Bioscope Movie Review: When DIY filmmaking meets village wisdom — and misses!
Bioscope Movie Review: Critics Rating: 2.0 stars, click to give your rating/review,Bioscope emerges as a curious paradox: a story about making movie magic that works only partially. L
The Times of India,
TNN, Jan 3, 2025, 10.43 AM ISTCritic's Rating: 2.0/5Bioscope Movie Synopsis:
Bioscope Movie Review: At a time of CGI spectacles and massive budgets, here comes Bioscope, a film about a film that dares to ask: What happens when a village decides to make a movie with nothing but gumption and improvised equipment? The answer, as it turns out, is both more and less than you’d expect.
The premise has potential. Kitchen utensils transform into camera rigs, farm tools become boom microphones, and grandmothers turn into unlikely stars. It’s the kind of setup that makes film festival programmers salivate and audiences lean forward in anticipation.
But somewhere between concept and execution, Bioscope loses its way. The film treats its runtime like a village elder with too many stories to tell — meandering, digressing, and occasionally forgetting where it was headed in the first place. What could have been a tight, enchanting ode to grassroots creativity instead becomes a test of audience endurance.
The village ensemble brings moments of genuine charm to the screen. The elderly women, in particular, steal scenes with their unvarnished reactions and accidental comedic timing. Yet these moments of authenticity get buried under an avalanche of tired rural comedy tropes. The humour oscillates between inspired and expired, with the scales too often tipping toward the latter.
The ingenuity on display is undeniable. Watching the villagers jury-rig their way through filmmaking challenges provides the film’s strongest moments. When the film hits its stride – usually during the more intimate moments of community collaboration – it captures something special about the universal drive to create art. But you wonder whether this could have been a YouTube release. The repetitive comedy beats don't help. There is a montage of the Satyaraj song and dance from the original, and director Cheran stepping in magnanimously to save the film. They're like some interesting tidbits because of the familiar face.
Bioscope emerges as a curious paradox: a story about making movie magic that works only partially. Like its characters’ makeshift equipment, it’s ingenious in parts, but doesn’t quite get the job done.
Written by: Abhinav Subramanian