HIndie Awards 2016
An Introduction
So, once again, once
again I failed to deliver on a simple promise. I could not complete the For
Your Consideration posts since I had a valid excuse; a lot on my plate…
Completing a
screenplay, which I am still stuck on.
Moving back to
Mumbai and no access to net, since I am looking for a place.
And other things,
I'd rather not share here.
Anyways, onwards and
upwards as they say.
So since I cannot
complete the posts that I wanted, I decided with time finally on my hands; I
should get on with it and begin starting my HIndie film posts.
Of course, this also
means having to lock down the final nominees; which is a difficult task.
Certain films I have to see are pending and it is causing a major conflict in
my schedule. I am hoping to get this awards show on the road before the Oscars
and done at least a week or more into the next month.
As you know, there
are 34 awards; and this year each award gets its own post [no matter how long
or short].
Here are a few
tidbits as to how the show will move forward;
-Though regional
cinema outclasses Hindi cinema this year by a massive leap. Those awards will
be the first presented. Then the Music awards, then Technical, Breakthrough,
Script, Acting, Direction [which is one single award] and finally Picture.
-With singular posts
this time; each set of acting awards [Hindi and Regional] will go on according
to the best performances…
In fact why am I
telling you all this? Let me just list down how the posts will go…
Best Short Film
Best Editing
[Regional Film]
Best Cinematography
[Regional Film]
Best Supporting
Actor [Female] in A Regional Film
Best Supporting
Actor [Male] in A Regional Film
Best Leading Actor
[Male] in A Regional Film
Best Screenplay
[Regional Film]
Best Director
[Regional Film]
Best Regional
Language Picture
Best Original Song
Best Original Score
Best VFX
Best Costume Design
Best Production
Design
Best Editing
Best Cinematography
Best Ensemble
Best Breakthrough
Performance [Female]
Best Breakthrough
Performance [Male]
Best Breakthrough
Director
Best Actor [Female]
in A Supporting Role [Drama]
Best Actor [Male] in
A Supporting Role [Comedy/Romantic]
Best Actor [Female]
in A Supporting Role [Comedy/Romantic]
Best Actor [Male] in
A Supporting Role [Drama]
Best Actor [Male] in
A Leading Role [Comedy/Romantic]
Best Actor [Female]
in A Leading Role [Drama]
Best Actor [Male] in
A Leading Role [Drama]
Best Actor [Female]
in A Leading Role [Comedy/Romantic]
Best Screenplay
[Drama]
Best Screenplay
[Comedy/Romantic]
Prettier
Best Director
Best Picture [Drama]
Best Picture
[Comedy/Romantic]
So that's how it is
going to go…
Another item to
consider is that each section barring a few will have 5 nominations. Once
again, it has been a struggle to fill out the female lead sections, despite how
promising the future gender equation in Hindi cinema is looking like.
Apart from them
however; since Regional cinema has been such a shining beacon for the past few
year and I have had my eyes awakened to it...it will have seven nominations;
each film from a different language. Sadly that means as you will see below,
certain really superb films miss out.
Another huge rule I
am establishing this year is that no individual can be nominated twice in the
same sub-category...hence Deepika Padukone cannot gain two or three nomination
for her performances this year which were all in the comedic/romantic genre. Or
the breakthrough man Avinash Arun cannot be nominated in cinematography for
both Masaan or Drishyam...no matter how stellar his work.
So let's get over
with it, here are the nominees;
Best Motion Picture
(Drama)
|
Best Motion Picture
(Comedy/Romantic)
|
Dinesh Vijan and
Sunil Lulla for Badlapur [EROS
International]
|
Aditya Chopra and
Maneesh Sharma for Dum Laga Ke Haisha
[Yash Raj Films]
|
Shonali Bose and
Nilesh Maniyar for Margarita With A Straw
[Viacom 18 Motion Pictures]
|
NP Singh, Ronnie
Lahiri and Sneha Rajani for Piku [Yash
Raj Films]
|
Vikas Bahl, Anurag
Kashyap, Vikramaditya Motwane, Guneet Monga, Manish Mundra, Melita Toscan,
Marie-Jeanne Pascal and Shaan Vyas for Masaan
[Pathe]
|
Sajid Nadiadwala
and Imtiaz Ali for Tamasha [UTV Motion
Pictures]
|
Aditya Chopra and
Dibakar Banerjee for Titli [Westend
Films]
|
Sanjay Leela
Bhansali and Kishore Lulla for Bajirao Mastani
[EROS International]
|
Vineet Jain and
Vishal Bhardwaj for Talvar [Junglee
Pictures]
|
Vikas Bahl,
Vikramaditya Motwane, Anurag Kashyap, Kirti Nakhwa, Rohit Chugani and Ketan
Maru for Hunterrr [Shemaroo
Entertainment]
|
Best Director
|
Best Cinematography
|
Shoojit Sircar for
Piku
|
Sudeep Chatterjee
for Bajirao Mastani
|
Sriram Raghavan
for Badlapur
|
Anil Mehta for
Badlapur
|
Meghna Gulzar for
Talvar
|
Nikos Andritsakis
for Detective Byomkesh Bakshy!
|
Sanjay Bhansali
for Bajirao Mastani
|
Rajeev Ravi for
Bombay Velvet
|
Imtiaz Ali for
Tamasha
|
Avinash Arun for
Masaan
|
Best Screenplay (Drama)
|
Best Screenplay
(Comedy/Romantic)
|
Sriram Raghavan,
Arijit Biswas and Pooja Ladha Surti for Badlapur
|
Juhi Chaturvedi
for Piku
|
Shonali Bose for
Margarita With A Straw
|
Reema Kagti and
Zoya Akhtar for Dil Dhadakne Do
|
Varun Grover for
Masaan
|
Harshavardhan
Kulkarni for Hunterrr
|
Sharat Katariya
and Kanu Behl for Titli
|
Deepak Venkateshan for Kaun Kitne Panee
Mein
|
Vishal Bhardwaj
for Talvar
|
Sharat Katariya
for Dum Laga Ke Haisha
|
Best Actor in A Leading
Role Drama (Male)
|
Best Actor in A Leading
Role Comedy/Romantic (Male)
|
Nawazuddin
Siddiqui as Dashrath Manjhi for Manjhi: The Mountain Man
|
Ranveer Singh as
Bajirao I for Bajirao Mastani
|
Randeep Hooda as
Charles Sobhraj for Main aur Charles
|
Ranbir Kapoor as
Ved Vardhan Sahni for Tamasha
|
Sushant Singh
Rajput as Detective Byomkesh Bakshy for Detective Byomkesh Bakshy!
|
Ayushmann Khurrana
as Prem for Dum Laga Ke Haisha
|
Irrfan Khan as
Ashwin Kumar for Talvar
|
Dhanush as Daanish
for Shamitabh
|
Varun Dhawan as
Raghav 'Raghu' Pratap Singh for Badlapur
|
Gulshan Devaiah as
Mandar Ponkshe for Hunterrr
|
Best Actor in A Leading
Role Drama (Female)
|
Best Actor in A Leading
Role Comedy/Romantic (Female)
|
Kalki Koechlin as
Laila for Margarita With A Straw
|
Kangana Ranaut as
Tanuja 'Tanu' Trivedi/ Kusum 'Datto' Sangwan for Tanu Weds Manu Returns
|
Anushka Sharma as
Meera for NH10
|
Priyanka Chopra as Ayesha Sangha-Mehra for Dil
Dhadakne Do
|
Richa Chadda as
Devi Pathak for Masaan
|
Deepika Padukone
as Piku Banerjee for Piku
|
Tabu as IG Meera
Deshmukh for Drishyam
|
Bhumi Pednekar as
Sandhya for Dum Laga Ke Haisha
|
Pavleen Gujral as
Pamela 'Pammy' Jaswal for Angry Indian Goddesses
|
Harshali Malhotra
as Munni/Shahida for Bajrangi Bhaijaan
|
Best Actor in A Supporting
Role Drama (Male)
|
Best Actor in A Supporting
Role Comedy/Romantic (Male)
|
Ranvir Shorey as
Vikram for Titli
|
Saurabh Shukla as
Maharaj Braj Singhdeo for Kaun Kitne Panee Mein
|
Nawazuddin
Siddiqui as Liak Tungrekar for Badlapur
|
Deepak Dobriyal as
Pappi for Tanu Weds Manu Returns
|
Anand Tiwari as
Ajit Banerjee for Detective Byomkesh Bakshy!
|
Nawazuddin
Siddiqui as Chand Nawab for Bajrangi Bhaijaan
|
Amit Sial as
Pradeep for Titli
|
Irrfan Khan as
Rana Chaudhary for Piku
|
Satyadeep Mishra
as Chimman for Bombay Velvet
|
Anil Kapoor as
Kamal Mehra for Dil Dhadakne Do
|
Best Actor in A Supporting
Role Drama (Female)
|
Best Actor in A Supporting
Role Comedy/Romantic (Female)
|
Konkona Sen Sharma
as Nutan Tandon for Talvar
|
Tanvi Azmi as
Radhabai for Bajirao Mastani
|
Sayani Gupta as
Khanum for Margarita With A Straw
|
Shefali Shah as
Neelam Mehra for Dil Dhadakne Do
|
Sandhya Mridul as
Suranjana 'Su' for Angry Indian Goddesses
|
Sheeba Chaddha as
Nain Tara for Dum Laga Ka Haisha
|
Revati as
Shubhangini for Margarita With A Straw
|
Priyanka Chopra as
Kashibai for Bajirao Mastani
|
Deepti Naval as
Ammaji for NH 10
|
Moushumi
Chatterjee as Chhobi Mashi for Piku
|
Best Breakthrough Actor
(Male)
|
Best Breakthrough Actor
(Female)
|
?
|
?
|
Best Breakthrough Director
|
Best Regional Language
Film
|
Navdeep Singh for
NH 10
|
Johanna Rexin,
Thierry Lenouvel and Bero Beyer for Qissa [Punjabi]
|
Neeraj Ghaywan for
Masaan
|
Vivek Gomber for
Court [Marathi]
|
Prawaal Raman for
Main aur Charles
|
Jonaki
Bhattacharya, Aditya Vikram Sengupta and Sanjay Shah for Asha Jaoar Majhe
[Bengali]
|
Kanu Behl for
Titli
|
Dhanush and
Vetrimaaran for Kaaka Muttai [Tamil]
|
Shonali Bose for
Margarita with A Straw
|
K Mohan and Vinod
Vijayan for Ottaal: The Trap [Malyalam]
|
Best Director (Regional
Film)
|
Best Screenplay (Regional
Film)
|
Aditya Vikram
Sengupta for Asha Jaoar Majhe
|
Tushar Paranjape
for Killa
|
Avinash Arun for
Killa
|
M. Manikandan for
Kaaka Muttai
|
Chaitanya Tamhane
for Court
|
Chaitanya Tamhane
for Court
|
Anup Singh for
Qissa
|
Aditya Vikram
Sengupta for Asha Jaoar Majhe
|
S.S. Rajamouli for
Baahubali: The Beginning
|
Joshy Mangalath
for Ottaal: The Trap
|
Best Leading Actor in A
Regional Film (Male)
|
Best Leading Actor in A
Regional Film (Female)
|
Irrfan Khan as
Umber Singh for Qissa
|
Tilotama Shome as
Kanwar Singh for Qissa
|
Archit Deodar as
Chinmay for Killa
|
Nithya Menen as
Tara Kalingarayar for OK Kanmani
|
Ritwick
Chakraborty as The Man for Asha Jaoar Majhe
|
Geetanjali
Kulkarni as Public Prosecutor Nutan for Court
|
Kamal Hassan as
Suyamblingam for Papanasam
|
Basabdatta
Chatterjee as The Woman for Asha Jaoar Majhe
|
Ashanth K Sha as
Kuttappayi for Ottaal: The Trap
|
Amruta Subash as
Mother for Killa
|
Best Supporting Actor in A
Regional Film (Male)
|
Best Supporting Actor in A
Regional Film (Female)
|
Parth Balerao as
Suhas/Bandya for Killa
|
Tisca Chopra as
Mehar for Qissa
|
Kumarakom
Vasudevan as Valyappachy for Ottaal: The Trap
|
Anushka Shetty as
Maharani Devasena for Baahubali: The Beginning
|
Pradeep Joshi as
Judge Sadavarte for Court
|
Rasika Duggal as
Neeli for Qissa
|
Sathyaraj as
Katappa for Baahubali: The Beginning
|
Leela Samson as
Bhavani for OK Kanmani
|
Vijay Sethupathi
as Kailasam for Orange Mittai
|
Ramya Krishnan as
Sivagami for Baahubali: The Beginning
|
Best Cinematography
(Regional Film)
|
Best Ensemble
|
Sebastian Edschmid
for Qissa
|
Dil Dhadakne Do
|
M J Radhakrishnan
for Ottaal: The Trap
|
Masaan
|
Avinash Arun for
Killa
|
Bajirao Mastani
|
Mahendra Shetty
and Aditya Vikram Sengupta for Asha Jaoar Majhe
|
Titli
|
Mrinal Desai for
Court
|
Talvar
|
Best Editing (Regional
Film)
|
Best Short Film
|
?
|
?
|
Best Production Design
|
Best Costume Design
|
?
|
?
|
Best Editing
|
Best VFX
|
?
|
?
|
Best Original Song
|
Best Original Score
|
'Judaai' Badlapur,
Rekha Bhardwaj and Arijit Singh
|
Sanchit Balhara
for Bajirao Mastani
|
'Tu Kisi Rail Si'
Masaan, Varun Grover and Swanand Kirkire
|
Various Artists
for Detective Byomkesh Bakshy!
|
'Deewani Mastani' Bajirao Mastani, Shrey Ghoshal and
Siddharth-Garima
|
Aditya Trivedi for
Main aur Charles
|
'Dhadam Dhadam'
Bombay Velvet, Neeti Mohan and Amitabh Bhattacharya
|
Bruno Coulais and
Indian Ocean for Masaan
|
'Tum Saath Ho'
Tamasha, Alka Yagnik and Arijit Singh
|
Amit Trivedi for
Bombay Velvet
|
So there's the
nominees from this years HIndie Awards. This year is quite a eclectic list,
because honestly this has not been the best year for Hindi cinema, in fact the
regional section was widened from just film because of how amazing it was to
experience that side of the field.
A few things to
note, below;
-Among the original
score nominees; Amit Trivedi is the only former winner with two wins from four
nominations. The only other former nominee is Indian Ocean, nominated in 2010
for Peepli Live.
-Unlike the 2012
edition of the awards which saw a three song sweep for Rockstar [2011], if it
weren't for the current established rule of one song per movie; then Bombay
Velvet could have [could, being the key word here] taken all five spots for a
myriad of great songs. As per my original type of awards; it would have
definitely [once again, a key word] won Best Soundtrack.
-The smaller awards
with no nominations will remain a great mystery. Can you guess the champions?
-Ensemble is a tough
nomination category to decide; since more top class ensemble films while work
as a piece for actors also managed to land them individual nods. Then it's up
to find the multiple actors across a single film that barely missed out on a nomination,
weighing them against their nominated co-stars and getting the five top acting
units. Then finally considering the most crucial factor for the category; how
do they function as an ensemble and voila, these are your big five!
-Avinash Arun and
Aditya Vikram Sengupta get their first of many nominations with three tough
contenders behind them for splendid works.
-With a lot of
actors pushed to the leading section, the female supporting crew comprises of
repetitive films that gave their female characters a good chance.
-However the
supporting men get to shine, with quite a few good nominees missing out e.g.
Arvind Swamy's slick comeback as the villain of Thani Oruvan or the chilling
presence of in RangiTaranga.
-A forceful push
adds some spicy much needed variety to the female section for leading film
female actors in Regional cinema of all ages and styles.
-The male section
also proving to be a tough competition between youngsters, veterans and a dark
horse.
-The screenplay and
director awards indicate to the real champions of regional cinema. This year
the likes of Rajamouli, Tamhane, Arun, Sengupta and Mangalath have made their
language regions proud with some stellar game changing works.
-A film per
language, divided into only five language nominees. So other outside language
films miss out, while language number two's that are natural top fives also
don't make the cut...sorry; Baahubali [Telegu] and Killa [Marathi] and more
-With a year filled
with some stellar directorial debuts, this awards was a given; especially
considering how easy it is to see each of these five as top directors this year
rather than their other counterparts [honest confession].
-Breakthrough does
not necessarily mean debut, but rather a young actor making up for one hell of
a year that has changed their prospects pushing them from struggler to actor
and from actor to star.
-The collective of
supporting nominations reads as usual a mix of struggling actors who've finally
made it big, wily character actor veterans and surprising leading players
moving a peg down. It's a tough race in each category highlighted by four
former nominees in the supporting categories of which there are two winners and
also two other former acting nominees in the leading category.
-A few more notes;
Dobriyal is a former winner in the same supporting category for the same role
in the prequel film Tanu Weds Manu, a big X-Factor as such.
-Wow! Was the
leading female actors spots difficult to fill?! Once again, this year there was
just not enough performances to outright consider for the female quotient. Is
it that hard to make ten sufficient roles for ten different women in Hindi
cinema, so as they can shine.
-With the
establishment of one nomination per person, it got truly difficult to fill the
comedy/romantic side of things. So debutantes who would naturally vie for a
breakthrough award are in this category, of course also because there's been a
better breakthrough performance.
-Also note, it was
extremely difficult to decide which Deepika Padukone performance would get the
nomination. She had a phenomenal year!
-Of the female drama
category, this year Tabu got bumped up to leading for her energy level raising
work in Drishyam. Something that should have happened last year for her win in
Haider as well. While it was a simple decision to pit Gujral above co-star Mridhul
as leading for Angry Indian Goddesses as she was the better of the two
performers that shone in the film.
-The leading actors
is an eclectic collection of nominees with only Varun Dhawan being the new
blood with his first nomination. Each category includes a stalwart winner with
Irrfan having taken the trophy twice [once in the drama category] while Ranbir
also having taken a win each in both categories. Can they stake their claims
once more in a competitive year?
-The screenplay
nomination are varied for comedy/romantic compared to the films that scraped
through. While in drama it's a clear indication of which films have a strong
foothold on the race through and through.
-The cinematography
nominations read like a who's who of top class DOP's. Nothing to say here.
-A tough category to
select; haven't even decided who would be the big winner meaning the race has
an unpredictability to it that just doesn't make sense. Five top class
directors with former nominees and a winner clashing with some of the best of
the best.
-Yash Raj makes the
giant leap this year with two big nominees in the Comedy/Romantic and right on
their heels are other top distributors specifically UTV.
-In the drama
category, the screenplay nominees completely lock it down. So is this a big
indication of the winner or does a completely well rounded drama film take it?
So those were a few
notes on the nominees. Of course one of the biggest takeaways is this; this
year Hindi cinema has been all about the dysfunctional families in all its
glory from comedic to completely dark. All of this being linked to the ideas of
patriarchy, equality, masculinity and more.
So this is it, these
are your nominees and I will soon get cracking with them. Till then enjoy.
'Nuff Said
Aneesh
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