Poorna
Poorna is the story of Poorna Malavath, who at 13 years became the youngest girl to climb Mount Everest. Although the story is inspiring, the telling of the tale is tedious.
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Poorna is the story of Poorna Malavath, who at 13 years became the youngest girl to climb Mount Everest. Although the story is inspiring, the telling of the tale is tedious.
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The film has flashes of brilliance, but the tedious sequences go on for so long you think you have aged when you emerge out into the sunshine.
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Anaarkali of Aarah is a brilliant little film that Swara Bhaskar handles magnificently, supported by a superb cast.
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Aa Gaya Hero is a story of a policeman who makes an elaborate plan to trap the assorted bad guys by closing all loopholes they usually employ to escape justice. The whole thing is handled so badly, the songs and dances are a relief from the strangest goings on.
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The director duo Abbas-Mustan launch Mustafa (son of Abbas) with this romance cum murder thriller cum demented psychological drama. They try so hard to offer as many hairpin bends as they possibly can add, but the young actors in this race are so callow, their romance is unintentionally hilarious.
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Mantra follows the story of a dysfunctional family, who are facing their demons in their own ways. And while their individual stories are interesting, the stories could have been better woven to create a mantra for success.
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Trapped is a typical festival film, which has its moments but is tiresome to watch and makes you wonder if it would have been better as a short film.
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Badrinath Ki Dulhania is certainly not a Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge, but backed with fine performances stands in its own place. A complete entertainer.
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Commando 2 is a slow moving movie, which has absolutely nothing original. The fight sequences are borrowed, the dialog is sloppy and the end is as good as propaganda.
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The story of a successful author - Aalia is told in flashback: Aalia as a young girl, who is in love with a young man, to Aalia being married forcibly, to a runaway pregnant woman, who becomes a mother and then lands a job in New York. After 170 minutes, when you wonder about the point of it all, there is a funeral and the movie ends.
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Mahie Gill plays a housewife whose husband has not shown up for his first wedding anniversary. Suddenly a poetry, philosophy spouting older man pops up and gives her so much useless homespun advice that she falls asleep, and you turn into a zombie and walk out of the theatre.
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Indian School of Technology is located in a remote place and forensics are called because four students have been brutally killed by something that has bitten off their limbs and necks and heads. A good start to a horror film, but it slowly falls into cliches and is unable to recover. Bollywood has never made worthy to be slotted as 'Horror' but this one makes an effort.
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