Baradwaj Rangan
3,206 FOLLOWERS
National Award-winning film critic. In this blog, he writes articles on Indian cinema and gives his reviews on Hindi movies.
Baradwaj Rangan
1d ago
For more, subscribe to GALATTA PLUS: https://tinyurl.com/ysbkyrht Copyright ©2024 GALATTA ..read more
Baradwaj Rangan
2d ago
By Vikas Yadav Amar Singh Chamkila died on 8 March 1988. He was just 27 years old when he left this world. This is not a big mystery, and Imtiaz Ali’s Amar Singh Chamkila doesn’t save the assassination scene for the climax. He opens this biopic with Chamkila and Amarjot’s death, and this scene shocks ..read more
Baradwaj Rangan
3d ago
For more, subscribe to GALATTA PLUS: https://tinyurl.com/ysbkyrht Copyright ©2024 GALATTA ..read more
Baradwaj Rangan
4d ago
The film stars Fahadh Faasil. Technically speaking, he is not the main character, but the way he owns the film is something else altogether. One week ago, had you asked me for my pick for Screenplay of the Year-so-far, it would have hands-down been Gireesh AD’s Premalu. But now, after watching the brilliantly done Aavesham ..read more
Baradwaj Rangan
5d ago
The film stars Dhyan Sreenivasan, Pranav Mohanlal. The laughs keep coming, but the writing needed to be much stronger in the emotional portions. At its most basic level, Varshangalkku Shesham is a story about two friends, what we’d call a bromance – one that starts in the 1970s and ends in the present day. Dhyan ..read more
Baradwaj Rangan
6d ago
Aavesham should be great fun for those who prefer action comedies that deliver the highs in all the right places . So, long back when Aavesham was first announced, there was this rumour floating around that it was a spin-off of Romancham and that Fahadh Faasil was playing the younger self of Chemban Vinod’s character ..read more
Baradwaj Rangan
1w ago
The film features Diljit Dosanjh and Parineeti Chopra. It narrates the story of a controversial artist and raises important questions about censorship. In Amar Singh Chamkila, Imtiaz Ali gives us two films for the price of one. The first – more obvious – narrative follows the shape of a biopic, the life and times of ..read more
Baradwaj Rangan
1w ago
By Iniya A I have many trees. So do you. Everyone does. There are the childhood trees. The large canopied neem and gulmohar trees that you grew up with. Trees that you swear were small once, but you can’t ever recollect them that way, because you were small too. Trees that you first climbed. Trees ..read more
Baradwaj Rangan
1w ago
By Latha Rajasekar An awakening art, a maze, that shuns all moral solutions redundant and questions one’s inner judgments about people around. Committed performance by the much talented cast keeps one engaged, but screenplay undoubtedly plays ‘hero’. An enriching experience that prompts one to redefine boundaries, through self-evaluation. A novel introduction of the premise ..read more