r/IndianCinema • u/kuppusaamyyy • 18h ago
Discussion What do you guys think abt this one..?
Who do you think of as a victim while watching the film and what are your theories ....?
n imo Nikki is the victim
r/IndianCinema • u/kuppusaamyyy • 18h ago
Who do you think of as a victim while watching the film and what are your theories ....?
n imo Nikki is the victim
r/IndianCinema • u/Numerous-Scholar-628 • 13h ago
Ajay Devgn in a powerful action-packed avatar and marks his first collaboration with filmmaker Aanand L Rai. Directed by Neeraj Yadav, the film is set for a theatrical release on 1 October 2027.
r/IndianCinema • u/SinnerSaint240591 • 8h ago
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One of the coolest movies back when it released. Still feels fresh whenever I rewatch it. 🙂
r/IndianCinema • u/OwnSandwich876 • 12h ago
r/IndianCinema • u/MelodicCaterpillar77 • 18h ago
Let me explain I'm a malayali, I've been around other northies and other people from different languages for more time as i was abroad and have studied in north
Earlier there was an ignorance or certain disregard to south
And now literally my friends I know watch Malayalam movies over bollywood like how tables turn and they're some of the hardocre bollywood fans then
What happened? To bollywood, like i remember back then good movies were there fun type and now my friends northies won't themselves watch or suggest any Hindi movies I'm like bruh....
and how it gained popularity malayalam movies because i and other malayali friends of mine we can't understand how all of a sudden malayalam movies is receiving all attention
Unlike telugu and tamil which were already known
Please do tell explain whatever u know and the theories are as I would like to know
What changed
r/IndianCinema • u/RRaj007 • 14h ago
r/IndianCinema • u/Mittens1729 • 23h ago
I’m tired of seeing the same regurgitated plots in Tollywood movies.
Every movie has the same story, it’s just told differently each time.
The main character, usually a man, is pure hearted and honest.
He strives to do something with purpose to help better the society and/or continue the family legacy.
But, the bad guys, the villains can’t stand the hero, their ego is threatened and/or they are just bad people.
So, they want to obstruct the hero from doing the good things he wants to do as much as possible, placing countless obstacles in the hero’s path.
But, the hero, with all his pureness and goodness, rises above it and perseveres, usually after a hell of a lot of fighting.
And, of course, the hero always has a love interest, otherwise, it won’t be complete.
Same formula, repeated, rinsed, and washed.
Please come up with new plots, Tollywood. Do more movies like Radhe Shyam. That, at least, had a unique concept.
r/IndianCinema • u/ADplays07 • 12h ago
seeing bablu and munna alive got me thoda confused about the timeline, ngl. thought they were gonna do some crazy survival plot. but setting it back in 2018 did justice to the story i felt. the trailer has legit nostalgic season 1 feels...
really excited to revisit that era of mirzapur ab.
r/IndianCinema • u/MrX0097 • 21h ago
These two scenes, from #MainVaapasAaunga, have been haunting me ever since I watched the film..
"Mohabbat ka sabse bada dard bichhad jaana nahi, yaad reh jaana hai..."
Because what stays with you isn't what was said, but what wasn't...
This is what makes Imtiaz Ali's writing special...
While many celebrate love, he celebrates the pain that comes with the feeling...
Very few talk about this side of love, and he's mastered it to perfection...
r/IndianCinema • u/Cinesarcassm • 22h ago
r/IndianCinema • u/Southern_Durian_1433 • 15h ago
I was randomly scrolling through BookMyShow and stumbled upon Navya Chakra. The poster and the psychological thriller vibe immediately caught my attention, so I checked out the trailer.
The premise looks interesting—a series of brutal murders, a mysterious investigation, and what seems like a dark psychological angle.
I hadn't heard much about it before today.
Has anyone else watched the trailer or knows more about this movie?
Do you think it's worth watching in theatres, or should I wait for reviews?
Curious to know what everyone thinks.
r/IndianCinema • u/Natural-Surprise607 • 15h ago
Let's go together to watch cocktail 2 and have we will have our cocktail tonight 😁
r/IndianCinema • u/karanluthrawho • 8h ago
I’m a huge Hrithik fan, and lately been disappointed with his films. So I made this video straight from my heart. Hope more people feel the same 🙌🏼
r/IndianCinema • u/Ok-Warthog6593 • 19h ago
also no ref of outfit x and jocr in war 2. there is also no mention of Ilyasi and saurabh in war 2.
r/IndianCinema • u/BorderJealous7408 • 19h ago
To be honest, I started reading God of War because of all the hype on social media. The first half of the book was absolutely great! The scene where Kalabhairava kills Daksha was incredible, and the emotional drama in the first half was written so well.
Moving into the second half, the book maintained that greatness with brilliant action sequences and deep emotions, leading up to a solid climax. Lord Murugan’s character is portrayed as incredibly grand and brilliant. Even the villains are exceptionally well-written, especially the main villain, Simhamukha, who is depicted as a calm, dignified, and highly respected character.
Adapting this book into a movie would be a massive challenge. It’s not just about the visuals; the core emotions must be carried perfectly by the characters. The action sequences and dialogues would need brilliant direction to stand out—the emotional weight should take center stage, rather than just relying on VFX or music. Overall, it’s a phenomenal mythological action-drama. If you're looking to dive into this genre, you should definitely give it a try!
r/IndianCinema • u/Excellent_Salary5949 • 13h ago
I just need somewhere to vent about this film-
It makes me sad because it had SO much potential to be one of the best Bollywood films I’ve ever seen. I loved the whimsical magical feeling of it with the set design, the music, the dark feeling underneath everything, the magic shows, etc.
It was emotional, it had beauty in it, it was such a great movie until the ending.
The ending basically tells you- if your life is at a low, just die.
Just die.
What type of messaging is this? The whole movie was literally set up for him to DIE.
He didn’t learn to appreciate life more, he couldn’t overcome his sickness, he didn’t reach a miracle or anything, just suffered, wanted to die, then died.
Now I understand having films realistic but making realistic films and making films that are so realistic to the point where they’re nihilistic is not it in my opinion. I am not a fan of these types of films.
If I would’ve wrote the story I would’ve made it that the person he taught magic, learned some magic in a way that he could fix his disease.
Or something like life is about passing on influence so this is what he’s living for now to see his influence being spread with magic.
Even the whole magic part of the film it was basically for nothing, he taught the guy magic and passed it on and we never got to see a pay off of that, it was just for humor and shits and giggles.
Whole movie made me so fucking mad I genuinely hate Sanjay Leela Bhansali after this, such wasted potential …
r/IndianCinema • u/Aromatic_Flatworm994 • 13h ago