Tagged: amy recommends

3

Hey Ram (2000)

Kamal Haasan’s outstanding somewhat-political religious epic of a man’s journey through friendship, love, hatred, revenge and redemption set around India’s Partition and the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi.

3

Her (2013)

The premise of a man falling in love with his Operating System is something that sounds most likely creepy and weird, but under Spike Jonze’s command and his cast, Her is a very heartfelt film that is shockingly sweet, delightful and even touching film.

8

Orange Is The New Black – Season 1

Out of Netflix’s new content, Orange Is the New Black proved to be the most interesting (and entertaining) of them all with its very diverse cast and outstanding storytelling.

8

Ram-Leela

Two battling family clans drive their town into chaos after Ram falls for Leela. The battle for love to win over hate has never been done with more enchantment (or gunfire).

4

12 Years A Slave

Steve McQueen’s film deserves as much praise and discussion as it does cricism for serving as a brilliant and harrowing depiction of Northup’s years of enslavement bleeding together as he loses track of his past

3

Requiem for a Dream

After quite some time, I managed to revisit Darren Aronofsky’s Requiem for a Dream, and it’s still holding strong for me.

6

Kahaani

A pregnant woman arrives in Calcutta in search of her husband who’s gone missing without a trace.

2

End of Watch (2012)

End of Watch stars Jake Gyllenhaal and Michael Peña as two police officers showcasing what it is to live their daily lives.