Movie Reviews
Love Today Movie Review: Fun-filled Youthful Entertainer
Film: Love At the moment
Score: 3/5
Banner: AGS, SVC
Forged: Pradeep Ranganathan, Ivana, Sathyaraj, Yogi Babu, Radhika Sarathkumar, Raveena and others
Music: Praveen Lakkaraju, Ram Miriyala
Director of Images: Dinesh Purushothaman
Editor: Pradeep E Ragav
Artwork Director: MKT
Producers: Kalapathi S Aghoram, Ganesh, Suresh
Written and directed by: Pradeep Ranganathan
Launch Date: Nov 25, 2022
“Love At the moment,” a Tamil movie, was a smash hit in Tamilnadu. Producer Dil Raju has launched the movie in Telugu after being impressed by its success.
Allow us to look at its benefits and drawbacks.
Story:
Pradeep (Pradeep Ranganathan) and Nikitha (Ivana), each IT workers, are deeply in love. Pradeep’s sister Divya (Raveena) lately obtained engaged to a dentist (Yogi Babu), and wedding ceremony plans are within the works. Pradeep agrees to satisfy with Nikitha’s father to ask for her hand after his sister’s wedding ceremony is over.
Nevertheless, Nikitha’s father Venu Sastry (Sathyaraj) detects their love and invitations Pradeep to their house. Sastry agrees to their marriage if they comply with his situation of exchanging cellphones for in the future. They comply with it half-heartedly and alternate their telephones.
Will they verify one another’s telephones? What difficulties would they face on account of this uncommon situation?
Artistes’ Performances:
Pradeep Ranganathan not solely wrote and directed the movie, but in addition starred because the protagonist. He resembles the boy subsequent door. His efficiency is relatable. His conversations, frustrations, and emotional outbursts are utterly pure.
Ivana, the feminine lead, is engaging and has good appearing abilities. She does a great job in her function. Yogi Babu, who additionally performs an necessary function, provides dignity to the proceedings. He demonstrates the maturity required for the function.
Raveena as his wife-to-be is great. Radhika Sarath Kumar and Sathya Raj are incredible.
Technical Excellence:
The cinematography, enhancing, and music of the movie mirror its fashionable setting. Enhancing is loopy and inventive.
Yuvan Shankar Raja’s music is an extra asset, significantly his background rating, which has elevated the proceedings. The Telugu dialogues are glorious.
Highlights:
The primary half
Enjoyable dialogues
Narration
Pradeep Ranganathan
Disadvantage:
Sure parts in second half
Predictable ending
Evaluation
“Love At the moment,” because the title suggests, is about two modern-day lovers. The 2 lovers use their telephones for every part from chatting to creating Insta Reels. Cellphones are extra like a private diary the place all their secrets and techniques are saved for them. Naturally, the issues start when they’re compelled to alternate their telephones for a day. Tamil director Pradeep Ranganathan had a superb concept involving cellphones and social media apps.
You is likely to be questioning what issues this cellphone alternate would trigger. It does. The heroine goes on an evening journey along with her ex with out informing her present lover. The hero messages ladies on Instagram and speaks properly to telemarketing ladies. These are just some of the various secrets and techniques revealed by their telephones.
The movie is filled with hilarious scenes that anybody can relate to right now. First, the director reveals that the heroine continues to be in touch along with her ex-boyfriend, and one in all her buddies proposed to her through cellular chatting. The director then sheds mild on the hero’s soiled secrets and techniques within the second half. Each of those threads come collectively at one level. There are quite a few plot twists and turns that each entertain and have interaction us.
The plot of the movie is just like that of most romantic dramas, however with a novel twist.
Using memes, viral songs, and jokes is sensible. One of many dialogues additionally features a reference to the latest “Jaru Mithaya” music.
One other thread entails Yogi Babu and Raveena, which provides one other dimension to the story.
On the draw back, the second half of the movie isn’t as amusing as the primary. Revi’s character and his thread will not be adequately defined. Different points come up within the second half as nicely.
All of this, nonetheless, has no impact on the movie’s move and it by no means stops offering leisure.
On the entire, “Love At the moment” depicts the approach to life of right now’s youth and their relationship tradition by way of plenty of fun-filled moments. The movie makes a time cross watch and gives paisa vasool leisure.
Backside line: Stylish Love Story
Movie Reviews
Movie Review – Mufasa: The Lion King
Like many critics, I despised the 2019 CGI version of “The Lion King.” The new animation was ugly and the rehashing of the story from the 1994 classic without many changes made the whole thing seem unnecessary. But unlike many critics, I’m not ready to throw prequel “Mufasa: The Lion King” away just because of the sins of its predecessor. I’m not saying that it’s not still inextricably tied to the 2019 film, especially with its still-terrible CGI animation, but the story and characters can do some roaming on their own that makes for a breath of fresh air.
The film opens with Simba (Donald Glover) and Nala (Beyoncé Knowles-Carter) going away on some adult lion business and leaving their cub Kiara (Blue Ivy Carter) in the care of comic relief meerkat Timon (Billy Eichner) and warthog Pumbaa (Seth Rogen). A storm is approaching, Kiara is scared, and Timon and Pumbaa’s danger-fraught stories aren’t helping. Wizened mandril Rafiki (John Kani), an old friend of the family, steps in and tells Kiara a story about her grandfather Mufasa’s bravery so that she won’t just be soothed, she’ll be inspired to be brave herself going forward. The framing device isn’t a bad idea in and of itself, and Kiara is important to the future of this world with the Circle of Life and all that, but Timon and Pumbaa are nothing but grating here. Their tired, lowbrow schtick gets the movie off to such a bad start and causes so many unwelcome interruptions that frankly I can understand why some people think they’re a deal-breaker for the entire film.
Fortunately, things pick up once the movie commits to the story of Mufasa (voiced as a cub by Braelyn and Brielle Rankins). A flood took him away from his parents (Anika Noni Rose and Keith David – because of course it took two of the greatest voices in the world to sire a character that would eventually have the all-time great voice of James Earl Jones) and he was rescued by Taka (Theo Somolu), an unblemished prince from a faraway pride who is quick to consider him a brother. King Obasi (Lennie James) allows Mufasa to live with the pride on the condition that he mostly live with the lionesses, led by Queen Eshe (Thandiwe Newton). This is supposed to be humiliation, but while Taka grows up learning rotten lessons from his jerk father, Mufasa picks up useful practical skills. He’s even able to protect Taka and Eshe from the son of evil lion Kiros (Mads Mikkelsen), who sets his sights on wiping out the entire pride, sending Taka and Mufasa fleeing toward a sanctuary called Milele.
Along the way, Mufasa (now Aaron Pierre) and Taka (now Kelvin Harrison Jr.) make friends with Rafiki, as well as fellow lion Sarabi (Tiffany Boone) and her guide-bird Zazu (Preston Nyman), and they form an unlikely pack. Both Taka and Mufasa develop feelings for Sarabi, but Mufasa is bound by his honor to defer to Taka. Sarabi falls for Mufasa anyway, and Taka considers it a betrayal. The team has to not only worry about making it to Milele with Kiros in pursuit, but dissention between two lions that were, for all intents and purposes, brothers.
Yes, it’s easy to see where the story is going when you consider that certain characters have to end up in certain places by the time “The Lion King” rolls around. Yes, the animation still isn’t great, but it’s only obnoxiously bad in close-ups, which admittedly the film does far too often. And yes, the songs by Lin-Manuel Miranda (which sometimes invoke “Moana” more than the actual “Moana” sequel from a few weeks back) aren’t as memorable as the Elton John songs from 1994. But sorry, no, none of that ruins the movie for me. I still found myself invested in these characters, Timon and Pumbaa aside. I see enough effort and passion here that I’m willing to give “Mufasa: The Lion King” a very shaky recommendation.
Grade: B-
“Mufasa: The Lion King” is rated PG for action/violence, peril and some thematic elements. Its running time is 118 minutes.
Contact Bob Garver at rrg251@nyu.edu.
Movie Reviews
'Babygirl' Review: Nicole Kidman Comes to a Place of Magic in Halina Reijn's Smart Erotic Dramedy
Babygirl is What We Need in a Vanilla Cinematic Landscape
In recent years, there has been a lack of sexuality in film. I’m not talking about romantic sex, but straight-up fucking. Frankly, movies have been a bit conservative. With film snobs or Gen-Z viewers on Twitter going, “Why do movies need sex scenes?” and the industry adhering to that, cinema has been feeling so radically vanilla. Sex is so much more than shock value in movies. Sex is meant to emphasize connection and pleasure, and why it’s so important to human stimulation, but nobody wants to have that conversation. Babygirl is a perfect personification of that and feels so radical and fresh to witness a movie that allows its lead to experience this pleasure, affair be damned, and not villainize her for it. Also, it’s a ton of fucking fun, dude!
Kidman and Co. Dominate the Screen
Nicole fucking Kidman, man. She’s one of the hardest-working actresses in the industry today, and her performance is something that you’d never even expect from an actress of her caliber. It’s not even the raw sexual fervor because we’ve seen it with Eyes Wide Shut. However, portraying a character with such a high level of class and authority, and swiftly exhibiting a submissive sexual position, such as getting on all fours and licking milk off a bowl or standing in the corner like a school child being punished, without portraying it as humiliation, is a delicate balance that, frankly, no other actress can achieve. The Aussie icon you see in every AMC ad (except for this one, for some reason!) stars in about five or six projects a year and keeps proving her talent. There’s a reason why she’s being touted for Best Actress during the current award season; this is her one-woman show.
The film’s excellent supporting cast also bolsters Kidman’s performance. Harris Dickinson truly understands the assignment as Samuel, the equivalent of a manic pixie fuckboi who can read people easily, but one you can’t seem to figure out yourself. He has this type of seductive magnetism that allows Romy to figure out her freak shit without ever teetering their dynamic toward romance because that’s truly not what this movie is.
Movie Reviews
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Runtime: 2 Hours and 20 Minutes
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Distributor: Searchlight Pictures
Director: James Manglold
Writers: James Mangold, Jay Cocks
Cast: Timothée Chalamet, Edward Norton, Elle Fanning, Monica Barbaro, Boyd Holbrook, Dan Fogler, Norbert Leo Butz, Scoot McNairy
Release Date: December 25, 2024
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