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Kalo Pothi Track your TV-Shows and Movies www.serienguide.tv Source: https://www.themoviedb.org/
#KaloPothi - running successfully in 3rd week, more and more shows and theaters are being added 😀 Congratulations @kalopothi #Nepali #film #nepal (at Kathmandu, Nepal)
Kalo Pothi कालो पोथी
‘Kalo Pothi’ movie review: A triumph of Nepali cinema
After watching Min Bahadur Bham’s much acclaimed Kalo Pothi, where two friends growing up in Mugu during the decade-long civil war set out on a journey to bring back a missing hen, I couldn’t help but reflect on how far Nepali cinema has come in the recent years.
After all, a little context is needed to appreciate Kalo Pothi, which combines an erudite understanding of the craft of cinema, with the deftness of a well-woven narrative and then elevates it with a degree of personal involvement that evoked with me, the works of Andrei Tarkovsky, no less.
Our films have been continually recognised by various film festivals around the world for quite sometime now. Most recently, the Bhaskar Dhungana-directed Suntali had successfully combined the conceit of a telenovela with a tale of a village girl that was distinctly Nepali. True to form, Suntali, had wholeheartedly embraced the camp that is distinctive to the telenovela format. But audience couldn't warm up to this use as most failed to recognise the clever juxtaposition of these forms.
A few years ago movies like Suntali was possible in Nepali cinema, movies which drew attention of the guardians of world cinema with its understanding of the craft and the vision to elevate it beyond the trappings of such, Deepak Rauniyar’s Highway had given a whole new generation of Nepali filmgoers what a ‘world cinema’ made in Nepal would look like.
Highway had raised eyebrows with its sordid depiction of the modern Nepali society and had combined multiple narratives to its proceedings which had, until then, been the domain of directors like Alejandro González Iñárritu and Mani Ratnam closer home. Most audience shrugged off the movie, their reason being that the movie was ‘too foreign’. Even more could not stand the fact that director Rauniyar had chosen to not give his myriad characters a closure.
Even after the screening of the much-anticipated Kalo Pothi at a local multiplex, I overheard similar concerns-reasons why audience had not completely warmed up to movies like Suntali and Highway - from the most vocal member of the audience.
But having spent the preceding hours with an excitement that I had not felt for Nepali movies in the recent years, I personally feel such concerns will be short-lived in the case of Kalo Pothi. Or better, it will be only limited within a very small number of the audience.
For one, director Bham’s leads are charmingly relatable. Haven’t we all had that one inseparable friend while growing up who has seen us in the nude and couldn’t care less. Prakash (Khadka Raj Nepali) and Kiran (Sukra Raj Rokaya), two friends although belonging to a different caste (it should matter because we are in Mugu), bring to the simple tale a reminiscence of simpler times we had all lived.
And even though, the film’s provenance maybe Mugu, where the languid air often belies the hardship of the region’s inhabitants and the resulting tenacity, its spiritual home lies in some of the most-revered piece of world cinema.
The movie evokes the works of Abbas Kiarostami in its apparent impassiveness of the camera work. At key moments, cinematographer Aziz Zhambakiyev’s frame only moves when it is absolutely required. These frames are, instead, keys to delve deeper into the inner life of the characters.
And in another sequence, a gleeful lot of kids watching a screening of a Rajesh Hamal movie evokes the love for the medium director Giuseppe Tornatore’s Cinema Paradiso had so charmingly brought across.
But in what is the most stunning sequences I have ever seen filmed for a Nepali movie, director Bham elevates a simple tale to a different plane. In impeccably choreographed segues, we are shown the inner life of Prakash. Composer Jason Kunwar’s haunting score acts as the hymn for meditation in these sequences which is the key to the lives of these disparate characters, especially Prakash, living unaware of the immensity of life beyond the rolling cliffs.
In its beauty and precise staging, these sequences reminded me of the films of Andrei Tarkovsky, especially his Domenico’s speech sequence from the movie Nostalghia.
What Bham has apparently done and succeeded in with Kalo Pothi is to not merely affect the appearance of a new form but has, along the way, created a distinct style that will only be better in the days to come.
Kalo Pothi is a solid addition to world cinema, a triumph for Nepali cinema. ■
An edited version of this article first appeared in Online Khabar.
#kalopothi - 3June #nepali #film @kalopothi (at Kathmandu, Nepal)
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Kalo Pothi - in cinemas 3 June
"KALO POTHI" - awarded as BEST FILM in International Critics Week of Venice Film Festival 2015. Congratulations KALO POTHI team. Here's official trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ffrIqBM_EHM