• The story is interesting and the performances are fantastic, but it’s the musical numbers that make ‘The Greatest Showman’ stunning.

  • ‘Wonder’ tells a great story with layers of deep feeling and questions of identity and makes the whole thing feel like a breeze.

  • You may like him or hate him but you can’t ignore Kejriwal, this 96-minute long political thriller tells you why.

  • Although a little over-dramatic towards the end, Secret Superstar effectively strikes the emotional chord. With Zaira Wasim’s fine performance as the lead, this film has very good repeat value.

  • Villeneuve’s Blade Runner is grim, gritty, appropriately allegorical and morally ambiguous sans an iota of force. Ridley Scott, with his alarmingly precognitive visual and mortal landscape, had done to the generation what Black Mirror has consistently been achieving with millennials.

  • In Doug Liman’s biographical crime drama, Cruise plays an anti-hero in this ‘money-trumps-moral’ tale.

  • If you cannot tolerate apartheid in the name of politics, this Madhur Bhandarkar scrapbook straight from the 70s is for you.

  • Kudos to writer Ritesh Shah for maintaining such sensitivity while writing the screenplay of the film.

    Watching this film should definitely be on your to-do list for the weekend. 

  • While many young directors brag about their debut with a star actor, Raam Reddy is a perfect example of a top class debut director.

  • The humour is deadpan, the lines crisp, the characters are random and together they make it work in a very refreshing fashion. Anderson deserves full credit for being true to his oeuvre, and giving the audience what they expect of him. You must watch this movie for both Fiennes and Anderson, and for a lesson in the film watching experience itself. It doesn’t pander to audience whims but instead is an honest attempt at being bizarre. And you what? It works.

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