Garbage (film)

Garbage is a 2018 Indian erotic drama film written, and directed by Qaushiq Mukherjee.[1] Jointly produced by Mukherjee, Shailesh R Singh, Hansal Mehta, Hina Saiyada and Dipankar Chaki, the film stars Trimala Adhikari, Tanmay Dhanania, Satarupa Das and Satchit Puranik in the lead roles.[2] It was premiered in the panorama section at the 68th Berlin International Film Festival.[3] The story follows Phanishwar, a taxi driver in Goa who has held a woman captive in his home. He encounters Rami, a victim of revenge porn and their world collide.[4] Garbage is available on Netflix.[5]

Garbage
Directed byQ
Produced byShailesh R Singh
Hansal Mehta
Q
Hina Saiyada
Dipankar Chaki
Written byQ
StarringTrimala Adhikari
Tanmay Dhanania
Satarupa Das
Satchit Puranik
Music byNeel Adhikari
CinematographyQ
Lakshman Anand
Edited byHina Saiyada
Production
company
Karma Media and Entertainment
Oddjoint
Release date
  • 17 February 2018 (2018-02-17) (Berlin)
Running time
109 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Cast

  • Trimala Adhikari as Rami Kumar
  • Tanmay Dhanania as Phanishwar
  • Satarupa Das as Nanaam
  • Satchit Puranik as Baba Satchitanand
  • Shruti Viswan as Arri
  • Gitanjali Dang as Simon

Production

Director Qaushiq Mukherjee said that Garbage reflected "the kind of time I was living in for the last two years, personally and social speaking."[4] He began writing the script which was initially titled The fucked. He said that several parts of the film were based on real characters and incidents. The taxi driver and the captive girl were "composites of different people" while the protagonist was based on his friend who had died in 2017.[4] Mukherjee said that the film was mostly unscripted and "workshop-driven."[6] To prepare for his character, Tanmay worked as a production driver for the team for a month. Mukherjee wrote the script while dealing with the deaths of a few close ones when he said he realised that "death is the only reality."[6]

Reception

Deborah Young of The Hollywood Reporter wrote: "For lovers of his angry, dreamy, sexually violent aesthetic, Garbage does not disappoint.[7] Jay Weissberg of Variety called it a "tiresome torture porn disguised as a femme-empowering revenge thriller."[8] Anupam Kant Verma of Firstpost wrote: "For a film that wants to stand out from the saccharine infested world of Bollywood, Garbage ends up emulating its black and white, good and evil charms."[9] Soumya Rao of Scroll.in felt that "the shock and horror are not just narrative tools but symptoms of the times in which we live." She also praised Trimala and Tanmay's performance, calling them "fearless".[10]

Shubhra Gupta of The Indian Express noted that the film is "sometimes too in-your-face, the way it takes two young women and a man, flings them into terrible situations, and observes them, pitilessly, trying to negotiate those tough tangles."[11] J Hurtado of Screen Anarchy called the film a "bold, no holds barred attack on the hypocrisy of the religious right wing in India today." Further calling it "too violent, too unafraid, and too real to even be considered as a commercial viability."[12] He also included it in his list of 14 Favorite Indian Films of 2018.[13]

gollark: Ah, but Hitler did violence, and is therefore bad.
gollark: IIRC you can only create Rust memory leaks with... bugs, `unsafe`, or just allocating unreasonably large amounts of memory with weird lifetimes and passing them around through your kodeprogram.
gollark: ```RUSTU SS TTSUR```
gollark: Just rewrite it in Rust.
gollark: Ban C programmers?

References

  1. "Qaushiq Mukherjee: I try to live as much of an abnormal life as possible". The Times of India. 23 August 2018. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  2. "Q's Political and Personal 'Garbage' Makes an Impact at Berlin". The Quint. 20 February 2018. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  3. Shedde, Meenakshi (9 February 2018). "Berlin Film Festival 2018: Q's Garbage, Wes Anderson's Isle of Dogs, Matangi/Maya/M.I.A and other highlights". Firstpost. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  4. Ghosh, Devarsi (16 February 2018). "'Garbage' director Q on his new film: 'It's dangerous, not funny'". Scroll.in. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  5. "Netflix acquires worldwide streaming rights of Qaushiq Mukherjee's psychological thriller Garbage". Firstpost. 23 August 2018. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  6. Amiruddin, Zahra (8 March 2018). "Why you need to watch Qaushiq Mukherjee's latest film, Garbage". Elle. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  7. Young, Deborah (28 February 2018). "'Garbage': Film Review: Berlin 2018". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  8. Weissberg, Jay (12 March 2018). "Berlin Film Review: 'Garbage'". Variety. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  9. Verma, Anupam Kant (6 September 2018). "Garbage movie review: Q's new film favours provocation over strong characterisation, storytelling". Firstpost. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  10. Rao, Soumya (10 September 2018). "'Garbage' review: Q's provocative thriller is not for the faint-hearted". Scroll.in. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  11. Gupta, Shubhra (20 February 2018). "Why Everything is Garbage". The Indian Express. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  12. Hurtado, J (17 February 2018). "Berlinale 2018 Review: GARBAGE Savagely Attacks Religious Hypocrisy In Media Addicted India". Screen Anarchy. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  13. Hurtado, J (3 January 2018). "J Hurtado's 14 Favorite Indian Films of 2018". Screen Anarchy. Archived from the original on 4 January 2019. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
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