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
Kanguva (4)
Freedom at Midnight (3)
Tees (1)
Singham Again (1)
Citadel: Honey Bunny (1)
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Freedom at Midnight
Saibal Chatterjee
NDTV
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.
All 11 reviews of Freedom at Midnight here
Freedom at Midnight
Rahul Desai
The Hollywood Reporter India
A Brave And Bulky Historical Thriller
Nikkhil Advani’s 7-episode Partition drama is ambitious, campy and politically expressive.
As children, most of us learn to see 1947 as India’s finest moment. The event is simple: India gained freedom from the greedy British Raj and that’s that. As teenagers, we start to sense that perhaps it wasn’t all smooth and happy. With independence came the pressure to move out and grow up. But it doesn’t matter much because, either way, colonialism ended. As we get older, however, a full and bittersweet picture emerges: a nation is free, only to be violently divided into two on the basis of religion. It was never as simple as the British leaving or a newly born country celebrating its revolutionaries. This fuller picture has been molded — and revised — into shapeless stories by a future reeling from its scars. History is what happened, but these days, history is what we choose to believe.
All 11 reviews of Freedom at Midnight here
Freedom at Midnight
Bharathi Pradhan
Lehren.com
A Poignant Reminder That Freedom Came At A Cost
'Freedom at Midnight' explores India's 1947 Partition, depicting political drama among Gandhi, Jinnah, Nehru, and Patel.
Much of our history was unknown in 1975 when Freedom At Midnight by Dominique Lapierre and Larry Collins, the bestseller documenting the backstage events that led to the bloody Partition of India, was first published. In recent years, there has been such a glut of printed and visual information on what happened in 1947 that Indians are familiar with most of the Nehru-Gandhi-Patel-Jinnah parleys which director Nikkhil Advani sets out to preserve on film.
All 11 reviews of Freedom at Midnight here
Tees
Rohan Naahar
The Indian Express
Dibakar Banerjee’s unreleased saga is ambitious, intimate, and incendiary
Dibakar Banerjee's generation-spanning saga about entrapment and emancipation remains incarcerated in Netflix's digital dungeon. What a crime.
In director Dibakar Banerjee’s Tees, three generations of a Kashmiri family grapple with identity, erasure, and a desire to be heard in an ever-evolving and increasingly intolerant India. It is cruelly ironic, therefore, that the movie itself has been throttled like its characters. Originally titled Freedom, the ambitious saga has effectively been caged on a hard disk by the paranoid Netflix. But despite being denied a release by the streamer, Tees was presented in its complete form at the 13th Dharamshala International Film Festival recently, with Banerjee present to soak in the warmth that seemed to be emanating from the hundreds of pilgrims who queued up for it on a winter evening. Tees opens, rather worryingly, with a scene that wouldn’t feel out of place in Banerjee’s latest, Love Sex Aur Dhoka 2, which was more an act of self-immolation than self-expression, if we’re being honest. A computer-generated black cat walks towards us, before it is revealed to be the internet avatar of a human being looking for a connection. The year is 2042, and a young writer named Anhad Draboo (Shashank Arora) appears rattled by the rejection of his rebellious verses by an overbearing government.
Kanguva
Rahul Desai
The Hollywood Reporter India
A Shoddy Monument To Superstardom
Siva’s Suriya-starring fantasy actioner loses more than just the plot
Sometime last month, a Timothée Chalamet look-alike contest in New York took the internet by storm. The prize was a modest 50 dollars. Some participants were more convincing than others, but the reason this event went viral is because the real Chalamet made a surprise visit in the end to greet the winners. Ironically, he looked nothing like the men trying to ape him. The point of this anecdote — wait for it — is that the entire Indian fantasy-period-action-epic bubble these days is an expensive look-alike contest. During the interval of Kanguva, I was momentarily disoriented: was the second half of Devara: Part 1 or Kalki 2898 AD going to start playing? Would anyone even notice? These movies resemble each other in strange and amateur ways, but none of them resemble the original star, S.S. Rajamouli’s Baahubali. In fact, like Chalamet himself, Rajamouli showed up in a cameo in one of these films — and that scene alone became more popular than the mega-budget production surrounding it.
All 10 reviews of Kanguva here
Kanguva
Manoj Kumar
Desi Martini, HT Media
Suriya leads this grand spectacle with heart amidst primal chaos
Set against a primitive landscape, Kanguva tells the story of a warrior-leader who balances his people’s survival instincts with his own vision of compassion and integrity.
A characteristic in all of director Siva’s movies that I strongly dislike is the lack of subtlety in emotions and reactions. Everything is loud—and sometimes even louder than Boyapati Srinu’s films. But if you can look past this trait, Kanguva might just be one of the most cinematic spectacles you’ve experienced in theatres in a long time.
All 10 reviews of Kanguva here
Kanguva
Janani K
India Today
Suriya-starrer has great ideas, but sub-par execution spoils it
Director Siruthai Siva's Kanguva, starring Suriya and Bobby Deol, has great potential. However, sub-par execution and incoherent writing bog down the film.
It’s been nearly two and a half years since Suriya had a big theatrical release. With Kanguva, Suriya and producer KE Gnanavel Raja made tall claims about the film’s success even before its release. While Gnanavel claimed that the film would rake in Rs 2,000 crore worldwide, Suriya went all out in promoting the film. But, has the film lived up to the massive expectations that the team set for themselves? Let’s find out! Kanguva’s story connects the past and present in two parallel timelines. Francis (Suriya) is a bounty hunter in 2024. He meets a child who reminds him of his past. A thousand years earlier, Kanga aka Kanguva (Suriya), a prince of the tribe, is facing one conflict after another. His village, Perumachi, is under threat from Romanians who want to conquer and rule them.
All 10 reviews of Kanguva here
Singham Again
Sanyukta Thakare
Mashable India
Ajay Devgn’s Film Entertains, Enough For All Fandoms
Ranveer Singh saves the second half!
Singham Again made quite the impression with its short film for a trailer. It also led to the perception that the film won’t have much to offer after everything was revealed in the teasers and trailers. And yet the film surprises with its comedy and its Ramayan connective direction. Rohit Shetty does warn his audience and the religious critics that the film is not meant to disrespect anyone’s faith or any religion with a two-minute long disclaimer and what follows is a cameo-filled film with a run time of 144 minutes.
All 17 reviews of Singham Again here
Citadel: Honey Bunny
Sanyukta Thakare
Mashable India
Varun Dhawan- Samantha Ruth Prabhu Show Makes Priyanka Chopra’s Series Even Better
Kay Kay Menon has the biggest impact
The show fits right into the style of Raj and DK sans the comedy, the rawness and the drama will keep you hooked for a while. Set in the 90s and early 2000s it focuses on the lack of technology and old-school espionage. Its sequences set in the 90s will remind audiences of old movies like the action remains grounded to today’s time. The makers find a good mix of old aesthetics, cinematography and modern writing for spy thrillers. The show has ups and downs, but performances like that of Kay Kay Menon will bring you back to the story.