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Home > Movie Review - Ta Ra Rum Pum We Have Found 1 Products for your search of Movie Review - Ta Ra Rum Pum. Displaying Items 1 - 1 and Article Search Page 1:
- Movie Review - Ta Ra Rum Pum
by Seo Mumbai. The good things first - Ta Ra Rum Pum - is what used to be called 'wholesome family entertainment' before wholesome went out of out films. The bad thing is that the melodrama is somewhat forced and piled on too thick. The middle of this Siddharth Anand movie, which is inspired by Life is Beautiful is watchable, it's the before and after that's a problem- generic love story and generic sports flic... products, articles, news
- Movie Review - 28 Days Later
by Darren LaRose. From Danny Boyle, the director that brought you "Trainspotting", is 28 Days Later, a stylish zombie horror that manages to stay true to the roots of the genre, while at the same time propelling it forward. The result is one of the best zombie films of the past decade, and indeed, a film that transcends the genre, and is a legitimately good movie in its own right.
The story opens with a gaggle of... products, articles, news
- Flyboys - Movie Review
by Scott Nehring. SHORT REVIEW:
Perhaps its a bad idea to make a film about World War I that has a longer running time than the war itself.
REVIEW:
There's a great number of things going for this film, too bad none of them made it onto the screen. A story about World War I flying aces shooting it out over France? A chance to see the old planes in action? A possible throwback to an older style war movie? Thi... products, articles, news
- Movie Review - The Convent
by Darren LaRose. The Convent is a relatively entertaining and extremely low budget B-Movie, that desperately wants to be Evil Dead but misses the mark. It was released in 2000 straight to video, and has gained a small cult following. The film opens with a flashback to the 1950s, where a teenage girl stylishly shoots up the Convent, in the best display of mass um.. clergyside since, well, ever I guess. If anyone k... products, articles, news
- Yatra Movie review
by Seo Mumbai. He is a Mahara-shtrian, living in Andhra Pradesh, writing Hindi books with Farsi titles. While you try to figure this out, Goutam Ghose's Yatra keeps getting derailed at several places.
In the process of deciphering a writer's imagination that moves between fact and fiction, Ghose goes almost breathless with an anti-consumerism message. The writer Dashrath Joglekar (Nana Patekar - distracted), o... products, articles, news
- Movie Review - Ikiru
by Darren LaRose. Ikiru, translated "To Live", is the masterpiece of the great Japanese filmmaker, Akira Kurosawa. It is very different from the Samurai films for which he is most famous in the West, but it is undoubtedly one of the greatest films ever committed to celluloid.
The film, produced in 1952, tells the story of Kanji Watanabe (Takeshi Shimura), a civil servant who, as the film begins, discovers that he... products, articles, news
- Sicko Movie Review
by Moland Fengkov. Michael Moore has created something of a huge following and great expectations for his work, ever since his Cannes Film Festival Award Winning Farenheit 9/11 and the assault he laid against the Bush Administration. Returning to Cannes once more with yet another politically minded bent, Moore brings Sicko to theaters this summer, an assault on the American Health System and how it compares to othe... products, articles, news
- La Vie en Rose Movie Review
by Fred Thom. There are very few things that can be quite as grating as the voice of Edith Piaf. Her work has always managed to crawl right up onto my nerves and take a gentle seat, twisting me in my seat. The fact that La Vie En Rose was still an incredibly likable film, speaks volumes to the success of a director whose only job was to make a film about the life and times of Edith Piaf.
Olivier Dahan, a dire... products, articles, news
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