I watched
Kaante (2002) at the New Beverly Cinema in Los Angeles this week. A few well-chosen and well-executed Bollywood production numbers helped make the movie's 2 1/2 hours fly by. Perhaps more heist movies should incorporate such numbers.
The major characters were all good, as were some of the minor ones. The solution to the movie's central mystery is arbitrary, but that's a red herring; the question drives the movie. The answer is beside the point.
The movie is in Hindi, liberally interspersed with English. All but one of the lead characters speaks both languages, and the script turns the linguistic duality into plot points both serious and comic. The film was shot in Los Angeles and incorporates several picturesque Los Angeles locations, among which is not, as far as I can tell, the Bradbury Building.
The New Beverly is Quentin Tarantino's theater, and Tarantino has been been quoted as rating
Kaante high among movies influenced by his own
Reservoir Dogs. I suspect that the occasional waves of what sounded like knowing laughter at the New Beverly reflected the audience's recognition of particular nods to Tarantino's movie, but knowledge of
Reservoir Dogs is no prerequisite to enjoying
Kaante.
© Peter Rozovsky 2017Labels: heist movies, India, Los Angeles, movies, music. Bollywood, New Beverly Cinema, Quentin Tarantino