This Hindi movie is a pretty straightforward slice-of-life story that tries to give a modern look at what it's like to be a single, professional gay man. It dives into how he understands who he is, the chances he missed out on, and the personal choices he’s made along the way. The director used three parallel timelines to tell the story, which honestly didn't make much sense to me. While the core idea was actually pretty interesting, I really feel like this would have worked way better as a short film considering the point it was trying to make. Still, it wasn't a bad watch. The plot centers on Rachit, a city professional, and his friend Shikhar as they hang out for an evening. Rachit is a polished, urban guy, while Shikhar has more of a "small-town" rustic vibe, and you can really see the contrast between them when they talk. As the night goes on, Rachit starts thinking back to some old memories from a long time ago. He remembers being an intern after college in ...
I am not familiar with the name Jean Cocteau. He was apparently a French poet, playwright, novelist, designer, filmmaker, visual artist and critic. This musical film focuses on his love life with a. Much younger man Raymond Radiguet in the early 1920s and also his addiction to Opium.
In the early 1920s, Jean Cocteau fell in love with the writer Raymond Radiguet. Cocteau was 30, Radiguet 10 years younger. It was an unhappy, addictive love affair. When Radiguet died of typhoid in 1923, Cocteau sought solace in opium, plunging from one addiction into another. The film tells this fascinating story as if narrated by Cocteau: associatively, surreally, fantastically. Besides the lovers, the third main character is the music, which as a sounding board reflects a feverish epoch. The film shows Jean checking into rehab and then into flashbacks on how the things unfold with on musical number after another.
In my opinion, this musical is so lubricious and poorly made, that it fails to hold any attention at all. With hardly a narrative to cling to, and one pretentious, crudely mounted sequence following another with no rhyme or reason, Opium is an unpleasant and boring watch on the screen. Films like this are so not my kind of thing. The love story of the two men is also just touched upon with their ups and downs and careers and jealousy and just that age old story of a young hot guy trying to take advantage of an older successful socialite while also probably being in love. I am sure that the film may hold some sentiment and value for people familiar with Jean and his work, but as an outsider, I would have been invested if the story was interesting or presented well. Instead, this seemed like the film maker's over indulgence in something that is way to whimsical for any normal person to enjoy. (1/10)

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