urchin. These two could be seen as the Philip Noiret character and the boy in Cinema Paradiso. Then a visually striking gypsy woman, who becomes a romantic distraction for Vishnu, is picked up when they run out of water and she has some.

    Bollywood films are the most watched in the world, apparently and so obviously various flicks are shown in sprawling communities, projected onto the walls of dwellings and such.

    Shot in deeply saturated colour and looking very attractive, it's not a deep, meaningful film but a nicely distracting, accessible one, nostalgic about long strips of celluloid and the joy that they can bring - and one that western audiences can easily appreciate and enjoy.

    It looks like it's generally unavailable in the U.K, at least as a region 2 DVD. I only found this region 1 on Amazon by typing in the director's name and not the film's title - as that brought up hundreds of connotations, but not the right one.

    Hopefully now, Channel 4's airing will have it released properly. It certainly deserves to be.
    7codenamepaulie

    A lesson in cinematographic excellence, an incomplete movie

    There are just four characters in the movie. Vishnu, played by Abhay Deol, wants to do more than just waste his time selling herbal oil as his father does before him. So, he volunteers for a friend to deliver across the desert an old truck which is a mobile cinema. The film is then about his journey, the movies that he plays & more importantly, the people that he meets on the way.

    We have seen bits of brilliance from Satish Kaushik in the past, from Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro to Calendar in Mr. India, but I think this is the one that he will be most remembered for as an actor. Cast as a veteran mechanic, Kaushik plays a central role in taking the movie in a different direction than the protagonist has planned to. He has been cast very well along with the little boy that Vishnu picks up early in his journey. Both these characters provide for the lighter moments in the film while also inducing some thought provoking dialogue. There is also scope for a female lead. A tribal whose husband was slain over a water dispute some years ago. As she mentions that she too wants to get lost in the magic of cinema, one can't help but wonder if there is a deeper meaning to this sentence. And this deep meaning dialogue is a standard feature of the film.

    Wide angle views of the vastness of the desert that lead to nothingness in the desert and a set of women treading along for days in search of water are brilliantly executed. And, other than the road & the movies, they are a common string throughout the film.

    The film exists at many levels. At the most superficial level, it appears to be a subtle comedy with situational jokes and a bit of slapstick too. You dig a little, and you find that it is a person's journey to finding himself by having to deal with an old truck, rough, dry weather and some people who have been through their share of pain & suffering and how they still manage to be at peace and look forward to some elusive tranquility.

    Dig a little deeper and you find the film is about some inherent social problems that still affect most of rural & tribal India. That something as basic as water can be a reason for murder & arson is hard to imagine but it is brought to us with a lot of sensitivity. How the lead characters almost die of thirst, how they almost get killed for trying to steal water all help appreciate a problem that is alien to most of us.

    Dig a bit more and we find that Indian cinema is trying to usher in the seemingly selfish directors who make films from the heart with a message that they want to send across to anyone who tries to understand their cinema. There is no plot in the movie that would build up into something big. For a film like this, there has to be no plot. Very few directors can do it and get away with it. It is a movie that should go down as one that shifted or at least tried to shift the paradigm of Indian cinema.

    That said there is much that the director could do better explaining & elaborating a little. Like what is the protagonist actually wanting to do with the truck, how does a particular mela (caravan fair) disappear overnight and mostly, why such a brilliant film seem a bit too long even for its 95 minute run time.

    It is most definitely a lesson in cinematographic excellence. One would just hope that it would be a complete movie in itself too.
    8dasvid_beckham_me

    cinematographic landmark, India's answer t o 'el aura'

    You were not forced to buy a ticket to this and neither were you going to the theaters for a women crying on the remains of her dead son/husband.

    Road,movie comes as a completely basic story line that has Vishnu(Abhay Deol) as a boy who goes through a certain phase revolving around poverty stricken, starving population of the deserts and ends the movie as a man.

    The others are cameos, Satish Kaushik carves the way with super acting amidst the most gorgeous the deserts have ever looked ! 90 minutes are not very long and Road is more than worth it for within a certain number of years the main behind cinema will shift towards cinematography and art direction.This is the bible for those days.

    overall a 7/10 || 8/10 and a pleasure watching the closest Bollywood has ever come to "El aura".

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Dev Benegal has directed two movies, Road, Movie (2009) and English, August, une histoire indienne (1994), with commas in the title.
    • Goofs
      When showing the arrival of performers for the fair, the setting sun is first shown about to disappear behind the horizon and a few scenes later it is higher above the horizon.
    • Crazy credits
      Before the end credits, the film acknowledges to have ended by a slide-show of the words "The End" in different fonts, types, colors & even languages.
    • Connections
      Features Assoiffé (1957)
    • Soundtracks
      Tel Maalish
      Music Produced by Eric V. Hachikian

      Performed by Eric V. Hachikian

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    FAQ

    • How long is Road, Movie?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 5, 2010 (India)
    • Countries of origin
      • India
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • Hindi
      • English
      • Rajasthani
    • Also known as
      • Untitled Road Movie
    • Production companies
      • August Entertainment
      • Indian Film Company
      • Studio 18
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 35 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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