That Girl in Yellow Boots

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That Girl in Yellow Boots
That Girl in Yellow Boots.jpg
Directed by Anurag Kashyap
Written byAnurag Kashyap
Kalki Koechlin
Produced byAnurag Kashyap
Guneet Monga
Shibani Keshkamat Tait
StarringKalki Koechlin
Naseeruddin Shah
Cinematography Rajeev Ravi
Edited byShweta Venkat Matthew
Music byNaren Chandavarkar
Benedict Taylor
Production
companies
Distributed byViacom18 Motion Pictures [1]
Release dates
  • September 2010 (2010-09)(Toronto)
  • 2 September 2011 (2011-09-02)(India)
Running time
99 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

That Girl in Yellow Boots is a 2010 Indian thriller film by director Anurag Kashyap, starring Kalki Koechlin and Naseeruddin Shah. [3] The film was first screened at the Toronto International Film Festival [4] in September 2010, followed by the Venice Film Festival [5] [6] after it played in several festivals worldwide including the South Asian International Film Festival. [7] The commercial release however took place a year later in September 2011, both in India as well as in the U.S. [8]

Contents

Plot

Ruth (Kalki Koechlin) is a British woman who lost her sister Emily to suicide a couple of years ago. She comes to India to search for her father, who is of Indian descent, a man she hardly knew but cannot forget, due to a letter he had written to her, asking her to seek him out. Without a work permit, desperation drives her to work at a massage parlour, where she offers both standard massages and "happy endings." Torn between schisms, Mumbai becomes the alien yet strangely familiar backdrop for Ruth's quest. She struggles to find her independence and space as she is sucked deeper into the labyrinth of the city's underbelly. She also dates a drug addict, Prashant (Prashant Prakash), who is simultaneously her saviour and tormentor. A city that feeds on her misery, a love that eludes her. In what is possibly also seen as a commentary on the cult of godmen in India, her father is shown to be a follower of one such religious cult. This film also shows her fighting back in vain against the shrinking feeling as the world grows around her larger and larger every day. While trying to make ends meet by working at the seedy massage parlour, Ruth also contacts multiple people to get help in finding her father, like some officials and also a few members of the cult. She is popular among a few of the clientele, who are her daily. She becomes friends with one of them (Naseeruddin Shah), who sees her only as a professional and unaware of the shady business going around. As the film proceeds, her druggie boyfriend falls in debt to another drug dealer, who takes her money as payback and asks her to pay the rest through 'Happy Endings'. Ruth somehow manages to escape from him. In the meantime, in order to find her dad, she obliges to give some private services in return for the favour from an official. But before she does it, her boyfriend interrupts and hits her, and she then breaks up with him. She finally finds her dad's whereabouts through a cult member that her dad is going with a different name from his actual and that he is now staying at Versova. By bribing the staff at a post office, Ruth somehow manages to find his address. As she walks out, it is shown that someone is clicking her pictures secretly. The next day she visits her dad to find he is not at home. As she looks around, she finds her childhood picture with her mum and sister, but not even one picture of her dad. As she looks through the pictures, she finds a box full of her latest pictures, the ones that were secretly clicked, and to her shock, she also finds her dad's picture on an ID hanging nearby and flees in horror. She walks around in shock all day, and when she goes back to the massage parlor, her only good client finds out about her secret services and confronts her by asking if she is not ashamed. Ruth stays at the parlour that night and procures a revolver pistol from the drug dealer she fooled earlier. As the next day starts, her regular morning client Lynn visits, and she strikes up a conversation, asking him why he insists on getting services from her, and as he mumbles to answer, she throws the hot oil on his back. It is then revealed that Lynn is her dad, and he knows she is his daughter from the start, and he is visiting her daily as he loves her. He also reveals that he only married her mom to get close to Emily, who he liked the same way as Ruth. It was him who got Emily pregnant, and her mother is aware of it and still did not get her aborted, which is why Emily committed suicide. Her dad keeps saying that he loves her as she walks out of the room in shock. The film ends with Ruth hanging up her yellow boots, quitting her job at the massage parlour, and presumably leaving the country to go back to Britain; her quest has come to a shocking end.

Cast

Production

Development

Lead actress Kalki Koechlin who also co-wrote the film with Anurag Kashyap mentioned, "A lot of these characters were based loosely on figures that I had seen growing up in India ...Growing up as a white-skinned woman in India, I was always the odd one out – there was a certain alienation that came with that, and you end up alienating yourself because everyone comes to you like the white girl, the easy, "Baywatch," loose-moraled white girl." [9]

Anurag Kashyap asked Koechlin to write the first scene, to get a female perspective on the treatment of white women at Indian government offices as she personally experienced the objectification. [10] He also wanted to explore the theme of child abuse; he had previously played the role of child abuser in I Am (2010) by Onir, and he himself had been a victim of child abuse for 11 years. [9] [11] At the writing stage Koechlin and Kashyap disagreed on the ending initially, as Koechlin wanted an optimistic ending, unlike Kashyap who wanted to portray that "...you don't always get solutions to your problems". [12]

The film had difficulty finding funding because it dealt with controversial themes like child abuse and drug addiction and "differed so vastly from his previous work". As Kashyap put it, "I wanted to break the formula that many directors and actors find themselves in." [9]

Filming

The film was shot in just 13 days. It was primarily framed in tight spaces, like apartments, massage parlours, and rickshaws leading to a "claustrophobic sense of unease that permeates the entire film". [9] Many of the cast members had previously worked together in theatre productions; this familiarity allowed the director to shoot the film in a shorter period of time. He admitted that he never "directed" any of the actors during the filming, "I've never told any actor what to do, only what not to do. You have to trust your actors, and I know mine inside and out." [9] He found the entire filming emotionally draining and tough, especially because it was made mostly on borrowed money. [13]

Release

After travelling to 2010 Toronto International Film Festival, 67th Venice International Film Festival in September 2010 and International Film Festival of Los Angeles (IFFLA), [14] at its New York premiere on 24 August 2011, at the Asia Society, director Anurag Kashyap said, "I hope you feel the film, because you will not enjoy it." [9] [13] The film's commercial release, however, took over a year as it was delayed to coincide with its US release to avoid internet piracy. [15] Indian distributors were not keen on the film, as without big Bollywood stars they did not find it viable for an international release; they mainly cater to an NRI (Non-resident Indian) audience. Finally US based-distributor IndiePix Films came on board for paving the way for a US release with 30 prints, all in non-NRI theatres, a rare feat for a Bollywood film. Meanwhile, the film was also sold in Scandinavian countries, Turkey, Southern Europe, and New Zealand. Its satellite rights were sold in many countries. [16] The film thus became Kashyap's first worldwide release, as it was released in 40 US theatres on 2 September by IndiePix Films, on the same day of its India release. Previously, after its showing at the London Indian Film Festival, Britain-based Mara Pictures picked up the film there for UK release in last quarter of 2011. [8] [17] Kashyap later told BBC News that he received a negative backlash from financial backers because of the film's sexual content: "A lot of people involved with the film were embarrassed about the film. A lot of people we thanked in the film who actually lent us money, they said, 'Please take our names from the film,' because they don't want somebody to see and say 'You gave the money to make this film!'" [18] That Girl in Yellow Boots is one of the few Indian films released without an interval. [19]

Marketing

Prior to its India release, the first look of the film was unveiled to the press on 11 August 2011. [20] MTV India started a "That Girl with Yellow Boots contest" asking for audition tapes from aspiring actors, the winner of which would act in future Anurag Kashyap's films. [21] In the run up to the film, its lead Kalki Koechlin appeared at an event, colour-coordinated, complete with yellow boots. [22]

Critical reception

The film opened to mostly positive reviews. Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-times gave it 3.5 out of the 4 stars, and he also noted that ' The film's value is in its portrait of Ruth, and her independence as a solo outsider in a vast, uncaring city. ' [23] In his Huffington Post review, Kia Makarechi wrote, "an unnervingly realistic portrait of unimaginable pain – is one with an ending you'll wish you could forget." [9] Nupur Barua of fullhyd.com rated it 7 out of 10, and said that besides the Kashyap-esque tone of despair and melancholy, That Girl in Yellow Boots is Anurag Kashyap's best until date, adding that you can watch it "only if you can handle the unspeakable". [24] Parmita Borah, on EF News International, wrote, "Kalki Koechlin carries That Girl in Yellow Boots on her shoulders and does so with great panache and élan." [25] Shivesh Kumar of IndiaWeekly awarded the movie 3.5 out of 5 stars. [26]

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