
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
Girls Will Be Girls (5)
Mufasa: The Lion King (1)
The Teacher (1)
Young Hearts (1)
Victoria (1)
Pierce (1)
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Girls Will Be Girls
Sucharita Tyagi
Independent Film Critic
Asks to break the cycle of trauma.
All 10 reviews of Girls Will Be Girls here
Girls Will Be Girls
Shilajit Mitra
The Hindu

A textured, eloquent coming-of-age story
As mother and daughter, Kani Kusruti and debutante Preeti Panigrahi dance a complex waltz in Shuchi Talati’s psychologically attuned boarding school drama
“I won’t allow anything more than a friendship,” decrees Anila (Kani Kusruti), a very mom thing to say. She is sizing up a tall, sweet boy, Srinivas (Kesav Binoy Kiron), who’s drawn her daughter’s affections at their elite, hillside boarding school. The girl, Mira (Preeti Panigrahi), stands at the door and listens. The camera mimics her watchful gaze. It is a simple domestic intervention, yet it thrums with suspense.
All 10 reviews of Girls Will Be Girls here
Mufasa: The Lion King
Bharathi Pradhan
Lehren.com

Royalty Without A Roar
Rafiki tells how Mufasa rose from orphaned cub to king. Taken in by Taka, a bitter heir, Mufasa learns leadership through struggles, while Taka's jealousy grows. With help from misfit friends, Mufasa earns his crown through wisdom and compassion.
We were charmed in 1994. By the story of Simba the lion cub, son of Mufasa, King of the Pride Lands. Scar, the evil force, had provided dramatic confrontation. The freshness of the animated number Circle of Life and the energetic camaraderie of Hakuna Matata have remained on the charts since then. Director Barry Jenkins’ prequel therefore comes with high expectations of a heartwarming, musical entertainer. The screenplay by Jeff Nathanson gives a backstory to Mufasa who died early in the 1994 blockbuster. Who was Simba’s dad?
All 4 reviews of Mufasa: The Lion King here
Girls Will Be Girls
Anupama Chopra
The Hollywood Reporter India

A Quietly Breathtaking Coming-of-Age Drama
Female teenage sexuality has rarely been captured with this sensitivity and nuance in an Indian film
Girls Will Be Girls is a quietly breathtaking film. It includes several remarkable debuts – starting with writer-director Shuchi Talati. This is her first feature, and she weaves this coming-of-age story of 18-year-old Mira with tenderness, frankness and delicacy. Female teenage sexuality has rarely been captured with this sensitivity and nuance in an Indian film. Second, Preeti Panigrahi who plays Mira. Panigrahi is the find of the year. Without a trace of strain or drama, she captures the myriad emotions coursing through Mira as she discovers passion, sexuality, unbridled rage, a twisted sort of jealousy, resentment, disappointment and eventually, comfort. And third, Richa Chadha and Ali Fazal who debut as producers with their company Pushing Buttons Studios. Girls Will Be Girls does this with skill and uncommon grace.
All 10 reviews of Girls Will Be Girls here
Girls Will Be Girls
Udita Jhunjhunwala
Mint, Scroll.in

A beautifully observed coming of age story
Writer-director Shuchi Talati’s debut feature is a simmering and sexually tense coming of age drama. Set in a boarding school, the story is centred around Mira, a school topper, head prefect and teacher’s pet. She’s driven to excel and considers herself the model student, upholder of school rules and moral gatekeeper. So, it’s confusing for the obedient and righteous Mira to be faced with challenges outside of the curriculum and to realise that book-learned knowledge might be no match against street smarts, life experience and generational patriarchal conditioning.
All 10 reviews of Girls Will Be Girls here
Girls Will Be Girls
Saibal Chatterjee
NDTV

It's Spellbindingly Granular And Resonantly Universal
It's buoyed by impeccable writing and a couple of consummate performances by debutante Preeti Panigrahi and the seasoned Kani Kusruti.
A brilliant and sensitive schoolgirl in love with a classmate is watched, monitored and scrutinised incessantly as she seeks to break free from familial and societal shackles in Girls Will Be Girls, writer-director Shuchi Talati’s self-assured, award-winning narrative feature debut now streaming on Amazon Prime Video. The exquisitely crafted and insightful coming-of-age drama, an Indo-French co-production that bagged two awards at the Sundance Film Festival this year, is buoyed by impeccable writing and a couple of consummate performances by debutante Preeti Panigrahi and the seasoned Kani Kusruti.
All 10 reviews of Girls Will Be Girls here
The Teacher
S. R. Praveen
The Hindu

An honest portrayal of dehumanising oppression in Palestine
A house, lived in for years, bulldozed by the Israeli military in front of its inhabitants, leaving behind a pile of tangible memories under the rubble. A youth resisting the burning down of an Olive orchard shot down by a settler with practised ease and nonchalance, just as if it were the most normal thing to do. Soldiers violently barging into every single home in a village in search of an Israeli military man who was abducted.
Young Hearts
S. R. Praveen
The Hindu

A heart-warming teenage gay romance
Sometimes, the most gentle turns in a film can create a considerable emotional impact on the viewer. The filmmaker need not necessarily move a mountain to achieve that. Belgian filmmaker Anthony Schatteman’s Young Hearts, with its fresh take on teenage gay romance, is filled with several such moments that flow organically one after the other. Being screened in the World Cinema section at the 29th International Film Festival of Kerala (IFFK), this rather small film about young people has gained appreciation amid a flurry of bigger films boasting wider festival play.
Victoria
S. R. Praveen
The Hindu

A crafty portrayal of a woman’s inner turmoil
Sivaranjini J’s debut film, screened at the Malayalam Cinema Today section at the 29th International Film Festival of Kerala on Saturday, is set almost entirely inside a beauty parlour
The spark that initiates a work of art can come from anywhere. For Sivaranjini J., it came from the unusual sight of a rooster sitting inside a beauty parlour near her home in Angamaly. Victoria, her debut film which was screened at the Malayalam Cinema Today section at the 29th International Film Festival of Kerala on Saturday, is set almost entirely a beauty parlour.
Pierce
S. R. Praveen
The Hindu

Nelicia Low’s worlds of movies and fencing come together seamlessly in her debut film
In Singapore, I picked fencing because two of my favourite movies growing up had swordplay – Lord of the Rings and Star Wars. So actually it was my love for film that led me to fencing, says the filmmaker.
While watching Pierce, the debut feature of former Singapore national fencer Nelicia Low, one would assume that the sport inspired the film, for fencing is at the very centre of the narrative which deals with brotherly affection and psychopathic tendencies. The trademark moves in the sport, which one character defines as chess played with swords, also parallels the behaviour of the characters in the film, screened in the world cinema section at the 29th International Film Festival of Kerala (IFFK) on Saturday (December 14, 2024).