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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.

You can also browse reviews using our alphabetical index of films reviewed

Films reviewed on this Page

Emilia Pérez (1)
Senna (1)
Woman of the Hour (1)
Joy (1)
The Piano Lesson (1)
Girls Will Be Girls (4)
Mufasa: The Lion King (1)

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Emilia Pérez
Rohan Naahar
The Indian Express
Jacques Audiard’s audacious new film is like a cross between Chachi 420 and Dog Day Afternoon

acques Audiard's new film, dances to its own tune; it's a musical, a crime thriller, and a redemption tale. It's among the most ambitious films of the year.

Did the French auteur Jacques Audiard watch Chachi 420 and feel inspired to make his latest film, Emilia Pérez? Stranger things have happened this year. Nick Jonas has celebrated Holi in Greater Noida, and Ed Sheeran has fried a batata vada with Sanjyot Keer. Is the idea of Audiard, a Palme d’Or-winning maestro, watching a Kamal Haasan rip-off really that outlandish? The genre-fluid mess that it is, Emilia Pérez certainly has origins in mainstream Indian cinema — it can go from Ekta Kapoor-style drama to Farah Khan-inspired musical in a matter of minutes. And like so many of our country’s films, its gender politics aren’t entirely above reproach.

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Senna
Rohan Naahar
The Indian Express
Spectacularly silly, Netflix’s big-budget mini-series is the cinematic equivalent of a flat tyre

Expensive-looking but shoddily written, Netflix's biographical drama about Ayrton Senna is among the streamer's most disappointing shows of the year.

If nobody were to speak in the new Netflix show Senna, it would immediately warrant at least two extra stars. But each time any of its wafer-thin characters opens their mouths, you’re likely to be overcome by an intense desire to pump the breaks and make a pit stop, or perhaps rewatch Asif Kapadia’s seminal documentary on the subject. Based on the life and career of the legendary Brazilian Formula One driver Ayrton Senna, the six-part biographical drama is flat, uninteresting, and most criminally, boring. It is perhaps the least effective way in which his extraordinary career, and lasting influence, could’ve been commemorated.

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Woman of the Hour
Rohan Naahar
The Indian Express
Anna Kendrick’s inventive serial killer thriller takes stabs in the dark

Anna Kendrick makes her directorial debut with the darkly comedic thriller, about a woman who comes face to face with a serial killer on a dating reality show. The movie is available on Lionsgate Play in India.

Sometimes, the wiser thing to do is to scale down. Not every film needs to be a sweeping epic, especially not one that demands a tight telling. Directed by the debutante Anna Kendrick, the darkly humorous thriller Woman of the Hour is based on an intriguing real-life story, but suffers from an under-confident execution. The movie would’ve worked wonderfully as a claustrophobic chamber piece, but feels compelled to jump across timelines and juggle between characters with an haphazardness that only does it harm. Kendrick is like an overeager Indian mum, checking the pressure cooker more often than she needs to, thereby releasing all the steam.

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All 2 reviews of Woman of the Hour here

Joy
Rohan Naahar
The Indian Express
Netflix’s melodramatic and manipulative IVF origin story is an Akshay Kumar remake waiting to happen

Netflix's cloying film about the birth of IVF takes a formulaic approach to what could have been a radical narrative

A well-intentioned drama that teeters on the edge of self-parody, Joy is a film that absolutely deserved to be made, but certainly not in this form. Some years ago, the utterly forgotten The Current War had all the messy ingenuity that a film about the creation of literal electricity demanded — the movie’s tone captured the spirit of its themes. Joy, which dramatises the events leading up to the first in vitro fertilisation (IVF) birth, would have you believe that all conception — let alone that of the artificial kind — is a cakewalk.

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The Piano Lesson
Rohan Naahar
The Indian Express
Near-perfect Netflix drama finds John David Washington in incendiary form

Starring John David Washington and directed by his brother, Malcolm, the new Netflix movie is a tightly-wound drama about sibling bonds, inherited trauma, and the horrors of the past.

It is easy, one would imagine, for a filmmaker to be overwhelmed by the words of the great August Wilson. Especially if they’ve never made a film before. Musical and marauding, the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright’s language is a vessel for the ambition and anger of his people. Netflix’s The Piano Lesson — the latest adaptation of Wilson’s celebrated Pittsburgh Cycle of plays — is directed by the debutante Malcolm Washington, whose father, the legendary Denzel Washington, has publicly devoted this stage of his career to shepherding Wilson’s work onto the screen.

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Girls Will Be Girls
Rohan Naahar
The Indian Express
Shuchi Talati’s searing psychological drama is one of the best films of the year

Featuring an electric central performance by newcomer Preeti Panigrahi, director Shuchi Talati's debut film is among the best of the year.

Like its protagonist, director Shuchi Talati’s Girls Will Be Girls is a constantly evolving entity. But behind an outer veneer of control, there is burgeoning angst, a simmering chaos, and a terrible desire to be seen and heard. The psychological drama played to an uncommonly interactive packed crowd at the Dharamshala International Film Festival recently — it was a bizarre screening that exemplified how important it is to watch movies in a community environment. Often, these experiences reveal more about society than the films themselves.

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All 10 reviews of Girls Will Be Girls here

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 Hollywood Reporter India
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.

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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?

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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.

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All 10 reviews of Girls Will Be Girls here