Film Review: Bollywood Venetian escapade loses plot in the city of romance

The movie has a short 98-minute run time. (Image supplied)
Updated 13 February 2019
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Film Review: Bollywood Venetian escapade loses plot in the city of romance

CHENNAI: Director Anand Surapur’s Bollywood film “The Fakir of Venice” has a great theme, a magical location and two fantastic actors in Farhan Akhtar and Annu Kapoor.
Yet the movie’s short 98-minute run time feels stretched, mainly due to the script’s poor development of the main characters.
Based on a true story, the film premiered at the Venice Film Festival back in 2009 but, strangely, only hit the theatrical circuit last week. Sadly, Surapur’s work has not aged well.

Set in one of the most romantic cities in the world, Adi Contractor (Akhtar) and Sattar (Kapoor) arrive in Venice as tourists of sorts, but with the motive of making quick money.
Akhtar, playing his debut role, is perfectly cast as an Anglo-Indian trickster and movie production fixer, who gets the chance of a lifetime when a Venetian gallery commissions him to find an Indian fakir (religious ascetic who lives on alms) to pep up its installation art exhibition.
After a fruitless search for a holy man, Adi finds one, but a fake, in his own backyard in Mumbai. He is Sattar, who has spent most of his poverty-stricken life scratching a living by entertaining passersby by burying himself in sand.
Adi drags Sattar to Venice, where the man is touted as a sage with divine powers. However, Adi’s deception starts to unravel when Sattar becomes unwilling to cooperate with the con trick and turns to drink.
To pull off their plan, the two men must learn to shed layers of deceit and move toward understanding themselves, and each other.
The story has a message that cannot be ignored, but there is still a tendency to view it as mere exotica.
The film is poorly shot, despite the dream location, and with Rajesh Devraj’s shoddy screenplay reducing the lead parts to caricatures, the narrative gets lost in the multitude of waterways and alleys of Venice.
It is quite possible that Akhtar and Kapoor would now be embarrassed to admit they were once part of this Venetian escapade.


Art Cairo part of a ‘long-term cultural project,’ founder says

Updated 59 min 50 sec ago
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Art Cairo part of a ‘long-term cultural project,’ founder says

CAIRO: As Art Cairo 2026 draws to a close, its founder Mohammed Younis is keen to set the fair apart from its regional counterparts — and also asserts that the annual event is part of a “long-term cultural project.”

The fair, which took place at the Grand Egyptian Museum and wrapped up on Jan. 26, boasted a distinctly Arab flavor, in terms of galleries, artists and the themes of the artworks on show.

Younis says that is all part of a conscious curatorial effort.

“Art Cairo stands apart from other art fairs in the region as the only platform dedicated exclusively and intentionally to Arab art … While many regional fairs present a broad, globalized perspective, Art Cairo emerges from a different vision — one rooted in presenting Arab art from within,” Younis told Arab News.

Across the fair, depictions of golden age icons such as 1950s superstar Mohamed Mohamed Fawzy by painter Adel El-Siwi jostled for attention alongside ancient iconography and pop culture references from the Arab world.

Abu Dhabi’s Salwa Zeidan Gallery, for example, exhibited work by up-and-coming Egyptian artist Passant Kirdy.

“My work focuses on Egyptian heritage in general, including pharaonic and Islamic art. These influences are always present in what I create. This symbol you’re looking at is a pharaonic scarab …  I’m very attached to this symbol,” she told Arab News.

The Arab focus of the curation is part of an effort to bill Art Cairo as a “long-term cultural project,” Younis noted.

“Ultimately, Art Cairo is not simply an art fair; it is a long-term cultural project. It exists to support Arab artists, contribute to building a sustainable art market, and articulate an authentic Arab narrative within the regional and international art landscape.”