Member Reviews
No good movie is too long and no bad movie is short enough. Your intellect may be confused, but your emotions will never lie to you.
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Films reviewed on this Page
Manvat Murders (2)
Joker (1)
CTRL (4)
The Signature (1)
Devara Part 1 (1)
Superman (1)
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Manvat Murders
Rahul Desai
The Hollywood Reporter India
A Bland Retelling of a Brutal True-crime Chapter
In creating its own version of justice and resolution, the series trivialises the anatomy of the crimes.
Being a true-crime drama in the Indian streaming landscape is like being an aspiring batsman in India’s cramped bylanes and crowded fields. Everybody is one — and everybody is advised to be one. Consequently, it’s harder to stand out. The default level has to be high: an engrossing story, a solid cast, a sense of place and time, technical competence. Most shows opt for an atmospheric setting to conceal a convoluted plot; the logic is that a visually striking tone will compensate for pacing and structural issues. In other words, the style can distract from a lack of substance. But Manvat Murders, helmed by Aatmapamphlet (2023) director Ashish Avinash Bende, is a Marathi-language series that does the reverse.
All 3 reviews of Manvat Murders here
Joker
Priyanka Roy
The Telegraph
Folie a Deux doesn’t submit to formula but fails to hit any high notes
After a haul of $1 billion at the box office, 11 Academy Award nominations and the first-ever Oscar for Joaquin Phoenix, director Todd Phillips knew it would be carte blanche for him when it came to the inevitable sequel to 2019’s intriguing if ultimately superficial Joker
“Let’s give the people what they want,” Lady Gaga’s Harleen “Lee” Quinzel (aka Harley Quinn) declares at a key moment in Joker: Folie a Deux. That seems odd coming from a film that is committed to giving audiences quite the opposite.
All 4 reviews of Joker here
CTRL
Saibal Chatterjee
NDTV
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.
All 13 reviews of CTRL here
CTRL
Anuj Kumar
The Hindu
Ananya Panday is in control in this timely lesson on the dangers of AI
Director Vikramaditya Motwane succeeds in creating the mood, moments, and message but the thriller lacks the killer punch
A cautionary tale on cybercrime and artificial intelligence, CTRL works like a ready reckoning on online behaviour for social media junkies and feels like it has been designed to showcase the budding talent of Ananya Panday. Many of us have yet to recover from the shenanigans of Bae when director Vikramaditya Motwane unleashes the effervescence of Ananya in yet another variant of the coming-of-age template for Gen-Z.
All 13 reviews of CTRL here
CTRL
Shubhra Gupta
The Indian Express
Ananya Panday, Vikramaditya Motwane film is two-dimensional
While both Ananya Panday and Vihaan Samat do their job well, the film truly feels potent only when it comes off the screen.
With Ctrl, a cautionary tale about the world’s obsession and our near-total dependence on online apps, Vikramaditya Motwane has moved firmly into the future. Or is it the present? Isn’t this what the geeks have been creating with their gaming universes, where your digital avatars are the better, shinier versions of you? Where they slay all the monsters, and leave you — or rather, your avatar — fully in control?
All 13 reviews of CTRL here
CTRL
Rahul Desai
The Hollywood Reporter India
Ananya Panday Anchors a Smart and Attentive Screenlife Thriller
It’s the kind of seamless actor-film fit that allows us to lament the imperfections of a culture without skewering it.
In 2018, Aneesh Chaganty’s Searching put the life in screenlife. It marked the natural progression of ‘screenlife storytelling’ — a visual format where events happen entirely on computer screens, smartphones and cameras — into the real world. Until then, the horrors of technology had been literalised by the found-footage and supernatural genres. But Searching featured a father who looks for his missing daughter by following her digital footprints. His internet sleuthing reveals how little he really knew her; the technology he uses to find her is what had isolated her to begin with. Vikramaditya Motwane’s CTRL goes a step further; it expands the plausibility of the genre by unfolding in an age that puts the screen in screenlife. CTRL marks its progression into the reality of a virtual world — one where being watched is simply a natural consequence of feeling seen.
All 13 reviews of CTRL here
Manvat Murders
Bharathi Pradhan
Lehren.com
Women & Crime — Raw, Real & Ruthless
In 1972, seven women were brutally killed in Manvat, shocking the entire country. The local police were unable to solve the case, so Special Crime Branch officer Ramakant Kulkarni stepped in to find out what really happened and reveal the hidden motives behind the murders.
The ritualistic Manwat Murders which brutally claimed the lives of innocent children and women and shook Maharashtra in the 70s, does it again. Amol Palekar had already put it effectively on screen in Akriet (1981).
All 3 reviews of Manvat Murders here
The Signature
Bharathi Pradhan
Lehren.com
To Pull the Plug Or Not
After his wife Madhu falls into a coma and is placed on life support, Arvind's world collapses. Can he save his wife and hope for a future together, or will circumstances hold him back?
It is a poignant dilemma familiar to most families. When a loved one is on life support, and prolonging it is unaffordable, can you bring yourself to sign the Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) form? For retired librarian Arvind Pathak (Anupam Kher), it is unthinkable. It’s easier for his pragmatic son (Kevin Gandhi) and daughter (Sangeeta Jain) who have their own lives to lead.