/images/members/Tatsam Mukherjee.jpg

Tatsam Mukherjee

The Wire

Tatsam Mukherjee has been working as a film journalist since 2016. Having contributed to the Indian Express, Mint Lounge, India Today, Open magazine, his byline has also appeared in foreign publications like Slate, Al Jazeera and Juggernaut. He is currently based in Bangalore.

All reviews by Tatsam Mukherjee

Image of scene from the film Phule

Phule

History, Drama (Hindi)

Ananth Mahadevan’s Film is Not as Brave as its Firebrand Protagonists

Sun, April 27 2025

Some of its scenes reflect the present, showing that society has not changed much for more than a century

One could argue: making a biopic in Hindi cinema these days is a lost battle even before one begins. Such is our legal system, our near-Olympic status at taking offence as a society, the cumbersome process of obtaining life-rights, and the patronising tone filmmakers adopt to turn someone’s life story into a moral science lesson (or they won’t get it). It’s no surprise then that most biopics coming out of Hindi cinema re-manufacture a stale, reverential tone with intermittent cues of inspirational music – so much so that my brain almost involuntarily switches off during such sequences these days. And god forbid if the film has the slightest socio-political criticism. Then the headache of battling the CBFC (censor board), with the livelihoods of hundreds of crew members being on the line – it’s no surprise why nearly every filmmaker is cautious, even if the film is set around characters who took on Brahmanical patriarchy more than a century ago.

Continue Reading…

Image of scene from the film Jewel Thief - The Heist Begins

Jewel Thief - The Heist Begins

Action, Thriller (Hindi)

Weightless Filmmaking with Zero Stakes

Sat, April 26 2025

The thought behind this probably was: if you can’t make the best film, you might as well try and make the worst film out there.

A thought occurred to me while watching Shauna Gautam’s much-derided Nadaaniyan – starring Ibrahim Ali Khan and Khushi Kapoor. To be fair, it was 2.30 am (the hour of epiphanies) on a Saturday, and I was watching it for some laughs. After a while the clunky dialogue, the stiff performances and the air-brushed palette of the film began to feel more deliberate. The film was obviously beyond salvaging, but after a point it seemed like some studio executive had instructed the makers to lean into the ‘badness’ of the film, try to make it as grating an experience for the audience as possible. The thought behind it probably being: if you can’t make the best film, you might as well try and make the worst film out there. In an ocean of content, this might be a way to generate conversation, and stand out. What else explains so many shoddy choices, one after the other, going unchecked? Either that, or the crew, the producers and the platform had fully given up on the film.

Continue Reading…

Image of scene from the film Khauf

Khauf

Drama, Mystery (Hindi)

Brings to Life the Terror of Male Violence – Physical, Verbal and Emotional

Tue, April 22 2025

I hope ‘Khauf’ earns some notoriety, because it will mean the show will have pierced through the veneer of smug Indian men.

Smita Singh’s Khauf is deeply suspicious of the world around it. In the eight-episode miniseries, spanning five and a half hours, there are only a handful of moments when the bystanders come out looking good (or at least civilised). Nearly all men (boyfriends, colleagues, bus passengers, older relatives, autorickshaw drivers, landlords, streetside louts) vary from being insufferable, creepy and abusive to serial killers; there’s no white knight in this bleak, decaying world. I wouldn’t be surprised if Singh’s show is labelled misandrist or ‘men-hating’ by rungs on social media – like they did with Arati Kadav’s Mrs. Will Singh’s show achieve the ‘virality’ that Kadav’s film did? We’ll find out. But, for Singh’s sake, I do hope it earns some notoriety, because it will mean the show will have pierced through the veneer of smug Indian men, touching a nerve somewhere.

Continue Reading…

Image of scene from the film Warfare

Warfare

War, Action (English)

Feels Like a Sobering Admission of America’s Futile, Bloody Invasion of Iraq

Tue, April 15 2025

The film also takes note of the victims of bombings and killings by US troops.

t’s curious how all the prestige around Hollywood war films – lucrative, quasi-recruitment videos and vanity projects for young actors – was punctured by one joke. More than a decade ago, comedian Frankie Boyle said in a set – “Not only will America go to your country and kill all your people – but what’s worse is, 20 years later, they’ll make a movie about how killing your people made their soldiers very sad.” It’s a stinging line that rightfully sullied the stock character of the haunted American war veteran. Especially, when such films didn’t show similar sensitivity towards the broad-stroked, faceless ‘jihadis’ and innocent civilians, whose lives are boiled down to just being ‘collateral damage’ before the eventual triumph of the American military. What was once a sure shot for an Oscar nomination – through films like Saving Private Ryan (1998), Black Hawk Down (2002), The Hurt Locker (2007) – has now become a relatively more introspective and self-reflective genre, with even filmmakers like Michael Bay making an effort to assess the problematic presence of America in a foreign land, without glorifying their soldiers.

Continue Reading…

Image of scene from the film September 5

September 5

Thriller, Drama, History (English)

The Munich Olympics Massacre, Seen Through the Viewfinder of a Cynical Newsroom

Fri, April 11 2025

The film makes a choice not to dwell on the Israeli-Palestine conflict which looks myopic in the current context.

The 1972 Munich Olympics massacre famously featured in Steven Spielberg’s Munich (2005), where 11 Israeli athletes were taken hostage and later killed. The event became a springboard in the Eric Bana-starrer, to showcase Mossad’s efforts for retribution – through a series of assassinations. This was before actors, filmmakers called out Hollywood’s implicit Islamophobia – and the fatigue around the binary depictions of Muslims in mainstream Hollywood as dutiful or barbaric. Relatively speaking, Spielberg’s film was pretty nuanced for its time – even showcasing an argument between Bana and a Muslim character in an apartment, which they’re forced to share at one point. A lot has changed in the last two decades leading up to the release of Tim Fehlbaum’s September 5, especially with Hollywood’s apparent ambivalence around Israel’s ongoing bombing of Gaza, triggered by the October 7 attack carried out by Hamas. As much as Fehlbaum’s film would like to revel in being a single-room thriller and tackle the ethical dilemmas that the ABC team went through while observing the coverage of a tragedy, it’s simply not enough for the macro storytelling elements at play today.

Continue Reading…

Image of scene from the film Inn Galiyon Mein

Inn Galiyon Mein

Drama (Hindi)

Harks Back to a Simpler, More Sincere Bollywood

Fri, April 11 2025

This modest film’s most sparkling trait is its determination to bring selflessness and community back to mainstream cinema.

It is easy to forget the what we have lost because of Hindi cinema’s tilt towards the right. Initially a mouthpiece for secular values in a post-Partition India, the film industry soon became an emblem for the Ganga-Jamuni tehzeeb (culture). It was the place where a Muslim man would become a newly-independent India’s first superstar, where dialogues in Urdu, Khariboli and Hindi would invent a new concoction of Hindustani, which would trickle down into everyday parlance. It’s only in the movies where the three biggest stars of their time would get separated at birth into homes of different religions, only to reunite and take down the villain in the climax. Sure, some part of it was an echo of popular sentiment, and carried a whiff of opportunism. But the tragedy of our new-age Hindi cinema is how it’s eviscerated even performative niceness in favour of unbridled, authentic hate.

Continue Reading…

Image of scene from the film L2: Empuraan

L2: Empuraan

Action, Crime, Thriller (Malayalam)

Displays Bravery in its Politics, but is Ultimately a Tedious Commercial Star Vehicle

Mon, March 31 2025

The film goes far in showing Gujarat-like 2002 communal horrors, which is more than any other film has done.

A few days before the release of L2: Empuraan, actor/director Prithviraj Sukumaran was asked in a press conference about how Malayalam films banked on content for their acclaim/success, and if his film would follow suit. Given that the film was a sequel to the 2019 hit Lucifer, Mohanlal’s bid for a globe-trotting, convoluted spy thriller fused with a homegrown tale of political succession, the condescending tone of the question addressing the sequel wasn’t entirely unreasonable. And thus, Sukumaran stepped in to say it was still ‘content’ that had dictated the making of L2; only the content was expensive to shoot. When I saw this clip two days before the film’s release, I fobbed it aside as another one of those empty promises made during a marketing campaign. But only two days later, I found out that the film was being targetted by right-wing forces. This is going to be a challenging review to write because L2: Empuraan is barely a competent film. Inheriting the vague world-building of the first film, Sukumaran’s film is everywhere and nowhere. One of the two primary plotlines takes place in Kerala around its local politics, while the other takes place between Senegal, London, Iraq and Berlin.

Continue Reading…

Image of scene from the film Black Bag

Black Bag

Drama, Thriller, Mystery (English)

Steven Soderbergh’s Spy Thriller Brings the Sugar, Spice and Everything Nice

Mon, March 31 2025

The film is a beginning game of possibilities, with all manner of permutations and combinations

While watching Black Bag – Steven Soderbergh’s latest film – I was reminded of Sriram Raghavan more than once. After all, both Raghavan and Soderbergh operate in hardened, grown-up genres. They’re both cinephiles, and therefore well-versed in the unwritten ‘contract’ between a genre and its aficionados, along with being crafty enough to flip the switch on the staples, time and again. They also seem to shoot their films in a non-pompous manner, whose grounded style doesn’t necessarily mean it lacks flavour. Helming thriftily-produced films that make dialogue sound like a martial arts sequence, both filmmakers might make cynical films about dark human impulses, but a deeper examination of their works prove they’re inherently idealists.

Continue Reading…

Latest Reviews

Image of scene from the film Thudarum
Thudarum

Drama (Malayalam)

A taxi driver finds himself embroiled in a dangerous conspiracy after his car is confiscated by… (more)

FCG Rating for the film
Image of scene from the film Another Simple Favor
Another Simple Favor

Comedy, Crime, Thriller (English)

Stephanie and Emily reunite on the beautiful island of Capri, Italy for Emily’s extravagant wedding to… (more)

Image of scene from the film Phule
Phule

History, Drama (Hindi)

A biopic on Jyotiba and Savitribai Phule, considered to be a pioneering couple in India’s societal… (more)

FCG Rating for the film
Image of scene from the film Devmanus
Devmanus

Drama (Marathi)

A devout priest's peaceful existence unravels after a moral transgression forces him to choose between confession… (more)