
Peepli Live
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Peepli Live
Trailer
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ht0-gqvFor0
Soundtrack
Storyline
<p>Natha is a poor farmer from the village of Peepli in Mukhya Pradesh who struggles to earn enough money for his family. After taking a trip to the city with his elder brother, Budhia, Natha discovers that the banks will seize his farm if he does not pay off his outstanding loans. Meanwhile, the Mukhya Pradesh government has called a by-election where the opposition party believes they have a chance to form the government. The agricultural, poverty-stricken population has lost faith in the long-serving ruling party, whose Chief Minister, along with the Federal Agriculture Minister, believe in the industrialisation of rural areas. Natha and Budhia request financial help from the village headman, who mockingly suggests that they commit suicide, after which his family will receive monetary compensation for his death from the government. Budhia encourages Natha to do this for the sake of his family, but Natha is hesitant. While the two discuss at a tea stall, Rakesh, a local journalist, overhears the conversation and reports Natha’s impending suicide on the news. The report quickly spreads to national news channels; one high-profile journalist, Nandita, joins Rakesh to interview Natha and his family. A rival channel also picks up the story, and each competes to report on Natha’s suicide, increasingly intruding on his private life. The media at large soon descends on Peepli to await Natha’s suicide, monitoring him at all hours. Natha becomes a celebrity, attracting visitors and businesses to the village. The ruling party tries to bribe Natha to prevent him from committing suicide, fearing it will galvanize the opposition. Conversely, the opposition encourages Natha to commit suicide, hoping to win the election while also using media attention to advance their own agendas. Rakesh, meanwhile, discovers a poor farmer in Peepli has died after his land was seized by a bank. He proposes writing a piece about the farmer to Nandita, who becomes frustrated and instructs Rakesh to concentrate on Natha’s story. The village headman, allied with the ruling party, secretly kidnaps Natha and holds him ransom from the opposition parties. Rakesh tracks down Natha to a warehouse in Peepli and contacts Nandita, who rushes to the location; however, the rest of the media follow her there, suspecting she has a lead on Natha. In the resulting confusion, a spill from a lamp sets fire to the warehouse, which explodes, killing Rakesh. Government officials mistake Rakesh’s badly burnt body for Natha’s; after ruling that the death was an accident, the government refuses to compensate Natha’s family, leaving them helpless. After Natha’s death is reported, visitors and media depart from Peepli, leaving it decrepit. Before driving off, Nandita briefly wonders what happened to Rakesh. As the film ends, Natha is shown to have escaped to , where he works as a day labourer in the construction industry. began as a script written by journalist Anusha Rizvi called . In 2004 Rizvi asked Aamir Khan to read her script and, although he initially refused as he was preoccupied with shooting , he eventually decided to finance the film after she described the plot to him. In an interview, Khan explains the meaning of the movie title: “When we were looking for the right title before we began the publicity and promotions of the film, we came up with Peepli Live. Peepli is the village that film is set in, the “live” part is meant to indicate: here is a story that is happening in Peepli that the filmmaker is bringing to you live. That’s why it’s Peepli Live.” was filmed on various locations in such as , , , as well as in New Delhi. Maxima Basu designed the costumes aptly capturing the rural essence of the film. According to Aamir Khan, many of the actors are from the sub-urban area of , Bhadwai in . Other cast members are from playwright ‘s theatre troupe Naya Theatre. competed in the , the first film from India to achieve this feat. With support of media billionaire Keyur Patel of Fuse Global who is major hollywood financier “Peepli Live” was selected at and his relationship with Robert Redford provided a great platform there. It received an in India for language use. The movie was picked up by speciality German distribution company Rapid Eye Movies for a special screening at the . It was also named the Best First Feature Film at the 31st in South Africa. In the United Kingdom, the film was released on 24 September. reportedly recovered its cost before its release itself. received positive reviews. , film critic and author of , describes as “a work of damning ramifications.” He further states that, “To most of us out here sitting in the auditorium, farmers’ suicide is just a headline. Read, regretted and then put to bed. Peeply (Live) is that savagely raw and hurtful wake-up call for the conscience which does not mince words.” of the gave the film three and a half out of five stars stating,” How smart can Indian cinema get? Exhilarating answer: Very smart. And that’s the bottomline of , a small little film, that showcases the real India without glossing over the contradictions of our fumbling-bumbling democracy or getting overtly sentimental about garibi and the attendant grime that goes with it. of wrote “Peepli Live demands to be absorbed and not just watched over the weekend” and praised the director Anusha Rizvi – “she has the gift of the dark humour satire ala Shyam Benegal and in her uncompromised shooting style, she shows the fire of Mira Nair”. of gave it four and a half out of five stars and argues that “the concept [farmers’ suicides] would instinctively translate into a serious, thought-provoking film. But takes a grim and solemn issue, turns it into a satire, garnishes it with populist sentiment and makes a far greater impact than a mere documentary, had it tackled the burning issue. In fact, like all Aamir Khan films, marries realism with a winning box-office formula most brilliantly.” Mayank Shekhar of gave the film four out of five stars arguing that “the satire is irresistible; the subtext, compelling. And yet neither shows itself up in any form of self-seriousness. The comic writing is immaculately inspired”. Noyon Jyoti Parasara of gave the film 3.5 out of five and said, ” is a class act and director Anusha Rizvi and producer Aamir Khan could take a bow for working this into reality”. of also gave it three and a half out of five stars, calling it “a scathing satire on the country’s apathy towards the rural class, and specifically towards farmers, employs a comic tone to tell a serious story. The witty script turns Natha into something of a local celebrity, who draws out the true character and motivations of all those who cross his path.” Mathures Paul of gave the film 4 out of 5 stars noting that, “Anusha Rizvi demolishes successfully whatever little faith we had in the political process. is entertaining and inspiring”. As of June 2020 , the film holds an 86% approval rating on , based on 28 reviews with an average rating of 6.32 out of 10. On , the film had an average score of 69 out of 100, based on 12 reviews, indicating “Generally Favorable” reviews. According to Box Office India, took a good start and did a business of (US$470,000) on its first day. The film collected (US$3.5 million) by the end of its third week and was declared a super hit. Overseas, the film opened to a limited release at 64 places in the U.S., and was ranked third, grossing $350,054 in the domestic market and $700,000 worldwide in its opening weekend. The music is composed by , an Indian band and . The film was subject to a few controversies. VJAS (Vidarbha Janandolan Samiti), the Nagpur-based farmer’s advocacy group, asked the Maharashtra government to ban the film due to its depiction of farmer suicides. Kishor Tiwari, the president of VJAS, stated: “TV serial ‘Bairi Piya’ has shown that debt-trapped Vidarbha farmers are selling daughters to clear their debt, while ‘Peepli Live’ is far from reality and an insult to poor farmers of Vidarbha who have been victims of globalization and wrong policies of the state.” In addition, according to the , “folk singer Rama Joshi alleges that a song Chola Mati Ke Ram, which has been used in the film, does not give credit to Gangaram Siwar, a celebrated folk singer of Chhattisgarh and the original lyricist of the folk song.” In response, Nageen Tanwir, who sang the song in the film, stated: “The song, Chola Maati Ke Ram, has been composed by Gangaram Siwar in Chhattisgarh, but the Habib Tanvir theatre group has officially purchased rights for the song. So I don’t understand why people from Chhattisgarh are asking for their due again.” Also, according to , was inspired by 1997 English film . In an interview with , he stated that he was astonished to learn that India’s official entry for the Oscars this year, , was inspired by , his best film as an actor. The film’s storyline also shares similarity to Malayalam film . Its director M. A. Nishad says: “The storyline of the Bollywood movie has a similar theme to , which was released much before the Hindi film. The difference was in the narrative style.” The song “Mehngai dayan khaye jat hai” was challenged in court by the Congress party alleging that was called as “Dayan” (female ghost) in the movie. However, the argument did not sustain and the case was dismissed by the court holding that Sonia Gandhi was not responsible for the rising inflation in India.</p>
Details
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Genres:
Political comedy
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Writer:
NDTV journalist Anusha Rizvi called The Fallen
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Producer:
Aamir Khan, Kiran Rao
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Music:
Indian Ocean, Brij Mandal, Bhadwai
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Director:
Anusha Rizvi
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Cinematography:
Shanker Raman
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Release Date:
13-Aug-10
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Edited By:
Hemanti Sarkar
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Budget:
10
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Production Company:
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OTT Platform:
Netflix
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Runtime:
1h 44m
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Language:
Hindi
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Box Office:
46.85
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Other Languages:
📄
Screenplay:
Anusha Rizvi
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Censorship:
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