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Recent Reviews by Saibal Chatterjee
NDTV

Saibal Chatterjee is an independent film critic based in Delhi. His weekly reviews appear on www.ndtv.com. He also writes on cinema for The Tribune and The Gulf Today newspapers.

Films reviewed on this Page

Freedom at Midnight
Citadel: Honey Bunny
Do Patti
CTRL
Taaza Khabar S02

Freedom at Midnight
Crafted With Utmost Diligence, The Show Gives History Its Due

Freedom at Midnight isn't driven by A-list stars but by actors who painstakingly and confidently flesh out the towering historical figures

In Freedom of Midnight, showrunner and director Nikkhil Advani, working with a script by a team of six writers, blends solid historicity with elements of fiction and imagination to bring to the screen the agonizing final leg of India’s freedom struggle. The SonyLIV drama series produced by Emmay Entertainment and StudioNext, is crafted with utmost diligence. It blends grandeur with intimacy, swept with precision, sustained gravitas with an acute awareness of the timeless contemporaneity of political decisions of far-reaching consequences made in an era of great upheavals by the architects of a free nation forged in fire.

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All 11 reviews of Freedom at Midnight here

Citadel: Honey Bunny
The Series Misses The Bull's Eye By Miles

The series does not exactly go down in flames but neither does it have us holding our breath as its action set pieces explode on screen.

It hits the ground running all right but the mission of sustaining the momentum is an abject failure. Much of what Citadel: Honey Bunny attempts to do proves way too much for a script that, even at its best, can only laboriously inch its way forward - and backwards. Citadel: Honey Bunny is an Indian spinoff of Amazon Prime Video’s Citadel Spyverse that was birthed last year in an espionage thriller series fronted by Priyanka Chopra and Richard Madden and executive produced by the Russo brothers. While it has its share of action, it runs low on intrigue and suspense.

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All 12 reviews of Citadel: Honey Bunny here

Do Patti
Kriti Sanon's Film Needed Much Better Cards To Make A Game Of It

The film is purply dark, a little suspenseful and somewhat twisted.

Identical twins of the kind that we encounter in Hindi popular cinema are always temperamentally polar opposites. The pair in Do Patti, a Netflix film directed by Shashanka Chaturvedi, is no exception - they look the same but are dissimilar in disposition and demeanour. The film, however, deviates from the larger narrative template that governs the genre. Mumbai movies may have stumbled upon a degree of freedom thanks to the advent of the streamers, but old habits die hard. Do Patti, scripted by Kanika Dhillon, has an old trope at its core. It, however, eschews the usual confusion-caused-by-mistaken-identity construct.

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All 18 reviews of Do Patti here

CTRL
An Uncategorisable Film That Is Equal Parts Entertaining And Sobering

CTRL, in spirit and substance, reinforces Vikramaditya Motwane's proven penchant for turning an established genre on its head.

Conjuring up a life that plays out in a virtual space - in other words, setting up a gauzy existence that floats in a dimension far removed from the real and the tangible - has its wages. Vikramaditya Motwane’s inventive, sparky CTRL examines the nature and extent of the toll that burrowing into a rabbit hole of constructed personas and enhanced engagements can extract.

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All 13 reviews of CTRL here

Taaza Khabar S02
Bhuvan Bam Gives The Role His Best Shot

The series certainly isn't a junkpile but it does end up in a puddly heap more often than is good for it. Go in with your eyes open.

Bhuvan Bam’s Vasant Gawde, Mr. Vardaan to the world owing to his ability to see events before they come to pass, is back seeking to make a killing from the prescient news updates that he receives on a mobile phone app. This time around, the Taaza Khabar protagonist is either on the backfoot or, worse still, down on his haunches. His plight necessitates desperate measures as he faces new challenges hurled at him by a man who will stop at nothing. But the show, notwithstanding a series of dramatic confrontations, struggles to skirt around the pitfalls of an idea that is beginning to wear thin.

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All 2 reviews of Taaza Khabar S02 here