Category: reviews

10

Jigarthanda

A Tamilian gangster musical comedy following the life of a filmmaker trying to write a script based on the life of one of the craziest psychopaths of southern India.

0

Assassination (1964)

One of director Shinoda Masahiro’s finest achievements, Assassination portraits a mysterious and charismatic individual who continuously shifts his allegiance from one political faction to another.

0

Into the Woods (2014)

With the success that ABC has been having with the revamping of fairytales crossovers in Once Upon a Time, James Lapine and Stephen Sondheim’s fairytale mish-mash where Little Red Riding Hood met with Cinderella, Jack (from the beanstalk) and a dash of Rapunzel, fit like a glove.

2

Tusk (2014)

A podcaster on the hunt for his next story meets a crazy mother-effer with a walrus fetish.

1

Horns (2013)

Ig Perrish’s girlfriend has been recently raped and murdered, but he’s being accused of commiting the crime. To make matters worse for Ig, one day he wakes up and notices that devil-like horns has sprouted from his forehead. As he figures how they actually work, Ig is determined to find who really killed Merrin before things take a turn for the worse.

5

Nightcrawler (2014)

Dan Gilroy’s directorial debut paints a disturbing yet intriguing film to watch, elevating Nightcrawler beyond crime porn and it is strongly enhanced by its authentic gritty feel and the cast’s acting, especially Jake Gyllenhaal.

13

Haider

Vishal Bhardwaj is back with his third Indian adaptation of Shakespeare, Hamlet, set against the heavy 90s political backdrop of the northern snowy Kashmir region.

1

Broad City – Season 1

Broad City follows the mundane misadventures of two young women living in NYC, Ilana and Abbi. Broke, reckless, and even careless at times, these best friends prove that poor decisions and a little bit of boldness is all you need to come up with comedy gold.

0

Epik High – Shoebox

With one of the year’s best hip-hop albums and one of the year’s best period, Epik High return with a brutally honest album without pretense.