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Butta Bomma Movie Review, Rating, Public Talk

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Butta Bomma Movie Review, Rating, Public Talk

Telugu360 Ranking : 2.25/5

Buttam Bomma is an official remake of the Malayalam movie Kappela. Sithara Leisure made the movie in Telugu. Allow us to have a look at the Telugu makes of Kappela:

Story:

Satya (Anikha Surendran) lives in Araku and takes care of her mom. When her mom requested to dial somebody, by mistake she get linked to Murali (Surya Vashistta) with the flawed dial, who’s an auto driver by occupation. When the dialog goes on, love blossoms in between. Each determine to fulfill in particular person and journey to Vishakapatnam. On the final minute, Murali misplaces his cell after which enters Ramakrishna aka RK(Arjun Das) into the story. The havoc created by RK and the way the couple’s love story lasted is the most important story of the movie.

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Evaluation:

Malayalam movies are slow-phased movies. On the subject of Telugu, this gradual section won’t work. Kappela was one Malayalam movie which gained constructive evaluations throughout the time of the pandemic by way of OTT watch. However for Theatre watch, Kappela could be a boring movie with message. Telugu director Shouree Chandrashekhar T Ramesh might need pushed the movie quick slightly than following the identical gradual section. The movie offers with romance and human trafficking. Pressure evokes emotion within the second half. Slightly than very small modifications all the pieces was a duplicate of an unique model. In Malayalam, the movie is from Wayand’s background and in Telugu story begins at Araku.

Efficiency:

Director has picked up a powerful casting for this movie. Anikha Surendran was one of the best together with her efficiency as a teenage lady, who doesn’t have many hopes slightly than shopping for a smartphone. She has carried out her job excellently. Surya Vashishta is an auto driver and short-tempered. Arjun Das as RK and Navya Swamy did their greatest with their efficiency. However the gradual drama exams our persistence. Whereas exposing a message on human trafficking, the movie ought to be gripping and racy. However Butta Bomma haa extra drama and is usually boring. Cinematographer Vamshi Patchipulusu is spectacular. Araku has been shot superbly and the songs are okay.

Verdict: A easy romantic story with a human site visitors message and spectacular performances however Butta Bomma finally ends up boring.

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Movie Reviews

Civil War | Review

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Civil War | Review

Alex Garland’s Civil War depicts a fictional US conflict that is less about conveying a political perspective as it is a tense statement about the normalization of violence and collectively losing sight of the bigger picture.  

Poignancy in film is sometimes on purpose, sometimes just coincidence. Civil War is a bit of both. Here is a film that recognizes the diplomatic atmosphere being as strained as it has been in a very long time, but also comes to theaters exactly at the right time when those conflicts are heightened to a worryingly improbable end. Civil War may depict a fictional conflict in the United States, but it’s message speaks to the global increase of violence in our lives driven by the splintering of society towards radical perspectives – in specific those who act upon them and those who pretend they aren’t a threat. 

Those exact perspectives aren’t clearly defined in Civil War, which is a detriment to those viewers who are hoping the film will champion their own specific views. Instead, director Alex Garland makes the choice to not explicitly detail the cause of his fictional civil war, but instead realize the greater implications of that conflict on the general population. It recognizes the general opportunity of how things could get out of control here in the US, as if to demonstrate that the systems of our precious constitution are just as susceptible to abuse as anywhere else in the world.

Civil War

Directed By: Alex Garland
Written By: Alex Garland
Starring: Kristen Dunst, Wagner Moura, Cailee Spaeny, Stephen McKinley-Henderson

Release Date: April 12, 2024

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By not providing a concrete reason for the conflict, Garland’s film suggests the flaws of humanity make it inevitable. He reinforces this theme by peppering in accounts of people who are pretending the war isn’t happening, as if to suggest their ambivalence played a role. The film contrasts the experiences of those people with their heads buried in the sand by spinning a narrative around those who are paid not to: war correspondents. 

The story focuses on a renowned journalist Lee Smith (Kristen Dunst) who has made a name for herself covering harrowing atrocities across the globe, and her colleague Joel (Wagner Moura) who lives for the thrill of experiencing the thrill of battle in person. As the civil war is upon the precipice of conclusion, they decide to race to Washington D.C. to try and interview the President of the United states before he is captured by his opposition. In this journey they are joined by Sammy, a veteran reporter who would rather die than stop working (Stephen McKinley-Henderson), and Jessie (Cailee Spaeny), a young and inexperienced photographer who looks up to Lee. 

Lee and Joel are an experienced 2-man crew who have been together through some very dangerous conflicts depicted to the audience through flashbacks. Sammy and Jessie’s involvement thus represents a hazard because they don’t just have to worry about themselves, they have to look out for two people who don’t have the same capabilities as they do. But while Sammy is willingly putting himself in danger and has the wherewithal to know exactly what he is getting himself into, Jessie does not. Joel and Lee’s opposing perspectives on the approach to their work is something that makes their working relationship function, but it creates conflict in regards to Jessie. 

Lee is reluctant to bring Jessie in under her belt and show her the ropes because she has seen the worst of humanity and fears Jessie isn’t prepared for it both emotionally and physically. Lee doesn’t want to have to care about someone else because it may compromise her ability to do her own work. Meanwhile Joel is excited to be able to share his enthusiasm for being in the thick of the battle and wants to help Jessie experience this for the first time. For her part Jessie realizes the uncomfortable burden her presence places on the group, but knows that if she wants to further her career this is a golden opportunity she would never get if she played it safe. 

In this way, all of them essentially exploit the pain and suffering of others for their living. This experience has essentially numbed them to the motivations of the conflict, which is part of the reason why the film doesn’t spend time commenting on them. Furthermore, it isn’t really possible for Lee & Company to be on one side or the other because the integrity of their craft and personal safety requires them to be ambivalent. In many ways they hide behind it like a shield. While they can’t ignore the conflict, their reasoning to not be on one side or the other is just as selfish as those who are ignoring the conflict. 

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You could construe this as a criticism of the media, which I think may be valid. But I think the point is the fact that our society is at a point where “sides” are necessary in the first place. This is a bigger criticism of the world’s social development as a whole. Rather than be motivated by the greater good, we’re motivated by selfish desires and we channel that into picking “sides”. At one point in the film, the main characters encounter a man with a gun who has captured and tortured two men because they were stealing from him. He comments on how he had gone to high school with one of them, suggesting the extremes that have become necessary – even in a civilized first-world nation – for individual survival. 

Director/writer Garland first made a name for himself in cinema by reinventing the zombie genre for the 21st Century with his script for 28 Days Later. In many ways, Civil War feels like a zombie movie. The world it depicts has fleeting reminders of normalcy amidst a harrowing almost post-apocalyptic fight for survival. There are gripping action sequences with sound design that pummels you into the back of your seat. And yet most of the film is quiet, expressing the void of humanity from this possible future. Garland depicts empty streets with the occasional roving military vehicle, others are littered with the carcasses of cars and equipment abandoned long ago. Like a zombie movie it hinges on humanity’s hubris – despite all our impressive accomplishments we’re still a deeply flawed species. 

Kristen Dunst portrays Lee the entire film with the aghast expression of someone who has seen too much. But Jessie’s inclusion in her life is what ultimately breaks her. Not because she witnesses her loss of innocence first-hand, but because Lee sees herself in Jessie. From this outside perspective Lee begins to feel the guilt that she had hid away for all these years. Reporting on these terrible events doesn’t necessarily bring heightened concern from the general public, instead it fuels our tolerance for them. 

Civil War offers us the ultimate paradox of our modern information age; the more we know about what is going on, the worse off we are. Truth becomes the enemy not because of what it means to us, but because of our selfish reactions towards it. The film conveys a pulse-quickening tale of survival in a harrowing dystopia of fear towards knowledge. It flies in the face of every horror film where we’re told that the most frightening thing is the unknown. 

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Sean Means Movie Reviews for April 19th, 2024 – X96

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Sean Means Movie Reviews for April 19th, 2024 – X96



Opening April 19, 2024

Artsies:

• “The Beast” • Time-hopping French/English romance • Broadway • 3 1/2 stars

A movie set 20 years in the future where human emotion is seen as dangerous and AI controls everything.

Director: Bertrand Bonello

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Stars: Lea Seydoux, George MacKay, Guslagie Malanda

 

What I saw:

• “Rebel Moon: Part Two – The Scargiver” • Zach Snyder not-“Star Wars” • Netflix • 1 1/2 stars

Warrior Kora and other warriors have to fight to live in their new home Veldt against the Realm.

Director: Zack Snyder

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Stars: Sofia Boutella, Charlie Hunnam, Anthony Hopkins

 

• “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare” • WWII spy action movie • theaters • 2 1/2 stars

In World War II, a group of trained and accomplished soldiers are hired by the British government to take down forces of Germany from behind the enemy lines.

Director: Guy Ritchie

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Stars: Henry Cavill, Alan Ritchson, Alex Pettyfer

 

 • “Abigail” • tiny vampire vs. criminals • theaters • 3 stars

The daughter of a powerful figure is kidnapped by a group of criminals and brought to a vacant mansion. Little do they know that she isn’t like any little girl they’ve seen before.

Director: Matt Bettinelli Olpin, Tyler Gillett

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Stars: Melissa Barrera, Dan Stevens, Alisha Weir

 

———

Next week:

 • Challengers

 • Unsung Hero

 • Boy Kills World




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Movie Reviews

Do Aur Do Pyaar Movie Review: Vidya Balan & Pratik Gandhi’s romantic, lighthearted film on infidelity is refreshing

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Do Aur Do Pyaar Movie Review: Vidya Balan & Pratik Gandhi’s romantic, lighthearted film on infidelity is refreshing

Both Vidya Balan and Pratik Gandhi shines in a relatable love story that is nonjudgmental when it comes to infidelity.

Marriage is no doubt a wonderful institution, but who wants to live in an institution. Azazel Jacobs’s The Lovers (2017), Do Aur Do Pyaar movie shows that marriages are not only about sharing a bed and a bedroom. It needs to have the zing which is missing in most modern day marriages. Probably the familiarity and the comfort of the relationship is so huge that couples start taking the relationship for granted. And that is where the down slide begins.

Marriages are never rosy. It’s mostly messy and that’s what make it challenging. Kavya (Vidya Balan) and Ani (Pratik Gandhi) are married for 12 years. They are not exactly unhappily married, but that mad, passionate love is not there anymore. So, they are looking for affection outside marriage. A relationship outside marriage that makes them feel alive and that partner outside marriage is not judging you for your looks, clumsiness or your personality. That partner outside marriage is finding your flaws to be attractive.

Still from Do Aur Do Pyaar movie

Often in marriages beyond a certain year, you stop engaging with each other, you lose interest and most importantly you don’t argue or fight with each other. Both of you are just like two pieces of furniture. Like Kavya (Vidya Balan) says in the film, “Why is that we don’t have fights like the way we used to do during our initial years of our relationship.” Very true, isn’t it? Relationships stay alive with fights and we often forget that. And again not always do you need to be faithful to each other. Shirsha Guha Thakurta’s feature debut 
Do Aur Do Pyaar
 tries to say that a certain element of adultery in a relationship is normal.

Vidya Balan, Pratik Gandhi’s Do Aur Do Pyaar movie

Do Aur Do Pyaar
 shows that for Kavya (Vidya Balan) and Ani (Pratik Gandhi) relationship all they talk about is the size of the garbage bags and allergy medicine. The relationship has gone monotonous and there isn’t any freshness in their conversation. Kavya finds happiness in her relationship with a handsome photographer who mostly works out of New York, but has decided to settle down with her in Bombay. The role is played by Sendhil Ramamurthy. While Ani feels alive in the arms of an aspiring actor Nora played by Ileana D’Cruz. Simple concept that happens in many urban households, but the way the film treats it is what makes it refreshing.

Vidya Balan and Pratik Gandhi in Do Aur Do Pyaar movie

But the happiest part of the film is when Kavya and Ani make a trip to her hometown, Ooty, Tamil Nadu when Kavya’s grandfather expires. They revisit the beginning of their love from there. It kind of brings back nostalgic memories of their love story starting from the lamppost where they hit while riding a scooter to the retro-bar where they used to go for a drink and most importantly their favorite love songs.

The connection of food in films is kind of dying and it is great to see the new filmmaker showing the origin of Chicken65 and Begun posto (aborigines with poppy seed paste). The clash of cultures and the clash of two states (Tamil Nadu and West Bengal) is beautifully  depicted in Do Aur Do Pyaar.

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Rating: 3 and half out of 5

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