Bhakshak by writer-director Pulkit seems to have been reverse-engineered to quite a degree, which is why the result isn’t as engaging as it should have been. What is the issue here? It’s hard to pinpoint in a single viewing, but there is an instinct that points to the answer. The movie, written by Jyotsana Nath alongside Pulkit, has a significant idea at the center of it, but how best to show it becomes the issue. You have to have the right scenario and a carefully planned-out sequence of events that invites the audience into the world of Bhakshak. The film stars Bhumi Pednekar, someone who has quite boldly chosen films with something to say. She seems to be the one figure in the film that the audience can see and then can immediately be on board with the plot of the film. As far as having a relatable figure is concerned,...
- 2/9/2024
- by Ayush Awasthi
- Film Fugitives
Dasvi
Starring Abhishek Bachchan, Nimrat Kaur, Yami Gautam Dhar
Directed by Tushar Joshi
Except for the fact that Yami Gautam looks nothing like a jail superintendent, Dasvi is quite a delightful experience. It is filled with little pockets of surprising warmth and dollops of takeaway tenderness.
Abhishek Bachchan, in a career-defining performance, plays Gangaram Choudhary, the Chief Minister of an imaginary North Indian state that looks suspiciously like Haryana. Abhishek’s behaviour onscreen suggests he plays a younger more effervescent and reformative version of Om Prakash Chautala. His accent is spot-on and his body-language suggests an arrogant ownership of the space that he claims as though by birthright.
But let’s not get too political here. Dasvi intends to have fun with the politics of gender dynamics. It also puts across a deeply-felt message on the importance of education. On both the counts, it passes the examination with distinction. While...
Starring Abhishek Bachchan, Nimrat Kaur, Yami Gautam Dhar
Directed by Tushar Joshi
Except for the fact that Yami Gautam looks nothing like a jail superintendent, Dasvi is quite a delightful experience. It is filled with little pockets of surprising warmth and dollops of takeaway tenderness.
Abhishek Bachchan, in a career-defining performance, plays Gangaram Choudhary, the Chief Minister of an imaginary North Indian state that looks suspiciously like Haryana. Abhishek’s behaviour onscreen suggests he plays a younger more effervescent and reformative version of Om Prakash Chautala. His accent is spot-on and his body-language suggests an arrogant ownership of the space that he claims as though by birthright.
But let’s not get too political here. Dasvi intends to have fun with the politics of gender dynamics. It also puts across a deeply-felt message on the importance of education. On both the counts, it passes the examination with distinction. While...
- 4/7/2022
- by Subhash K Jha
- Bollyspice
There is a date, and then are are the dates. As the unnamed girl in the pouring rain gets into the shared cab, she meets a couple whose daughter is to get married. The friendly lady thrusts date fruits in the troubled heroine's hands.
"Take take," she goes in broken English. A manufactured moment meant only to fill the space provided.
But Konkona Sen Sharma, her face showing every twitch of terror and apprehension that her character feels, has got another date on her mind. She must meet her boyfriend of one month and tell him the dark truth about herself.
It's a heart-rending situation which, if the truth be told, didn't really require any elaboration. Hence, even the short-story format seems to have been stretched out, with sundry characters popping up like unwanted performers at a big rock concert where Elton John is supposed to perform.
And really, the...
"Take take," she goes in broken English. A manufactured moment meant only to fill the space provided.
But Konkona Sen Sharma, her face showing every twitch of terror and apprehension that her character feels, has got another date on her mind. She must meet her boyfriend of one month and tell him the dark truth about herself.
It's a heart-rending situation which, if the truth be told, didn't really require any elaboration. Hence, even the short-story format seems to have been stretched out, with sundry characters popping up like unwanted performers at a big rock concert where Elton John is supposed to perform.
And really, the...
- 6/7/2019
- GlamSham
Watch the new brand track Sun Zara from an upcoming movie Tera Mera Tedha Medha in the voice of Chittaranjan Tripathy, lyrics by V.K Sharma.
Tera Mera Tedha Medha stars Rahul Bagga, Geetika Tyagi, Rajesh Sharma, Chittaranjan Tripathy, Reema Worah, Sanjiv Chopra, Neeraj Sood and Vinod Nahardih. Directed by Chittaranjan Tripathy and produced by Sanjiv Chopra, Renu S. Chopra and Puja Sharma Tripathy, Tmtm is set for release on September 11.
//www.youtube.com/watch?v=5K56ZGnOOVc
The post Sun Zara video song from Tera Mera Tedha Medha appeared first on BollySpice.com.
Tera Mera Tedha Medha stars Rahul Bagga, Geetika Tyagi, Rajesh Sharma, Chittaranjan Tripathy, Reema Worah, Sanjiv Chopra, Neeraj Sood and Vinod Nahardih. Directed by Chittaranjan Tripathy and produced by Sanjiv Chopra, Renu S. Chopra and Puja Sharma Tripathy, Tmtm is set for release on September 11.
//www.youtube.com/watch?v=5K56ZGnOOVc
The post Sun Zara video song from Tera Mera Tedha Medha appeared first on BollySpice.com.
- 9/9/2015
- by BollySpice Editors
- Bollyspice
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