From Xi Jinping to Trump, what the news tells us about the responses of leaders to the coronavirus outbreak
With the film’s director, writers and dialogue writer all being women, Guilty could have been that film that talked to us. Instead, it is a lost opportunity. One extra star, just for the subject matter. Go watch Pink again.
Kaamyaab movie review: Kaamyaab is a moving, consistently engaging portrait of an artiste as a weathering, weathered man. And Sanjay Mishra is faultless as the lead character - always the bridesmaid, never the bride; an insider but always on the outside.
Onward often seems confused about that line between magic that seeks to impress, and magic that just is. It is also too much about a lot of things.
Baaghi 3 movie review: The last time Tiger Shroff got into an actioner, he had to play second fiddle with the very sexy, equally fit Hrithik Roshan. This time around, no such risks are taken.
Kunal Kamra may not be in air but he was on air, everywhere. And in the UK, a period of separation begins.
With Helen Mirren and Ian McKellen playing the parts, could the plot of this film based on a novel by the same name get more delicious?
Knives Out movie review: Daniel Craig, Jamie Lee Curtis, Toni Collette and Christopher Plummer slip into their roles with relish.
The two leads aren’t bad, Shivaleeka Oberoi pulling off her part with some amount of confidence and Vardhan Puri (the grandson of Amrish Puri) showing a glimpse of promise, minus the grandpa’s towering build or the gravelly voice.
Commando 3 movie review: Though Vidyut Jammwal does the heroic things, like thumping thugs and rescuing fair maidens, it is Gulshan Devaiah who steals the show in this patchily plotted, predictable actioner.
The Irishman movie review: This is not a film about growing up but growing old, about what all those years of living entail -- the choices, the betrayals, the loneliness, the love, the pain as well as the aches.
There is no attempt to relieve the tension, no little side stories to humour its audience, and almost no strained sentimentality. However, that both serves this deeply chilling script well -- more chilling for it being real -- and takes away from it.
Martin Scorsese plays with the Bob Dylan myth in Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story, even savours it. For the fans, it will be a roller coaster ride.
Bonding is a seven-episode Netflix Original which takes us into the world of BDSM through the lead pair of Tiffany Chester aka Mistress May, a dominatrix, and her gay friend Peter aka Carter, who is initiated into the ‘lifestyle’ as a bodyguard for Tiffany.
Beyonce lets the viewers into her life just a little, keeps them focussed on her as a performer in an effort to archive herself.
I found myself humming along. Both the background music and the songs — clearly, a film about musicians will have lots of songs, and appropriately, both Goopi and Bagha use their skills to the hilt — are superb.
Sonchiriya seems a bit of an improbable situation, where we go expecting smooth soul and anthemic choruses and what we get, with the exception of two pieces, is off key vocals and pieces that lack heart.
Watch One Day at a Time if you are struggling with the ‘talk’, that you are about to have with your kids, or if you are not able to deal with the constant hassling of your parents, as they constantly push you to be better.
Gully Boy’s music is the hallmark of change in Bollywood, which is getting stuck in the rut of regularity quite easily these days. Cock your years, and listen in. For this is the change we all talk about.
Selection Day has the wings — the splendid ensemble cast and source material ensure that — but it fails to soar, and crash lands in spite of sporadic bursts of excellence.
Pawlikowski packs a lot into Cold War, often elliptically. Wiktor and Zula soon separate and settle in different countries only to reunite and separate once more.
The interviews are largely with those who would still count Szukalski as a friend, but Dobrowolski’s opinions on his subject aren’t obvious, even if he is helping to rescue the artist from oblivion.
The army chief’s comments on women in frontline duties trigger a war of words
When narratives of hate violence go unnoticed on social media platforms
Of the SC Aadhaar verdict that raised hopes, Brett Kavanaugh’s old dates, and how POTUS gets laughed at in the UN General Assembly



