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Gamyam Review

Gamyam
EDITOR RATING
7.0
Performances
Script
Music/Soundtrack
Visuals
NA
NA
NA
NA
Suggestions
Can watch again
NA
Good for kids
NA
Good for dates
NA
Wait for OTT
NA
"Nenu London, Paris, New York inka chaala chotlaki vellanu, chaala prapanchaanni choosanu - intha daridranni ekkada choodaledu."

"Nuvvu choosindhi pradesalani - prapanchaanni kaadu
."

There's more where that came from. And it all sounds good.

Gamyam falls somewhere between what Mee Sreyobhilashi was and what it could have been. A person's perspective changing completely in a couple of days is heavy material, one of the toughest scripting challenges. If it's done well, at the end of the movie you'll feel like the beginning was so long ago, even if the film lasts the standard 2½ hours.

Gamyam does not altogether manage it, but it's still a story well told. If you chose to treat it as a romance, it has the ingredients - a heroine with character (and an excellent actress in Kamalinee Mukherjee), sizeable footage for the courtship, good songs with creative picturization rather than meaningless dance, a brief estrangement and the always-appetizing getting back.

There's however a deeper layer of a man's world-view changing, and it has some good lines even if not the best of conceptualization, and in general shows more intelligence than an average - or even above average - Telugu film.

Abhiram (Sarvanand) is the son of an obscenely rich businessman, and does what any self-respecting son of an obscenely rich businessman would do - get wasted on partying. However, when he falls in love with the kind-hearted medico Janaki (Mukherjee), he has to work hard to win her heart since she is interested more in what he is without his wealth and status. Which is basically nothing.

However, love is blind and so can see nothing (get it, get it?), and so she warms up to him. Unfortunately, she soon realizes he cannot appreciate her zeal for helping disadvantaged people and actually repudiates it, and so walks out of his life. Abhiram however cannot live without her, and starts off on a journey to trace her and win her back.

Now every journey needs a mode of transport, and Abhiram's super-swanky bike attracts some unwanted attention.

Seenu. Gaali Seenu.

It's hard to imagine how watchable Gamyam might have been without Allari Naresh. He's increasingly a delight to watch, and no one complains that he has a release every week, and sometimes five (fullhyd.com in fact has just started a special Allari Naresh practice to deal with the increasing workload - please apply). If Kamalinee Mukherjee lends class to Gamyam, Naresh lends mass.

Seenu is a person who sells bikes for a living - usually others', and without their knowledge. Many people would call him a thief, and he agrees, so at least there's no dispute there. He tails Abhiram for a long while on the pretext of trying to help him, but becomes a loyal friend when the latter makes a completely unexpected gesture towards him, and offers to help out in tracing Janaki in return for 2 meals a day.

The duo then travel through the Andhra hinterland running into a variety of people and experiences including a school for the underprivileged, a bunch of local thugs, a woman in labor stuck in a traffic jam, a street performance by a travelling dance company, and even naxalites (which incidentally has some pretty well-written dialogues).

Gamyam is fundamentally a romcom, and an entertainer at that - you can watch it giggling selflessly, and leave detachedly when it's over, stuffing the popcorn cover into the seat's crevice. How many layers you find in Gamyam, however, depends on what all is etched in your own mind. The difference between a movie and real life is the happy ending. There's a payoff in movies for becoming a nice person - in life, you can keep getting nicer and nicer, hoping that Someone will notice and give you what you badly want. The truth is either what you already know, or hopefully will never have to find out.

Kamalinee Mukherjee is perhaps the only actress in Telugu aside of Genelia with memorable roles - it's a pity she's making noises about turning "glamorous". Sarvanand does a good job of being the silent and purposeful young man, and you watch with delight as he turns over a new leaf - money and goodness is a potent combination, and there's nothing like changing an unfortunate person's life with a wad of notes. Yes, rich people have it all, including the greatest power to bring happiness to others.

Naresh is the life of the film as the hyperactive and talkative Gaali Seenu. He's coming into his own pretty fast now, a Bankable Star - people actually whistle when he first comes on screen. It can't be just EVV's efforts that he's reached that stage.

The few songs in Gamyam are all melodious, lyrical and good to watch on screen - they're more about emotions than choreography, and shot in poetry rather than in prose.

Gamyam is a good film after a long while. For best results, watch it before you become obscenely rich.
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GAMYAM SNAPSHOT
Gamyam (telugu) reviews
USER RATING
9.0
151 USERS
RATE
Rating is quick and easy - try it!
  • Cast
    Allari Naresh, Sarvanand, Kamalinee Mukherjee, Giribabu, M S Narayana, Brahmanandam, L B Sriram
    1 user says this is wrong.
  • Music
    E S Murthy
    1 user says this is wrong.
  • Director
    Radhakrishna
    1 user says this is wrong.
  • Theatres
    Not screening currently in any theatres in Hyderabad.
    1 user says this is wrong.
TOP COMMENT
yrsandeep on 22nd Apr 2008, 1:37pm | Permalink
After sekhar kammula's movies in telugu this is one of the recent movies which has some substance in it.Though i am not well aware of the technicalities, the song by sirivennala stands out with loads of meaning compressed.Felt really good after listening to the song.

coming to the movie i feel that though the transformation of the hero as he makes his journey has been well portrayed the triggering of this transformation could have been handled better.

There are some very good dialogues that would make people think.

The character of brahmanandam showing the nature of general public who take no action but just criticize has been well depicted and aims at pricking the public to awake.
2
0
USER RATING
7.0
GAMYAM USER REVIEWS
1 - 15 OF 22 COMMENTS  |  NEXT  |  LAST
POSITIVE  |  NEGATIVE  |  NEWEST  |  OLDEST  |  MOST HELPFUL  |  LEAST HELPFUL
USER RATING
9.0
151 USERS
Performances
Script
Music/Soundtrack
Visuals
8.7
8.9
8.2
8.4
Can watch again - Yes
Good for kids - Yes
Good for dates - Unsure
Wait for OTT - Yes
Vaana Vasu on 2nd Mar 2008, 3:42pm | Permalink
This is a darn good movie. Watchable everytime you think about it. I wonder why do people still make king size duds like Okaa Magadu or similar trash when good movies like Gamyam can be made at a fraction of their budget. Move over stars, make way for actors and story tellers.
RATING
10
Movie Freek on 2nd Mar 2008, 5:54pm | Permalink
Kamalini has become so boring and routine
Naresh is again..at his best
RATING
2
Mahi M on 6th Mar 2008, 1:09pm | Permalink
Fantastic movie. comes in must watch category
RATING
10
Kris Ray on 7th Mar 2008, 12:21pm | Permalink
Hey Vaana Vasu, you are absolutely right. Duds from the dunce cap "big stars" (ha ha ha) are ruining the Telugu industry. Lets welcome "Actors" and "Story Tellers" at least now... Else, we may soon have to see the untimely sad demise of Telugu film industry.
RATING
8
Die-hard 5 on 8th Mar 2008, 2:08pm | Permalink
Our telugu directors never change...do they?? they either choose artless and simple moral issues as the themes for their movies or pilferage complex concepts of foreign movies under the label
RATING
2
Portuguese Man-Of-War on 8th Mar 2008, 3:18pm | Permalink
@Diehard: There's a certain way the Telugu film industry works. A director, especially a new one, finds it very difficult to find a producer if he is trying to make a genuinely innovative film. The producer is basically an investor - he wants returns, and doesn't care crap for innovation. He will invest more readily if you tell him that this film was already made in such-and-such country, and made millions there.

So it's not about ideas - it's about backers.

How does Hollywood manage it? I think it's simply the much larger market, and the more evolved audiences - you can make a highly arty film there and still get plenty of viewers. A non-SFX/CGI movie without a major starcast but with an innovative script can be made in maybe $20m. It's easy to recoup that - 2.5m viewers paying $8 a head, from a country with 250m mostly well-educated population, plus international audiences.

Telugu? Rs. 3 crore on a creative film will need 20 lakh people watching it paying Rs. 15 on average. If it's creative/arty, you are almost ruling out the B & C centers. So only the more elite audiences in 5-6 urban areas. Let me give you some approx numbers. A superhit film means 100 days in 100 centers. So 40,000 shows. Average 150 people per show means 60 lakh viewers. Add all the extra centers in the first 30-40 days, you'll get another 15 lakh viewers.

So a superhit gets about 75 lakh viewers. 20 lakh viewers then means about 75 days in 50 centers - to just about break even. It's very tough telling a producer that your innovative concept will do 75 days in 50 centers (which basically means a hit), when there are 5 superhits a year. In the 4-6 urban markets (A centers) in AP, there is hardly scope for 15 centers running a film for that long, even for superstars. (Of course, you can talk of music rights and overseas revenues, but those are assumed for big movies when you are at the drawing board stage.)

Movies are made according to market realities. It'll take a lot more in average educational levels in AP before we can target Hollywood standards instead of being purely "mass".
RATING
6
M Kaushik on 20th Mar 2008, 7:15pm | Permalink
I was longing to watch a nice telugu movie and perhaps, Gamyam came at the right time . It feels so light on your mind. It has no songs just for the heck of having them , has a very good script , balanced emotion , good one liners and good performances. All in all, a pleasure to watch .
RATING
8
Hard Portugese on 24th Mar 2008, 2:32pm | Permalink
@ Die-Hard: Though I appreciate your larger concern about plagiarism, yet I do not agree that there should not be any form of reproduction of the "original." If that were to be, then the subject in case - The Motorcycle Diaries - should not have been made at all since it was "inspired" from the even-more-popular book. In spite of the original - the book- the movie was still made. Why? To reach a different, larger audience.

If the pleasure of a brilliant creation is restricted to only a few people because it's in their language, then it's fair that such a creation be translated into languages that other people understand as well. Language there is a metaphor for customization to reflect the sub-culture of that audience, which is essential for them to appreciate its brilliance. The key is to the "inspired" creation radiates the same brilliance of the original. In the case of Gamyam, it does, in parts. In Ram Gopal Varma ki Aag, it didn't. That's the difference.

@ Portugese: Producers make formula-movies because audience likes them. Audience likes formula-movies because producers only make those. Egg or Chicken? Happy Days - a plotless story depicted by amateurish performances - turns out to be the highest grosser of last year. With all due respect to the movie, is that the best we can do? I hope not! Do we remember the last time a "critically-brilliant" movie flopped? We don't.

Because Telugu movie-makers stopped making brilliant movies. So, just an attempt at making a half-decent movie is enough here to make it a hit - take Gamyam for instance. But I don't blame the producers for this stagnation. All the so-called big-banner producers have already had colossal failures sticking to formula flicks. Ashwini Dutt, Allu Arvind, MS Raju, Suresh Productions, Dil-Raju, Super Good Films - you name him, he's taken a hammering.

At this juncture they'd be more-than-willing to invest in low-budget flicks which may turn out to be another Happy Days. Given the relatively low capital expenditure, this is a venture worth investing in. Invest-more to gain-more does not seem to be working well for the industry. So try investing-less. You only have less to lose.

So if you have a terrific script, and you can market yourself decently, you can not only find a producer, but also have a good movie, all with the expected ROI. The problem here is an apparent, very worrying, dearth in writing talent in the industry.

Another feature of Telugu cinema which is not being utilized to its potential is the blind adulation of the stars. Chiranjeevis and Bala Krishnas are not blind or deaf or stupid. They know they're old. They know that they should've retired. But they know, more than anything, that their fans still want them to act. It's very tough to walk away from that much love. And that's a terrific situation to be in. They should use this following to educate the "masses" with sensible, if not arty, cinema. By educate of course I don't mean to eradicate corruption or some such lofty agenda. Educate them in understanding good cinema. Their philosophy of sticking to "mass" flick is not doing good for them or their fans - since there's no the "mass" movies also flop phenomenally.

Instead use your image to draw full houses to cinema being made by Shekhar Kammula (if he's the yardstick that this generation measures). Your fans will see you through a million Okka Mogadus, then why not try to give them Aditya 369 as well? At least you're respecting their intelligence and yours in the process.
RATING
2
Karan on 27th Mar 2008, 11:27am | Permalink
iam not gr8 critic as all u guys.But i loved this film theme,performances and direction.
RATING
8
Anil Kumar on 28th Mar 2008, 11:12am | Permalink
enthavarakU endukoraku vintaparugu ani aDakku
gamanamEdi gamyam ayitE bATalOnE bratuku doruku
RATING
8
Koushik Reddy on 1st Apr 2008, 2:43pm | Permalink
some touching dialogues make this a pleasing film.
abhiram to his father : showing gaali seenu, "avunu veedu donge kaani veedu oka manishe".
-- money minded and egocentric personalities like me can learn so many things about pesons
RATING
10
cheerful libran on 20th Apr 2008, 12:51am | Permalink
Naresh rocks. If you haven't seen Gamyam, you are missing one of the best Telugu films this year!
RATING
8
Ravi U on 20th Apr 2008, 9:07pm | Permalink
for the first time i'd seen this movie.. i found it ok.. not a gr8 one.. but after reading u'r review i'm feeling like i should watch it again.. some brilliant movie i'd come across with similar concept was Satyame Sivam.. and may b that's why this is not sounding like a gr8 one for me.
Ravi U on 21st Apr 2008, 10:48am | Permalink
for the first time i'd seen this movie.. i found it ok.. not a gr8 one.. but after reading u'r review i'm feeling like i should watch it again.. some brilliant movie i'd come across with similar concept was Satyame Sivam.. and may b that's why this is not sounding like a gr8 one for me.
maharshi on 21st Apr 2008, 6:40pm | Permalink
hey this is maharshi, a wannabe director and writer.

I thank all those expressed their views on Gamyam. Now you will wonder why? In the current situation good and meaningful movies are nerver seen but, this movie falls into this group. I agree the director did a brilliant work but the song written by sastry garu (sirivennela) speaks louder than the movie.

The script work is brilliant and the screenplay was excellent.The feel of watching a great movie was never down for 2 hrs.

For movie enthusiasts this is a great treat. I always prefer good movies with great technicalities, excellent screenplay, good acting and having something to carry home. Truely speaking i have found all these qualities in very few films and these not even a single movie.But, gamyam has all the qualities.

Truely speaking the lyrics of sastry garu have a great impact on me, which are reflected in the poems i write. But, the song of

yentha varaku yendukoraku inta parugu ani adakku

has literally changed the way i see my life.

The directors who have brilliant ideas and start offf with a great movies at times fall prey to the vicious cycle of making movies with those big starts who doesn't allow directors to do their work and make the script spoil. I wish RADHAKRISHNA shouldn't come under these section of directors. Any ways shaould be carefull as his nextproject itself is with a bigstar and aswani dutt.

The subject which the director has selected is a very huge and new subject. But the efforts made to fit that subject to few pages of script and converting it into few reels has paid off.

For this movie a MS graduate from US has become director betting hs career and this movies made his career as a director.
RATING
10
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