Kevi Rite Jaish
Official poster
Directed byAbhishek Jain
Written byAbhishek Jain
Anish Shah
Produced byNayan Jain
StarringRakesh Bedi
Anang Desai
Kenneth Desai
Tom Alter
Divyang Thakkar
Veronica Gautam
CinematographyPushkar Singh
Edited byManan Mehta
Music byMehul Surti
Vishvesh Parmar
Production
company
Distributed byCineMan Productions
Release dates
Running time
128 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageGujarati
Budget1.75 crore (US$220,000)[1]

Kevi Rite Jaish is a 2012 Indian Gujarati-language drama film directed by Abhishek Jain and produced by Nayan Jain. The film is a satire on the fascination and obsession of the Patels' – a Gujarati farmer community – migration to the U.S. Over the last half century, thousands of Patels have migrated to the US and have come to dominate its motel industry.[2][3] The film stars Divyang Thakkar, Veronica Kalpana-Gautam, Tejal Panchasara, Kenneth Desai, and Anang Desai. The success of the film started a "new wave" in Gujarati cinema.[4]

Plot

In a flashback, Bachu (Kenneth Desai) and Ishwar (Anang Desai) are close friends who dream of going to the USA together illegally, though Bachu doesn't have enough money yet. One day, Bachu receives a phone call from Ishwar saying he has managed to reach the US. Bachu feels betrayed and starts resenting his friend.

In the present, Bachu has two sons, Jignesh and Harish (Divyang Thakkar). Jignesh is married and expecting a child. The younger son, Harish, just like his father, dreams to go to the US, one way or another. Bachu wants to realize his own dream through his son. Harish applies for a visa, but is rejected due to his inability to give satisfactory answers to the visa officer, Derek Thomas (Tom Alter). Meanwhile, Ishwar returns to India with his daughter, Aayushi (Veronica Kalpana-Gautam). Ishwar is now very successful in the United States; he has a chain of motels and is now known as the Motel King. His purpose is to invest in Gujarat and ultimately return to his motherland and settle there. Bachu still resents his old friend, but Harish falls in love with Aayushi, in spite of his father warning against it. Harish's friend, Raheel, introduces him to his acquaintance, Kaivan (who has changed his name to Kevin), who is soon going to the US, and introduces him to his travel agent, Daulatram Chainani (Rakesh Bedi). Chainani assures Harish and his father that he'll groom Harish and make sure he gets the visa, but will need money, to which his brother, Jignesh promises that he'll arrange for enough funds. Jignesh borrows money from less-than-legal elements, who are now threatening him unless he returns the money soon. In a party arranged by Kevin, one of his friends warns Aayushi about Kevin, saying that he is not a reliable man and is going to the US by using someone else's sponsorship papers. When drunk, Aayushi warns Harish about Kevin, but Harish dismisses her concerns. One day, Harish finds out about the illegal racket Chainani is running for illegal entry to the US. Chainani also reveals that Kevin used Harish's sponsorship papers to reach the US. When all hope is lost, one of Bachu's acquaintances informs him that he has managed a fake passport using which Harish can travel to the US; Bachu and Harish agree to that. Jignesh confronts his father for always shooting him down as dafol (stupid) and threatens to sever ties with the family. At the same time there are complications in Jignesh's wife pregnancy and is admitted to the hospital.

When Harish is travelling to the airport with his friends to leave for the US via the fake passport, they are assaulted by people from whom Jignesh had borrowed money from. Harish manages to escape and reaches the airport and is bade farewell by his parents. When Bachu returns to his house, Ishwar confronts him and tell him about his life and struggles as an illegal immigrant and hardships he had to endure before being the Motel King. Bachu realizes his mistake and they rush to the airport to stop Harish, only to find that Harish, touched by the plight of an old lady (Rita Bhaduri), deliberately did not board the flight as he decided to stay with parents, friends, and Aayushi. Bachu apologizes to his son Jignesh and the family is reunited.

In epilogue, it's revealed that Harish and Aayushi are married and they're looking for their options for a honeymoon; Harish is still insistent on going to the US for it.

Cast

  • Divyang Thakkar as Harish Patel
  • Veronica Kalpana-Gautam as Aayushi Patel
  • Tom Alter as Uncle Sam / Derek Thomas
  • Rakesh Bedi as Daulatram Chainani
  • Rita Bhaduri as Old Lady
  • Anang Desai as Ishwarbhai Patel
  • Abhinay Banker as Raheel
  • Siddharth Amit Bhavsar as Kevin
  • Aakash Maheriya as Mehul
  • Abhishek Jain as Kevin's friend
  • Tejal Panchasara as Bhavna Jignesh Patel
  • Kenneth Desai as Bachubhai Patel
  • Raju Barot as Old Man
  • Jay Upadhyay as Jignesh Patel
  • Dipti Joshi as Jyotsnaben Bachubhai Patel
  • Hemin Trivedi as match maker
  • Malhar Thakar as Guy at VISA office

Production

Development

The director, Abhishek Jain, is an alumnus of Whistling Woods. After finishing the course, he assisted Sanjay Leela Bhansali and Subhash Ghai on Saawariya and Yuvvraaj respectively. Then he moved to Ahmedabad and made a Gujarati film.[5] Abhishek Jain approached Anurag Kashyap to produce the film; although Kashyap was impressed with the script, the collaboration did not work out for the film.[6] Divyang Thakkar, the protagonist of the film, has mentioned it as "natural progression to do a local film, rather than try" his "luck in a Bollywood film immediately."[7] Veronica Kalpana Gautam (from Surat) was discovered as the lead female via Facebook[8][9] and considered the film "path breaking".[10] Anang Desai, although being a Gujarati, had never acted in a Gujarati movie until Kevi Rite Jaish as he said he "was waiting for a project that I can connect with".[11]

Filming

The director of photography, Pushkar Singh, visited Ahmedabad a year before the principal shooting to understand the lighting conditions of the city and made a video as part of the pre-production.[12][13] The film was filmed with a RED Camera in Ahmedabad, Gujarat. This is the first time a RED Camera has been used in India for regional films.[14] The film is shot mostly in Ahmedabad at 34 locations. The shooting of the film was completed in 23 days.[5][15]

One of the scenes in the party sequence required more than 500 empty liquor bottles and Gujarat, where the principal shooting took place, has alcohol prohibition, so the art director Taj Naqvi and his team started scouting for it 8 days prior to the schedule. 'ravi vaari bajaar' to posh hotels, residence to open grounds they collected these bottles and on the day of the shoot managed to get 731 empty liquor bottles. To avoid any police suspicion, the bottles were transported during the night and the art director Taj Naqvi ended up doing a cameo as a bartender in the movie.[16] The casting director, Abhinay Banker, ended up auditioning for the protagonist's friend, Raheel, and was selected to play the role.[17] The female protagonist, Veronica Kalpana-Gautam, is introduced in the film in slow motion as a tribute to Martin Scorsese; he often introduces his blonde heroines in idealizing slow-motion shots, as a possible tribute to Alfred Hitchcock.

Soundtrack

Kevi Rite Jaish
Soundtrack album by
Released26 May 2012 (2012-05-26)
GenreFeature film soundtrack
Length39:58

Kevi Rite Jaish features songs sung by Roop Kumar Rathod, Suraj Jagan, Vishvesh Parmar, Parthiv Gohil, Mehul Surti, Aishwarya Majmudar and Aman Lekhadia for the film.[18] The sound track was launched on 26 May 2012 at Ahmedabad. The album was made available for free to download on the official website. The response to the music has been very positive, with the soundtrack being described as soulful and praised for lyrics,[19][20] especially Pankhida, the rock version of a popular garba song of the same name, which was a viral hit.[21]

Track list
No.TitleLyricsMusicSinger(s)Length
1."Kevi Rite Jaish"Jainesh PanchalMehul SurtiRoop Kumar Rathod4:43
2."Pankhida"Jainesh PanchalVishvesh ParmarSuraj Jagan3:55
3."Aa Safar"Raeesh ManiarMehul SurtiParthiv Gohil,
Aishwarya Majmudar
4:19
4."Kharekhar"Jainesh PanchalVishvesh ParmarVishvesh Parmar5:16
5."Rang Rangili"Raeesh ManiarMehul SurtiDhvanit Thaker2:30
6."Kaya Karano Thi"Vivek TaylorMehul SurtiMehul Surti5:41
7."Bheeni Bheeni"Raeesh ManiarMehul SurtiAishwarya Majmudar5:28
8."Kevi Rite Jaish (Instrumental)" Mehul SurtiSandeep Kulkarni5:06
9."Kevi Rite Jaish (Unplugged)" Mehul SurtiAman Lekhadia3:00

Release

The official poster for the film was released on 28 April 2012.[22] The first trailer was released online on 2 May 2012 and was received positively by the audiences.[23] The film was released on 15 June in India.[24] The film was initially released in major Gujarat cities, Vadodara, Ahmedabad, Surat as well as some small cities, and also in Mumbai. In the first week, the film was released with 34 prints and increased to 60 prints in the second week due to increasing demand.[15] After the initial success in Gujarat, the film was planned to be released in USA, UK, Australia, New Zealand and some middle-eastern countries as well,[25] subsequently it was released in USA (at New Jersey and Chicago) on 31 August 2012.[26]

Marketing

The premier was held at Cinépolis, Ahmedabad and was attended by the whole cast and crew.[27] As part of promoting the movie, special screenings were held along with the crew at Rajkot, Vadodara,[28] Surat and Ahmedabad.[15] The makers have widely used social media for the promotion of the movie.[8][29] They released a Facebook game as well.[30]

Critical reception

Initial reviews of the movie were positive. Long live cinema called the movie a "glimmer of hope" for Gujarati cinema.[31] Leading Gujarati newspapers reviewed the film positively. Divya Bhaskar rated the movie 3.5 out of 5 stars and called it a "truly urban film" and "revolutionary".[32] Gujarat Samachar also reviewed it positively.[33] DNA praised the movie saying "KRJ in all is a funny roller coaster ride with its own share of romance, drama, apprehension, desperation, exhilaration and insanity".[34] Leading Gujarati blog Desh Gujarat also praised the movie calling it "paisa vasool".[9] Leading Gujarat Samachar columnist, Jay Vasavada, called it the best Gujarati film since Bhavni Bhavai.[35]

Boxoffice

The film ran more than for six weeks in Bharuch, and ten weeks in Ahmedabad, Vadodara and a few other cities.[36] The film eventually completed sixteen weeks.[37]

Awards

2012 BIG Gujarati Entertainment Awards

The film was nominated for all eight categories and won seven of them.[38][39]

Film

Music

12th Annual Transmedia Gujarati Screen & Stage awards

The film was nominated for 15 categories and won 10 awards.[40]

Film

  • Best film
  • Best director
  • Best story – Abhishek Jain, Anish Shah
  • Best debutant (female) – Veronica Gautam
  • Best supporting actor (male) – Anang Desai
  • Best cinematography – Pushkar Singh

Music

  • Best music – Mehul Surti
  • Best male playback singer – Parthiv Gohil
  • Best female playback singer – Aishwarya Majumdar
  • Best lyrics – Raeesh Maniar

References

  1. "'કેવી રીતે જઈશ' અને 'બે યાર'ના સર્જક અભિષેક જૈન કહે છે...એ ઘટનાએ જ મારી ગુજરાતી ફિલ્મ બનાવવાની ધગશને વધુ પ્રગટાવી". Sadhana Weekly (in Gujarati). 2 May 2015. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 15 May 2015.
  2. Skop, Emily (2007). "Asian Indians and the Construction of Community and Identity". In Ines M. Miyares, Christopher A. Airriess (ed.). Contemporary ethnic geographies in America. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-3772-9. Retrieved 13 August 2010.
  3. Varadarajan, Tunku (4 July 1999). "A Patel Motel Cartel?". New York Times.
  4. Dutta, Vishal. "'Good Road' builds bridges with city audience". The Economic Times.
  5. 1 2 "'કેવી રીતે જઈશ' : યે હુઈ ન બાત!" ["Kevi Rite Jaish" – Yeh hui naa baat!]. 23 June 2012.
  6. Jain & Patel 2015.
  7. TNN. "Divyang Thakkar: From theatre to Gollywood". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 31 July 2013.
  8. 1 2 "Interview with Abhishek Jain". BuddyBits.com. 7 July 2012. Retrieved 8 July 2012.
  9. 1 2 "'Kevi Rite Jaish' is good urban youth film with high quality production". DeshGujarat. 15 June 2012.
  10. "TV will typecast me: Veronica Gautam". The Times of India. 6 May 2012. Archived from the original on 29 July 2013.
  11. Nidhin Patel (19 May 2012). "Urban youth don't connect to Gujarati films: Anang Desai". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 29 July 2013.
  12. "A little secret..." facebook. Retrieved 8 August 2012.
  13. Pushkar Singh (2010). Ahmedabad HD. Ahmedabad: Cineman productions. Retrieved 8 August 2012.
  14. Desai, Kinjal. "Gujarati cinema:Kevi rite jaish!". Retrieved 21 May 2012.
  15. 1 2 3 "New – 26 June 2012". 26 June 2012. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  16. "Taj Naqvi". facebook. Retrieved 8 August 2012.
  17. "Abhinay Banker". facebook. Retrieved 8 August 2012.
  18. Cineman Productions. "Suraj Jagan Exclusive- Kevi Rite Jaish". YouTube.
  19. "Kevi Rite Jaish : Music Review (Gujarati)".
  20. "Music review KEVI RITE JAISH".
  21. Ano Patel (14 June 2012). "Gujarati rock song; a viral hit". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 18 June 2013.
  22. Kinjal Desai (29 April 2012). "New road to Gollywood..."
  23. "Kevi Rite Jaish (2012)". YouTube.
  24. "Kevi Rite Jaish (2012)". IMDb.
  25. Chitra Unnithan (14 August 2012). "Gujarati film Kevi Rite Jaish to be screened globally". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 29 July 2013.
  26. "Kevi Rite Jaish to be released in USA from 31 August". Akila Daily. 24 August 2012.
  27. "Cinépolis Ahmedabad hosts special premier of 'Kevi Rite Jaish'".
  28. Soumitra Das (1 July 2012). "'Kevi Rite Jaish' team visits Vadodara". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 29 July 2013.
  29. Prasant Naidu. "Gujarati Movie 'Kevi Rite Jaish' Impresses on Social Media". Retrieved 19 July 2012.
  30. "Facebook Game Kevi Rite Jaish". 15 June 2012.
  31. Prakash Gowda. "Movie Review: Kevi Rite Jaish – No Dhollywood, but an urban Gujarati film". Retrieved 16 June 2012.
  32. "Movie Review, Kevi Rite Jaish". divyabhaskar.com. Retrieved 18 June 2012.
  33. "એક આગવી ગુજરાતી ફિલ્મ જે જુના ખ્યાલને ભૂલાવે..." [A different gujarati film that makes you forget old inhibitions]. 15 June 2012. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
  34. Roopalee Parswani (17 June 2012). "E halo halo jova – 'kevi rite jaish'". Retrieved 18 June 2012.
  35. Jay Vasavada. "Jay Vasavada review". Facebook.
  36. "Houseful Jaish!". Ahmedabad Mirror. 15 July 2012.
  37. "Return of the Native". Box Office India : India’s premier film trade magazine. 10 January 2015. Archived from the original on 16 July 2015. Retrieved 15 July 2015.
  38. ""Kevi Rite Jaish" covered in award also". 14 July 2012.
  39. "7 ગુજરાતી એન્ટરટેનમેન્ટ એવોર્ડ જીતીને છવાઈ ગઈ 'કેવી રીતે જઈશ'" ['Kevi Rite Jaish' sweeps Gujarati entertainment awards with 7 awards]. GNS. 14 July 2012. Archived from the original on 24 January 2013.
  40. Hina Nainani (12 March 2013). "'Kevi Rite Jaish' showed the way!". DNA. Archived from the original on 14 July 2015. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  • Jain, Abhishek; Patel, Arati (2015). Aa To Just Vaat Chhe. Navbharat Sahitya Mandir. ISBN 978-9351980742.
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