• Despite its flaws, ATC2 can be watched, if you are a diehard Nana Patekar fan. On second thoughts, watching the original again would be a smarter move.

  • Jai Jawaan Jai Kisaan (named after the late PM’s popular slogan) is merely a textbook representation of the iconic leader’s life, which probably caters to kids under the age of 10. A school play could be more effective than this.

  • As far as execution is concerned, while the unhurried unfolding of mystery adds depth to the film, it also demands patience from the viewers, which may or may not work in its favour. Nonetheless, this tale of the ‘perfect crime’ will appeal to fans of the genre.

  • If you find flying objects, animated butterflies, erotic dreams and the sight of letters being deleted automatically from a word document on a laptop scary, you deserve to watch Khamoshiyan alone and be disowned by friends and family all your life, like its protagonist.

  • Overall, the characters are crazy enough to amuse you with their shenanigans. If you don’t mind a cliched story, Beri villa is worth a visit.

  • …the story had potential, but lacks chutzpah in its making. Too much of sharafat and no play makes it a dull watch.

  • American Sniper is hard-hitting, no doubt, and predominantly a performance-oriented film, where Cooper shines. It isn’t the Clint Eastwood classic you expect it to be, though.

  • … the film lacks continuity and gives an impression that certain portions were chopped off randomly to cut the length.

    Raj Zutshi stands out and so do the two children. The film tries too hard to hold you emotionally. If only the makers took it easy, this one could have been a winner.

  • Mumbai Can Dance Saala desperately works towards portraying Tarannum as a harmless victim. Never mind the intent, the execution is so unbearably silly that you don’t give a damn about Tarannum or her sob story. The film is so excruciatingly boring that it might change the opinion of those who were against the shutting down of dance bars.

  • Kabaddi deserves a better film dedicated to it.
    Instead of infusing ‘energy and courage’ into the film, something the sport strongly embodies, you end up watching a compilation of sob stories as each character recounts a tragic tale, which only distracts you from the core premise.

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