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Romancham Malayalam Movie Review

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Romancham Malayalam Movie Review

Launch Date : April 07, 2023

123telugu.com Ranking : 2.5/5

Starring: Soubhin Shahir, Arjun Asokan, Chemban Vinod Jose, Sajin Gopu, Siju Sunny, Afzah P H, Abin Bino, Jagadeesh Kumar, Anantharaman Ajay & others

Director: Jithu Madhavan

Producers: Johnpaul George, Joby George, Girish Gangaradhan

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Music Director: Sushin Shyan

Cinematography:Sanu Tahir

Editor: Kiran Das

Associated Hyperlinks : Trailer

Malayalam movie Romancham which grew to become the speak of the city is presently streaming on Disney Plus Hotstar in a number of languages. The film, based mostly on true occasions, was directed by Jithu Madhavan. Let’s see how the film is.

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Story:

The movie is about seven bachelor mates who reside in a home in Bangalore. One is employed, whereas one other tries his hand at each enterprise however retains failing. Two crack an interview however are but to get the provide letter. One works at a petroleum pump. The opposite two simply take pleasure in their lives with out doing something. Someday one of many mates will get within the Ouija board (Spirit board) and requests his mates to play with him. The others initially don’t present curiosity however later conform to play. The remainder of the movie is in regards to the bizarre moments that occur to the seven mates after enjoying with the Ouija board.

 

Plus Factors:

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The casting was excellent, and each actor did an excellent job. Somebody who lives with mates individually can relate to the movie because of the actors’ neat and pure performances. However the very best amongst all would definitely be Soubin Shahir. His easy but impactful efficiency is the foremost spotlight of Romancham.

The second hour has just a few participating scenes because of the performances of the actors. After the entry of Arjun Ashokan, the film turns a bit engrossing. Arjun Ashokan’s bizarre expressions and neat efficiency evokes respectable laughs. There are just a few delicate comedy scenes which are properly executed.

 

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Minus Factors:

The primary drawback with Romancham is the shortage of participating narration. Extra time is taken for character introductions, and the primary story really begins on the forty fifth minute. The complete first hour may be very bland, and it wants a large amount of persistence to observe the movie. The scenes in regards to the spirit board are boring. This half isn’t humorous or thrilling on the similar time.

After having watched the impactless proceedings for one hour, one would usually anticipate the plot to take a major flip within the second hour. However there isn’t something nice that occurs relating to the plot within the second half too. The actor’s performances and their antics grow to be the saving grace, however it is rather evident that the plot is wafer-thin.

Touted to be a horror comedy, the film doesn’t have any horror components as such. The ending is left abrupt, solely to have a sequel to the movie. The modifying is unhealthy, because the movie strikes at a snail’s tempo for essentially the most half.

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Technical Facets:

The background rating by Sushin Shyan is nearly okay. Sanu Tahir’s cinematography is respectable. The manufacturing values are good. The modifying group ought to have trimmed many lag scenes within the movie.

Coming to the director, Jithu Madhavan, he did a below-par job with the movie. He is also the author for Romancham, however sadly, his writing isn’t nice to maintain one invested all through. The perfect half was getting good actors on board. The director tried to overshadow the failings within the movie with the actors’ performances however couldn’t succeed fully. At instances it was seen that the makers tried too onerous to generate comedy. Extra importantly, there are not any Romancham (goosebumps) moments within the movie.

 

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Verdict:

On the entire, Romancham is a movie that doesn’t reside as much as the hype round it. The actors’ performances and some moments right here and there make the film a tolerable fare. Aside from that, there’s nothing nice to rave about it.

123telugu.com Ranking: 2.5/5

Reviewed by 123telugu Workforce

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TAGS:  Arjun Asokan, Chemban Vinod Jose, Romancham Malayalam Film Ranking, Romancham Malayalam Film Evaluation, Romancham Malayalam Film Evaluation and Ranking, Romancham Malayalam Evaluation and Ranking, Romancham Film Ranking, Romancham Film Evaluation, Romancham Ranking, Romancham Evaluation, Romancham Evaluation and Ranking, Soubhin Shahir

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Movie Reviews

Video: KSL Movie Show – Young Women and the Sea Movie Review – KSLNewsRadio

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Video: KSL Movie Show – Young Women and the Sea Movie Review – KSLNewsRadio

Listen to Steve & Andy this Friday from 11:00 am – 1:00 pm as they review the Young Women and the Sea. Discover the jounrey of the first women to swim across the English Channel!

Listen live at kslnewsradio.com/listen/

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Have a story idea or tip? Send it to the KSL NewsRadio team here.

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Movie Reviews

Boy Kills World: Bill Skarsgard stars in blood-soaked thriller

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Boy Kills World: Bill Skarsgard stars in blood-soaked thriller

2/5 stars

Exploding onto the screen like the bastard son of a dozen 1980s action movies and an arcade full of beat-’em-up video games, Boy Kills World is a whirl of blood-soaked martial arts and jet black humour that barely pauses for breath.

Bill Skarsgard rose to prominence as Pennywise the clown in It, and as the aristocratic villain of John Wick: Chapter 4. Here he stars as “Boy”, a deaf-mute angel of vengeance.

Over the course of two hours, Boy tears through the hierarchy of a near-future dystopia in the hopes of destroying the regal Van Der Koys, responsible for murdering his family.

The hook to Boy Kills World is that, because of his debilitated senses, Boy narrates his every waking moment through an incessant internal monologue, in a voice lifted from his favourite childhood video game, Super Dragon Punch Force 3.

Comedian and voice artist H. Jon Benjamin (Archer, Bob’s Burgers) provides Boy with the vocal identity for his relentlessly self-aware, comic-book-style voice-over.

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Hilda Van Der Koy (Famke Janssen) rules with an iron fist, staging an annual “culling”, whereby a dozen enemies of the state are ceremonially executed in front of the people.

Such a fate befell Boy’s own mother and sister, and he has spent the years since living in hiding, honing his body into a lethal weapon under the brutal tutelage of Yayan Ruhian’s unforgiving Shaman.

Once Boy is set in motion, there is no stopping the swathe of bloody carnage he unleashes.

Bill Skarsgard in a still from Boy Kills World.
He allies himself with a pair of well-meaning rebels, played by Andrew Koji and Isaiah Mustafa, and together they dispatch an endless army of goons on their way to picking off the Van Der Koy clan, brought to the screen with cartoonish relish by Sharlto Copley, Michelle Dockery and Brett Gelman.

First-time writer-director Moritz Mohr shot the film in South Africa, which lends it a visually distinctive otherworldliness, but beyond this cosmetic exoticism, Boy Kills World ploughs a painfully familiar path.

Its sustained tone of fast-paced choreography, splashy violence and knowingly irreverent humour soon becomes exasperating, leaving it with no other option than to barrel towards a wholly predictable finale.

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Bill Skarsgard in a still from Boy Kills World.

Skarsgard’s performance must be commended for its physicality, but ultimately Boy Kills World becomes as much of a physical ordeal to watch as for its hero to survive, and will surely prompt all but the most resilient of viewers to tap out long before justice is served.

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Movie Reviews

Movie review: The Teacher's Lounge – Law Society Journal

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Movie review: The Teacher's Lounge – Law Society Journal

Idealistic young teacher Carla Nowak (played with anxious intensity by Leonie Benesch) is a new arrival at a German secondary school. Well-meaning and empathetic, she is the conductor of a peaceful classroom. A shot of Carla from behind, her arms beautifully outstretched, suggests this is her daily orchestra. She is organised and dedicated, if a touch closed off from her fellow teachers.

But when a student of Turkish origin is accused of stealing money, and Carla’s own surveillance of the teachers’ lounge indicates the guilt of Friederike Kuhn, an administrative staff member, we realise she’s far from in control. Carla’s star pupil, Lukas (Mrs Kuhn’s son), resents the accusation aimed at his mother. The students rally around him and the teachers, divided by internal disagreements, seem almost powerless to assert control.

Long gone is the strict discipline of The 400 Blows or Dead Poets Society. The students in the film seek neither escape to the outside world nor solace in the rich inner worlds sparked by poetry. As they have been taught, these students seek answers. They seek justice. As the editor of the student newspaper boldly declares that, outside of truth, “everything else is just PR.”

The path to maturity for the students seems not to lie in compromising their ideals but in sticking to them ever more fiercely. It’s a wonderful inversion of what the Germans call “Bildung,” the tradition which examines the formative years of youth, marked as it is by a certain moral education. But the students cede no ground. They are uninterested in the murky give-and-take of the adult world. Their world is zero sum.

Indeed, it is the teachers’ uncertain sense of themselves as disciplinarians and moral leaders that provides so much fuel for the plot. They do not know who they are, and the students grasp it quickly. Carla in particular has ideals, but does she really believe in them? Çatak satirises the speed at which the right to privacy, freedom of the press, and the concept of innocent until proven guilty are upended in the search for a thief. It’s quite an achievement, especially given that thrillers are rarely satirical, and satires seldom thrilling.

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The film moves so briskly that viewers can be forgiven for failing to notice that on Carla’s surveillance video, Mrs Kuhn’s blouse is patterned with little stars. It’s a knowing nod to Germany’s tragic past. That Mrs Kuhn also represents a slightly different power struggle within the school – between the teachers and the administrative staff – adds more complexity to The Teachers’ Lounge. One can only hope that the next films concerning the consequences of accusation are so richly engaging.

Verdict: Five stars

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