Cineaste Finals part II

49
1 James ‘Whitey’ Bulger was the inspiration for the character in a 2006 film. He provided Boston FBI with the information on his gang’s main rival the New England Mob. He was finally captured recently after 16 years on the run. Which character did he inspire and who portrayed it ?

Transcript of Cineaste Finals part II

Page 1: Cineaste Finals part II

1James ‘Whitey’ Bulger was the inspiration for the character in a 2006 film. He provided Boston FBI with the information on his gang’s main rival the New England Mob. He was finally captured recently after 16 years on the run. Which character did he inspire and who portrayed it ?

Page 2: Cineaste Finals part II

1Frank Costello in The Departed

Page 3: Cineaste Finals part II

2

This effect of infinitelyLooped images is named after a cocoa Powder brand. Name The effect or the brand.

Page 4: Cineaste Finals part II

2

Droste Effect

Page 5: Cineaste Finals part II

3• One of the central characters in the Anime Naruto• Mammals of the family Ursidae• Arecaceae• Astor Piazzola• Panthera pardus• Exoskeleton of an invertebrate• Footed cup intended to hold a drink• a structure in which all of the outer surfaces (excluding

the base) are triangular and converge at a single point• The name which means "farmer" or "earth-worker“

Page 6: Cineaste Finals part II

3"A festivals", or "category one“ according to International Federation of Film Producers Associations (FIAPF)And their top awards.

Page 7: Cineaste Finals part II

4It was the name given to several related German Shepherd dogs featured in fictional stories on film. The first of the line was a shell-shocked pup found by American serviceman Lee Duncan Lorraine, France. It was named for a puppet that French children gave to the American soldiers for good luck. One of the three non-animated canine characters who has a star on the Hollywood walk of Fame.

Page 8: Cineaste Finals part II

4Rin Tin TIn.

Page 9: Cineaste Finals part II

5

Missing film?

Page 10: Cineaste Finals part II

5

400 blows

Page 11: Cineaste Finals part II

6

A writer, a director and an actor, it is often said, that his rather rebellious atittude, liberal beliefs, his tendency to make fun of established conventions, did not really endear him to the Hindi movie industry's rather conservative establishment. Hence he spend the latter part of his life making some B grade movies. One of the first Indian actors to appear in Hollywood movies, he also made a series of road movies with his friend, and the movies were named after both of them. During Emergency he was one of the few from the Hindi film industry who openly took on Indira Gandhi's regime, leading to one of his movies being banned too. Identify.

Page 12: Cineaste Finals part II

6

I S Johar and Mehmood

Page 13: Cineaste Finals part II

7

This film won the Palm De Or despite the fact that the jury head, Tennessee Williams detested violent movies. The plot has similarities with Shane, a 1953 George Stevens movie and The Searchers, a 1956 John Ford movie. However, the director has claimed that few of the shot sequences were inspired from Hitchcock’s The Wrong Man. It has been shot in a disinterested documentary style and has been given a greater depth by lengthy improvisations on sessions prior to filming. One example of which is the smoking gutter in the opening credits. Which movie?

Page 14: Cineaste Finals part II

7

Taxi Driver

Page 15: Cineaste Finals part II

8

In the movie there is a scene where 'Madhuri' <character name> asks Deepak Dobriyal's character if she resembles Tabu, which is an obvious reference to the actress Tabu. This is because many people in the industry at first glance have complimented 'Madhuri' that she looks so much like Tabu, and even the actress Tabu herself has commented this. So Anurag Kashyap wanted to put this idea in the movie. So, who would be 'Madhuri' ?

Page 16: Cineaste Finals part II

8

Gulaal, Mahie Gill

Page 17: Cineaste Finals part II

9Goebbels made sure that the film's print was one of the first things seized by the Germans when they occupied France. He referred to Jean Renoir as "Cinematic Public Enemy Number 1". For many years it was assumed that the film had been destroyed in an Allied air raid in 1942. However, a German film archivist named Frank Hansel, then a Nazi officer in Paris, had actually smuggled it back to Berlin. Then when the Russians entered Berlin in 1945, the film found its way to an archive in Moscow. When Jean Renoir came to restore his film in the 1960s, he knew nothing of Hansel's acquisition and was working from an old muddy print. Purely by coincidence at the same time, the Russian archive swapped some material with an archive in Toulouse. Included in that exchange was the original negative print. However, because so many prints of the film existed at the time, it would be another 30 years before anyone realised that the version in Toulouse was actually the original negative. Which Film ?

Page 18: Cineaste Finals part II

9Grand Illusion

Page 19: Cineaste Finals part II

10

Previously titled 'Ivan Yaaro', which means "Who is he?" in Tamil. It was changed to 'Evano Oruvan' which means "Some guy", "Some person" or "Some one.” It is a remake of the Marathi film and both the films are directed by X. Marathi film and X ?

Page 20: Cineaste Finals part II

10

Dombivali Fast and Nishikant Kamat

Page 21: Cineaste Finals part II

11_____ is a band without any talent. They only perform in the night by breaking into music shops and 'jamming'. Their hit songs "Heyyy" and "Yeahhh" contain just one word in the lyrics, repeated over and over. Nonetheless, they are fond of asserting loudly - "We are the ____ ! The coolest thing since Antarctica!". They are also apparently "huge in Bangladesh." Which band ?

Page 22: Cineaste Finals part II

11Bombay Boys

Page 23: Cineaste Finals part II

12

Page 24: Cineaste Finals part II

12se7en

Page 25: Cineaste Finals part II

13

Hyperlink cinema are films where the characters or action reside in separate stories, but a connection or influence between those disparate stories is slowly revealed to the audience; illustrated in Mexican director Alejandro González Iñárritu's films Amores Perros (2000), 21 Grams(2003), and Babel (2006).One of first examples of such cinema was displayed in Satyajit Ray's first colour movie. He described the film's narrative structure as follows: "Our audience likes a central character, or a couple of central characters with whom they can identify, and a story with a straight narrative line. It told the story of several groups of characters and it went back and forth. You know, between group one, group two, group three, group four, then back to group one, group two, and so on. It's a very musical form"

Page 26: Cineaste Finals part II

13

kanchenjunga

Page 27: Cineaste Finals part II

14

• Connect to a song.• Hub, Uns, Ishq, Aquidat, Ibaadat,

Junnon, Maut.

Page 28: Cineaste Finals part II

14

Satarangi Re from Dil Se

Page 29: Cineaste Finals part II

15

A group of British children aged 7 from widely ranging backgrounds are interviewed about a range of subjects. Director Michael Apted planned to re-interview them at 7 year intervals to determine how their lives and attitudes have changed. Next part, is expected in late 2011 or early 2012. Name of the documentary ?

Page 30: Cineaste Finals part II

15

The Up series, first film was 7 Up.

Page 31: Cineaste Finals part II

16

In which famous film you will hear the dialogue “Wait a minute! Wait a minute! You ain’t heard nothing yet.“ ?

Page 32: Cineaste Finals part II

16

The Jazz Singer

Page 33: Cineaste Finals part II

17

Bob Dylan was asked to contribute music, but was reluctant to use his own recording of "It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)", so a version performed by Byrds frontman Roger McGuinn was used instead. Also, instead of writing an entirely new song for the film, Dylan simply wrote out the first verse of “Ballad of ____ ____” and told the filmmakers, “Give this to McGuinn, he’ll know what to do with it.” McGuinn completed the song and performed it for the film.

Page 34: Cineaste Finals part II

17

Easy Rider

Page 35: Cineaste Finals part II

18

• His films usually focus on young protagonists or have children that play key roles in the plot

• Frequently uses music by Jô Hisaishi• Frequently makes references to nature, ecology, and

pollution by man in his films• Films often involve human protagonists entering a

strange land that are forbidden or otherwise inaccessible

• Often sets his films in Japanese-influenced versions of European cities. Who ?

Page 36: Cineaste Finals part II

18

Hayao Miyazaki.

Page 37: Cineaste Finals part II

19

Himanshu Rai was partners in Bombay Talkies with Sashadhar Mukherjee, and Mukherjee's brother in law worked as a technician in the studio. When due to suspected romantic liaisons of his wife and the leading man in one film, Himanshu had to sack the leading man and look for a replacement, he cast the gawky, awkward looking and relcutant brother-in-law as the leading man. The brother-in-law in question was Ashok Kumar.After Rai''s, there was a tussle for studio control, His widow Devika Rani was in conflict with Sashadhar Mukherjee. Eventually there was dual control and alternate production of films by the two camps, during this era Sashadhar produced the studio's biggest hit to date Kismet in 1943. He then parted ways and formed something of equally great magnitude. What ?

Page 38: Cineaste Finals part II

19

Filmistan

Page 39: Cineaste Finals part II

20

The nick name X which Naseeruddin Shah's character gives to Satish Kaushik's character in the film Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro is actually the name of a film of which Kundan Shah, among other things, was the assistant director. What is X ?

Page 40: Cineaste Finals part II

20

Albert Pinto ko Gussa Kyon Ata Hai.

Page 41: Cineaste Finals part II

21

During the early days of the Hollywood a certain word was used to refer to people working in Film industry. What word ? BLOW UP PIC

Page 42: Cineaste Finals part II

21

Page 43: Cineaste Finals part II

21

Movies

Page 44: Cineaste Finals part II

22

According to director X, Y threatened to abandon the film entirely at one point during the shooting. X says he threatened to kill Y and then turn the gun on himself if Y left - and later declared he was quite prepared to do so. Y stated in interviews that X wielded a pistol to emphasize the threat, but X denies this. This diabolical relationship between X & Y was also subject of a documentary “My Best Fiend”.

Page 45: Cineaste Finals part II

22

X – Werner HerzogY – Klaus Kinski.The movie was Aguirre: the Wrath of God

Page 46: Cineaste Finals part II

23

Page 47: Cineaste Finals part II

23

Song from Bandini, Debut of Gulzar

Page 48: Cineaste Finals part II

24

According to folklore, ‘A night in Casablanca’ got the brothers into trouble with Warner Brothers, who thought the title was similar to Casablanca & threatened to sue. What was the famous ‘Groucho reply’?

Page 49: Cineaste Finals part II

24

He threatened to sue the studio for using the word ‘Brothers’ in its name ! He said Marx Brothers were brothers before the Warner Brothers.