Naina is a 2005 Indian Hindi-language supernatural horror film directed by Shripal Morakhia and starring Urmila Matondkar as the titular character who loses her sight as a child, regains it as an adult with corneal transplantation and starts seeing images beyond the general surroundings.[2] The film is an unofficial remake of the 2002 Hong Kong-Singaporean horror film The Eye directed by the Pang brothers, with a subplot borrowed from the 2002 Japanese film Dark Water.[a][3][4][5]
Naina | |
---|---|
Directed by | Shripal Morakhia |
Screenplay by | Shripal Morakhia |
Based on | The Eye by Pang brothers |
Produced by | Sagar Pandya Anjum Rajabali Rakesh Mehra |
Starring | Urmila Matondkar Anuj Sawhney Amardeep Sinha Shweta Konnur Kamini Khanna |
Cinematography | C.K. Muralidharan |
Edited by | Amitabh Shukla Sanjay Shukla |
Music by | Salim–Sulaiman |
Production company | iDream Productions |
Distributed by | SPE Films India |
Release date |
|
Running time | 103 minutes |
Country | India |
Language | Hindi |
Budget | ₹5 crore[1] |
Box office | ₹6.94 crore[1] |
The film was premiered in the Marché du Film section of the 2005 Cannes Film Festival.[6][7] Released theatrically on 20 May 2005, Naina flopped at the box office, grossing ₹6.94 crore against a ₹5 crore budget.[1] It was also controversial because its depiction of the protagonist seeing ghosts after receiving a corneal transplantation was similar to existing fears in India surrounding corneal transplants and it was feared the film would discourage people from donating corneas or seeking corneal transplants.[8][9][10]
Plot
editDuring a solar eclipse in 1986, young Naina Shah, while traveling in the backseat of her England-based dad's car, is struck by glass from the shattered windshield during an accident and loses her eyesight. Her parents do not survive, and she is brought up by her paternal grandmother. Years later, Naina gets a successful corneal transplant and is able to see. She complains of vision problems, seeing hooded persons, and people dying, which a psychiatrist, Samir Patel, diagnoses as hallucinations. But when Naina reports seeing someone else in her mirror reflection, Sameer decides to investigate who the original cornea actually belonged to. This investigation will lead them to an impoverished village in New Bhuj, Gujarat, where she will find her life endangered by hostile villagers who believe that the donor of her cornea was cursed.
Naina learns the story of her donor, Khemi. Khemi was born with the ability to see a person's imminent death and was ostracised by society. One night, she tried to save the village from a great fire, but nobody believed her. After the fire broke out, those same villagers blamed Khemi for the disaster. Khemi committed suicide out of despair. Naina returns to England, where she unsuccessfully tries to save people from fire. In the accident, Naina once again loses her eyesight, but she does not regret it because she has the love of Samir and her grandmother.
Cast
edit- Urmila Matondkar as Dr. Naina Shah
- Anuj Sawhney as Dr. Samir Patel
- Malavika as Khemi
- Amardeep Jha as Somabai
- Kamini Khanna as Mrs. Shah
- Sulabha Arya as Parvati Amma
- Morne Botes as Burn Victim
- Dinesh Lamba as Rathore
- Rahul Nath as Ghost blood rain car
- Anthony Rosato as Police Officer
- Tom Saville as Misc
- Pankaj Upadhyay as Victim
Reception
editNarbir Gosal from Planet Bollywood gave the film an 8/10 rating, labeling it an original story mixing the paranormal ideas from The Sixth Sense and The Eye, and praising the technical aspects.[11] Taran Adarsh from Bollywood Hungama gave the film 3 stars out of 5, calling it "one of the most imaginative and pulse-pounding horror films to come along in recent times."[12]
On the other hand, Sukanya Verma from Rediff.com praised Matondkar's performance and the absence of songs, but felt the film failed to "establish an emotional connection" and instead went on a "melodrama spree" which ruined the fear factor.[3]
Box office
editThe film was a financial disappointment, earning ₹6.94 crore against a ₹5 crore budget.[1]
Notes
edit- ^ Multiple reviewers have pointed out that the film is identical to The Eye while director Morakhia has completely denied this, making it an unofficial adaptation.
References
edit- ^ a b c d "Naina - Movie". Box Office India.
- ^ "'Naina is not another Bhoot'". The Telegraph. Retrieved 30 April 2005.
- ^ a b "Naina, all blood and gore, is a bore". Rediff.com. Retrieved 20 May 2005.
Two scenes later, however, it becomes a tacky scene-to-scene reproduction of the Chinese supernatural hit, Jian Gui aka The Eye [...] The entire girl-in-a-raincoat sub-plot is conveniently borrowed from Hideo Nakata's Japanese horror, Honogurai Mizu No Soko Kara, aka Dark Water.
- ^ "Watch Bollywood Remakes of 'Scream', 'Fright Night', and 'The Eye' on SCREAMBOX Right Now!". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 3 February 2023.
- ^ "Naina isn't a copy: Shripal Morakhia". Nowrunning.com. Retrieved 22 May 2005.
He's even more stupefied by the premature assessments that his film is a "scene by scene" remake of the Chinese film The Eye [...] But to say that Naina is a remake of any one particular film is completely wrong. This is my own film, and that's the way I want to see it.
- ^ "'Naina' world premiere at Cannes". Bollywood Hungama. Retrieved 5 April 2005.
- ^ "The Hindu : Entertainment Bangalore / Cinema : Cannes premier for Naina". Archived from the original on 4 February 2010.
- ^ Chandra, Anjali (24 May 2005). "Seeing is not believing". The Times of India. Retrieved 6 October 2007.
- ^ "NAB also fails to see eye-to-eye with 'Naina'". Afternoon, Bombay, India. Cybernoon. 20 May 2005. Retrieved 6 October 2007.[dead link ]
- ^ "Eye doctors see red over spooky movie". IOL. 21 May 2005. Retrieved 6 October 2007.
- ^ "Naina - movie review by Narbir Gosal". Planet Bollywood.
- ^ "Naina Movie Review: Naina Movie". Bollywood Hungama. Retrieved 20 May 2005.