• It’s got some fun moments of course, and light-hearted family drama that will make you groan with the familiarity of the situations.

    But this, without a doubt, will be one of the most unmemorable movies you’ll se this year.

  • The movie is competently made, but also perfunctory, telling us things about the greed of rich business executives and the shallowness of cable TV that we already know.

    And if you care about your money, just watch the trailer – it gives away far too much.

  • It’s good old-fashioned entertainment if you like slipping in the occasional B-movies to wet your movie-watching appetite. But it isn’t necessarily a ‘must watch it in a theatre’ watch either.

  • Comic book adaptations can be fickle beasts. But when done well, they shine. Civil War is a super satisfying film in that regard and also because it takes its characters and not itself seriously

    Despite being half an hour longer than the average Hollywood flick, it’s dynamic, entertaining and you’re not going to be itching to leave you seat.

  • This one is purely for the audiences – most of whom will watch a barely funny star-studded vehicle no matter what.

    But perhaps, just perhaps, you shouldn’t subject your mum to this as a Mother’s Day treat. She deserves better.

  • These days, you can pretty much glean the entire plot of a movie from its trailer. Which is why it’s rare to watch a film that keeps you guessing.

    And your pulse racing.

  • The Man Who Knew Infinity plays it very safe by reducing Ramanujan’s life into a well-established sellable movie formula.

    But it’s a wonderful change from the fare we’ve getting recently.

  • It isn’t the worst movie in the world, but it’s not great either. It just simply exists.

  • If you’re a true blue horror fan and want something scary, look elsewhere. Or just watch the Babadook again.

    Otherwise you would have most definitely wasted 137 minutes of you life. And a few hundred rupees that would come to use at the end of the month. 

  • Demolition is first and foremost a movie about grief, and how everyone deals with it in different ways, but it’s as unconventional as you can get, with a dark comic tone that mirrors something like Fight Club or American Psycho. 

    That means that it probably won’t be for everyone, although it never enters territory quite as dark as either of those movies.

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