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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.

You can also browse reviews using our alphabetical index of films reviewed

Films reviewed on this Page

Squid Game S02 (3)
Doctors (1)
The Smile Man (1)
Barroz (1)
Baby John (4)

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Squid Game S02
Tatsam Mukherjee
The Wire
Has a Hearty Laugh About 'Democracy' and 'Free Will' in an Unequal Society

Turns out – not everyone values their lives.

Like it happens with the follow-up for any successful show, I entered the Squid Game 2 with a fair bit of trepidation. What worked in the first season was the shock value of the setting that posits the innocence of childhood games, sophisticated Western classical music with a kind of savagery few would be able to stomach. Where unsuspecting debt-ridden civilians are lured onto an island to play a series of games – for which they stand to win an obscene amount of money, or pay for it with their life. A cruel, but clinical simulation of our lives in a hyper-capitalist society, the appeal of Squid Game lay in how it studied human nature – especially the ones with limited means, who are driven to take desperate measures. How far would you go to survive/get paid? As the first season showed: to any length.

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All 3 reviews of Squid Game S02 here

Doctors
Rahul Desai
The Hollywood Reporter India
A Medical Drama That Operates on Vibes Alone

Directed by Sahir Raza, the ten-episode series plays out like a tacky college movie set in a hospital.

It often takes no more than five minutes to tell that a ten-episode series is going to be … not good. Yet, it’s my job to watch the whole thing. I can’t just abandon it the moment I realise it’s fundamentally flawed. So, I spend a day or two watching the next 395 minutes, hoping against hope that a miracle changes my mind. But, of course, it never comes—the craft is all wrong, the writing is dated, the music is uninspired, and the acting is everywhere. Yet, when a series is so long and stubborn and voluminous, one tends to develop a strange attachment to it. There’s no escape, so I simply make peace with—and normalise—the mediocrity at hand. It’s a reluctant bond, the kind you have with a month-long cough. But it’s a bond nevertheless, and when it ends, a part of your life ends. That’s what Doctors became to me.

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The Smile Man
Kirubhakar Purushothaman
News 18
Sarathkumar’s Attempt To Emulate Por Thozhil’s Success Fails Again

Had only the writing been efficient to incorporate all the chaos, Smile Man could have been a decent genre film

Sarathkumar tasted great success playing a moody cop in the commercially and critically acclaimed Por Thozhil (2023). Since then he has been trying to emulate its success in vain. Smile Man, his 150th film, is another such attempt, in which the actor yet again plays a brooding CBCID office grappling with Alzheimer’s disease, who is also on a hunt for a serial killer, notoriously known as Smile Man. Like most serial killer films in Tamil, Smile Man also suffers from the usual problems of convenient writing, cliches, and redundant flashbacks. Honestly, the film kicks off on a promising note. The epilogue has Chidhamabaram (Sarathkumar) chasing the serial killer only to get bashed by him after a near-fatal accident. The unknown killer swears to come back if Chidhambaram chooses to show up again as a cop. Meanwhile, we learn that Chidambaram’s partner (Sunil Menon), who is currently missing, has closed the Smile Man case, claiming that the serial killer was shot dead. Yet, in the present day, the murder starts to happen again. Bodies of victims with skin carved out to make a smiling face (the modus operandi of the killer) are found in the city, and Chidhambaram, despite his health condition, joins the force again to finish what he had started years ago.

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Barroz
Kirubhakar Purushothaman
News 18
Mohanlal's Directorial Debut Is A Visual Splendor But Falls Short on Execution

Channeling more energy to the 3D aspect of Barroz, Mohanlal has failed to make an engaging fantasy film, despite having a promising premise.

Debutant director Mohanlal has been hung up on the 3D element of Barroz: Guardian of Treasures. So much so that every other aspect of the film has gotten little to no attention. Even Mohanlal, the incredible performer, is absent as everything about Barroz comes across as a stage play captured on camera. The only focus of the team has been to come up with various ways to gloat the 3D elements of the film on the face of the viewer. A flower bouquet will get an unnecessary slow-motion shot as Barroz extends it to Isabell (Maya Rao). The idea is to impress the audience as the flowers extend outside the screen, but even children (who seem to be the target audience of the film) lose interest as such gimmicks become redundant. Beyond the brilliant execution of the 3D technology and the superlative production design, Barroz has little to offer concerning an engaging story.

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All 2 reviews of Barroz here

Baby John
Tatsam Mukherjee
The Wire
A Culmination of Hindi Cinema’s Laziest Instincts in 2024

Not content with just being old wine in a new bottle, the film might as well be hooch in a polythene bag.

Nothing screams ‘crisis’ in Hindi cinema right now more than Salman Khan showing up in his second ‘star cameo’ of the year – hedging his bets between two cinematic universes; hoping at least one of them works. Something works. This is not a spoiler, given how the film’s PR and fan accounts are enthusiastically ‘leaking’ his entry scene on social media. Khan’s films proudly flaunted their ‘critic-proof’ status for a long time, but have looked increasingly silly in the last five years. Apart from YRF’s spy universe, Khan’s Chulbul Pandey has announced himself in the Rohit Shetty cop universe, and now alongside Varun Dhawan in the Baby John universe – where he’s called (what else, but) Agent Bhai Jaan. It looks like even Bollywood’s loosest canon is looking to diversify his portfolio, fervently praying to make windfall gains from one franchise. The devil-may-care swagger has been replaced with the caution of a star unsure of his place.

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All 12 reviews of Baby John here

Squid Game S02
Priyanka Roy
The Telegraph
Despite some thrills and chills, Squid Game S2 lacks novelty and succumbs to streaming bloat.

The arrival of Squid Game in 2021 was met with overwhelming resonance and relevance. In a world ravaged by the pandemic which had shifted power structures, altered priorities for both individuals and institutions and given birth to an existential crisis which compelled many of us to question purpose and privilege, the South Korean series — that Netflix dropped with very little fanfare — may have spoken, much like the Oscar biggie Parasite, about the class chasm in that country as well as fast-growing debt and the perils of the rise of capitalism in the South Korean economy, but it found itself touching a chord with audiences across the world.

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All 3 reviews of Squid Game S02 here

Baby John
Priyanka Roy
The Telegraph
Full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

Logic, chronology, geography, sensitivity, ear drums and brain cells all take a hike in Baby John. The big-budget production that attempts to launch Varun Dhawan as an all-out action star is an all-round assault on the senses, partially redeemed by only a few clap-worthy moments mostly credited to ‘VD’, which is what the baby-faced actor is introduced as at the beginning of Baby John. I haven’t watched Theri, the 2016 Tamil blockbuster which was purely a fan-service exercise for diehard followers of Thalapathy Vijay. I am not sure if Varun has the kind of fans — I mean by demographic and not volume — that would queue up feverishly to watch him defy the laws of physics to make easy work of 10 men at one go or swing his sunglasses in one swift movement as some sort of a signature style, a mid-level tribute to everyone from the iconic Rajinikanth to the magnetic Chulbul Pandey.

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All 12 reviews of Baby John here

Baby John
Ishita Sengupta
Independent Film Critic
The Worst Film Of The Year

With Baby John, Varun Dhawan joins the long line of male actors transitioning to action stars who willingly hack and chop. He does the same but with an abject insincerity that gleams from the screen.

Like all bad films, Kalees’ Baby John gets worse by the second. But like a special kind of bad film, the progression happens in leaps and bounds. If the first fifteen minutes are infuriating, half an hour later the film makes you question your life’s choices. By the time the first half closes, you are having an existential meltdown and as the end credits roll, your orientation to reality has altered. Was that real? Was he real? Is any of this real or are we stuck in a parallel universe of Atlee’s imagination where everything on screen unravels as a duller version of his stylistic choices?

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All 12 reviews of Baby John here

Squid Game S02
Sonal Pandya
Times Now, Zoom
Addictive Korean Drama Returns For Another Stellar Session Of Chills And Thrills

Emmy Award winner Lee Jung-jae steps back into the shoes of Seong Gi-hun as he takes on the odds again in Squid Game.

After its premiere in 2021, it was easy to see why Squid Game became the most popular show in the world. Writer-director Hwang Dong-hyuk’s universal story of greed and betrayal, which exposed humanity’s basest behaviour, struck a chord globally. Audiences took to the characters created in this universe and mourned as we lost several fan favourites who were treated as pawns in the deadly contest based on nostalgic children’s games. The show returns after three years and a time jump, as the last winner Seong Gi-hun decides to infiltrate the games to take it down. Lee Jung-jae’s Gi-hun is a much-changed man this season as he’s on a mission to dismantle the games. Plagued with guilt about his survival after his friends didn’t make it, he wants to save others from succumbing to the same fate. But his plan faces plenty of hurdles that he doesn’t anticipate. The Front Man (Lee Byung-hun), the overseer of the game, has a bigger role than last season, and police officer Hwang Jun-ho (Wi Ha-joon) also returns to find his way back to find out more about the mysterious organisation that runs the games.

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All 3 reviews of Squid Game S02 here

Baby John
Deepak Dua
Independent Film Journalist & Critic
कचरे का सुल्तान

2016 में एक तमिल एक्शन-थ्रिलर फिल्म आई थी ‘थेरी’। इसमें कहानी, स्क्रिप्ट और निर्देशन एटली का था। वही एटली, जिन्हें हम हिन्दी वाले अब शाहरुख खान की फिल्म ‘जवान’ के डायरेक्टर के तौर पर पहचानते हैं। हालांकि ‘थेरी’ भी कोई ओरिजनल फिल्म नहीं थी लेकिन उस समय तमिल में यह सुपरहिट हुई और बाद में इसके डब संस्करण को हिन्दी वालों ने भी यहां-वहां खूब देखा। अब इतने साल बाद उसी ‘थेरी’ का हिन्दी रीमेक आया है जिसके निर्माताओं में एटली भी हैं। लेकिन एटली ने इसे निर्देशित नहीं किया है बल्कि साऊथ के ही कालीस से निर्देशित करवाया है। अपनी बेटी के साथ केरल के एक छोटे-से कस्बे में बेकरी चला रहा बेबी जॉन मारधाड़ से परे रहने वाला आदमी है। लेकिन तभी कुछ ऐसा होता है कि वह वापस अपने उस हिंसक अवतार में आ जाता है जब वह एक दबंग पुलिस अफसर हुआ करता था जो बुरे लोगों को पटक-पटक कर मारता था। क्या कारण था कि जो उसने पुलिस की नौकरी छोड़ी? अब क्या कारण है कि वह वापस मारधाड़ करने लगा?

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All 12 reviews of Baby John here