Dhobi Ghat

2010
Dhobi Ghat
7| 1h42m| en| More Info
Released: 21 January 2010 Released
Producted By: Aamir Khan Productions
Country: India
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

Arun is a reclusive and lonely modern art painter. Shai is an American banker who is on a visit to Mumbai. Munna is a washerboy also living near Arun and Yasmin. The movie is about these four characters from different class of society and how the lives of four characters are intertwined.

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Aamir Khan Productions

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Reviews

bparekh12 Can't say I liked it much. After watching the movie, I didn't remember a lot of it.. It was like waking up from a dream and you know how it feels. You just remember that you had a good dream but more often than not you don't really remember them it was the same with Dhobi Ghat. All that I can say was that for the most part of the movie... I had a smile on my face.IMDb wants me to write about 10 lines and I don't really know what else to say about the movie.. so hence this extra line here.. to fill up space? No? I know it... not my fault though... IMDb forces me.Yeah BTW, try to be patient if you aren't quite in the mood you might fall asleep or get bored enough to drool out a bucket. So yeah .. that's that.
Advait Kamat There is something refreshingly different about "Dhobi Ghat". It spins a fable of the world we claim to know and live in yet it's unlike anything we've seen before. The answer to what makes it so different is a lot like the characters it tells us about : enigmatic and complex. Kiran Rao's debut succeeds in picking out those few emotions which we experience everyday but never succeed in comprehending them.Of the millions of storytellers of the chaotic, vibrant and secretive city of Mumbai, Rao narrows it down to just four of them. Munna (Prateik Babbar), is a washer-man who aspires to become an actor one day. His luck takes a turn for the better when he encounters Shai (Monica Dogra), an American banker who comes to Mumbai to pursue her interests. Shai is an adventure junkie, intrigued by the squalor of Mumbai, and befriends Munna because she needs a friend to show her around the city. In the course of things, Munna falls in love with her but she has her eyes on Arun (Aamir Khan), a reclusive artist. Arun has a dark past and therefore fails to have an emotional connection with anyone. After he moves into a new house, he comes across a bunch of tapes in which a newly married woman Yasmin (Kirti Malhotra), an ex-tenant, tells her brother of the new life she's experiencing in the city of Mumbai. Hesitant at first, Arun becomes increasingly fascinated by her life. The film explores the intertwined stories of four people who are, in different ways, affected for the better or worse by the delights and tragedies of the city that never sleeps."Dhobi Ghat" is a film reminiscent of the miraculous Indian art films of the 1980s. Although Rao uses the unusually chaotic city of Mumbai as her muse, the film is something as quiet as a whisper. Rao cleverly uses archaic locations around the city to give it a melancholic look and feel, yet there is something strangely optimistic about it. "Dhobi Ghat" is a remarkably observant film. In one fantastic sequence, when Shai asks her maid to bring tea for Munna and herself, the maid gets it in an ordinary glass for him, clearly highlighting the appalling difference in class which exists all around us which we sadly choose to ignore. The story of Arun and Yasmin merits a deserving round of applause for Rao, who chooses something drastically different from the usual mundane crap we're subjected to in Indian films today. It is both imaginative and fascinating, and Rao tackles it with vigor and a sense of urgency. Tushar Kanti Ray's cinematography is outstanding, capturing the right essentials of the city with his faithful camera. Somewhere in the midst of the film, a hollow feeling begins to creep in but you can't place where it could've originated from, which is harrowing. One grave error on Rao's part is that she doesn't let her characters evolve completely. Making use of an age-old cliché of an outsider coming to explore the city of Mumbai, Rao ends up playing herself through the stereotypic character of Shai, because she documents the city without any affection whatsoever. I couldn't quite understand the relationship Munna and Shai share, for there are flashes of affection between them, but the depth of it is kept cryptic. In my view, had Rao made the film about for people who are used to the abrupt tragedies and small delights of the city, the film could've turned out to be better and much more mature. That, you see, would be a tribute to the city.Of the performances, Aamir Khan is reliably excellent, playing the brooding Arun with exemplary calm and confidence. Babbar and Dogra are convincing in their respective roles, but the best of the lot is Kirti Malhotra, who has the briefest role of the four leads. Though she's hardly seen in the film, her oratory skills are simply terrific. Yasmin is a character all of us have encountered at some point or the other in our lives, a passive spectator but who can speak volumes with her silence."Dhobi Ghat" is a flawed effort and is criminally passed off as a documentary about the city. Though Mumbai does play a significant role in the film, it is a mere representation of how an outsider embraces it. The film is devoid of a plot and the soothing and redeeming qualities of the city are never explored, because the morally complex characters get nowhere at the end of it. Still, I'm glad that someone in the industry has no qualms about making an independent film in a commercialized film industry. It's a good film but far from a perfect one, and if you can overlook the gaping holes in its premise, it can make a compelling experience.
Ahmed Dawod I wanted to watch this movie after my very good experiences with Aamir Khan movies: "3 Idiots" and "Like stars on Earth". So I got the movie and watched it and WHAT A DISAPPOINTMENT!!!!!! The movie - as any of Aamir's movies - has a message to deliver to the audience. but I think the message is lost in the many events of this movie. It tells about lives of different people and their intersections in a way that makes you can't understand who is the main character of this movie. I mean a movie can have more than one main character if they have one common thing. But when they have many things in common and sometimes they differ then you are lost. The ending is open too and you can't know how the issues ended at all. I don't know but I'm very disappointed with this movie. I rated it with 6 out of 10 because it has a very noble message to deliver but it failed to deliver it right. I'm neither regretting watching it nor will be if I didn't.
sindhuja-p-s A year too late, but Dhobi Ghat (Mumbai Diaries) is definitely worth watching. Surprisingly short for a Hindi movie and one is visually engaged with the brilliant camera work. The music is haunting and aesthetically coordinated with the scenes & characters.I love how the underlying 'feel' of the movie is of melancholia. The street level realism gives a taste of what Bombay is like.Of course the screenplay at times was redundant and a bit overindulgent. Monica Dogra's character seemed to reinforce the existing stereotype of a typical NRI with 'shallow' dialogues. Nevertheless my faith in Indian cinema has been momentarily restored!