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Guild Reviews

Image of scene from the film Psycho Saiyaan
Psycho Saiyaan

Drama (Hindi)

Kartik Pandey, a poetic student in Ujjain, becomes obsessed with Charu, convinced she is his destiny. When she disappears, he learns she’s trapped by ruthless gangster-politician Huntry Chauhan. Infiltrating Huntry’s haveli, Kartik enters a violent world of manipulation where love turns toxic, obsession deepens, and sanity blurs into madness.

Cast: Ravi Kishan, Tejasswi Prakash, Anud Singh Dhaka, Srishti Shrivastava, Vaarun Bhagat, Ashwini Kalsekar, Surbhi Chandna
Director: Ajay Bhuyan


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Srivathsan Nadadhur | Independent Film Critic Writing for M9 News

RX 100-Style Romance with Few Good Twists

Sun, March 1 2026

Kartik, a man from Ujjain, falls obsessively in love with the mysterious Charu. When she suddenly vanishes, his life turns into a relentless search. He soon finds himself entangled in the dangerous world of a ruthless politician, Huntry Chauhan. As Kartik travels from India to Georgia to find the truth, he must navigate a web of deception, violence, and changing loyalties where love comes with a price. For the masala genre to click, besides writing and direction, you want the actors to submit to the world fully without chasing logic. The viewer can catch glimpses of it in Tejasswi Prakash and Anud Singh Dhaka’s performances. One hoped the writers invested the same thought in giving substantial characters for Srishti Shrivastava and Tejasswi as much as they did for Anud and Kishan’s parts.

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Image of scene from the film Kennedy
FCG Rating for the film Kennedy: 58/100
Kennedy

Crime, Thriller (Hindi)

An insomniac former cop, Kennedy has been presumed dead for years. Yet, in secret, he continues to serve a corrupt system while seeking redemption. Halfway between thriller and film noir, Kennedy chronicles a violent and bloody vendetta in the dark streets of Mumbai. At the rate of the murders, Kennedy's character reveals itself more and more and sinks into a spiral that seems to have no way out.

Cast: Rahul Bhat, Sunny Leone, Mohit Takalkar, Megha Burman, Haripriya Manish Lodhia, Shrikant Yadav, Abhilash Thapliyal, Jeniffer Piccinato, Benedict Garrett, Aamir Dalvi
Director: Anurag Kashyap


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Ajay Brahmatmaj | CineMahaul (YouTube)

Sun, March 1 2026

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Akhil Arora | akhilarora.com

A Spotify Review

Wed, February 25 2026

It took three years for Anurag Kashyap’s Kennedy to secure a release after its Cannes premiere, and that, too, on the D-list tier streaming service ZEE5. We discuss the film’s baffling narrative, vague rumination about corruption and power, and long stretches of inaction that don’t feel authentic to Kashyap. We also spend way too much time discussing the ill-fitting costumes of Rahul Bhat and the underused Sunny Leone, and end with unverified rumours about the movie’s long-delayed release. Hint: It had something to do with a certain ‘Bade Papa’.

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Sucharita Tyagi | Independent Film Critic

Personal, realized, and forthright both in its exuberance, and despondency

Tue, February 24 2026

Image of scene from the film Accused
FCG Rating for the film Accused: 46/100
Accused

Thriller, Mystery, Drama (Hindi)

When a celebrated queer doctor in London is accused of sexual misconduct, her life unravels. Now under a storm of suspicion and scrutiny, her marriage fractures and the truth blurs. Her wife must decide whether to walk away, or fight for the woman the world is turning against.

Cast: Konkona Sen Sharma, Pratibha Ranta, Aditya Nanda, Sukant Goel, Sanjeeta Bhattacharya, Anuj Sachdeva, Mashhoor Amrohi, Monica Mahendru, Kallirroi Tziafeta
Director: Anubhuti Kashyap
Writer: Sima Agarwal, Yash Keshwani


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Ishita Sengupta | Independent Film Critic Writing for OTT Play

Netflix’s Post-MeToo Thriller Squanders Its Potential

Sun, March 1 2026

Days before Anubhuti Kashyap’s Accused dropped on Netflix, the director admitted that the film was made keeping in mind the audience and algorithm. Her words were a radical confession, one that freely used the “A” word and distilled an aesthetic that is increasingly becoming a norm in the streaming landscape. Algorithm filmmaking, bent on holding the audience’s attention hostage, has diverse symptoms, ranging from using stark colours, recurring expositions and, as Kashayap shared, the dire need to sustain tension (“I kept taking very specific notes and showing the film at different stages to different people — asking, were you feeling relaxed here? Were you getting out of the film at this point?” she told The Hollywood Reporter). Such interventions can result in assembly-line products, and Accused is the recent casualty.

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Tatsam Mukherjee | The Wire

For All its Sound and Fury, Konkona Sen Sharma-Starrer Holds up the Status-Quo

Sun, March 1 2026

Accused raises some interesting questions, but settles for a cop-out climax.

When I watched the teaser for Anubhuti Kashyap’s Accused about a week ago, my first reaction was that of excitement. But almost reflexively, I tempered my expectations. Decades of being let down by Hindi cinema can do this. The teaser reminded me of Todd Field’s Tár – starring Cate Blanchett, playing a renowned conductor, whose mythical brilliance on stage is punctured by her indiscretions. It makes sense that the actor tasked with conveying the moral ambiguities and unpleasantness of the subject is Konkona Sen Sharma. The farthest thing in physicality and style – the only thing overlapping Sen Sharma and Blanchett, is their fearlessness to look absolutely deplorable on screen without breaking a sweat. Also, I’d enjoyed Kashyap’s last venture, Doctor G (2023), pushing the Ayushmann Khurrana social dramedy in a new direction.

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Sucharita Tyagi | Independent Film Critic

Overly concerned with what it wants to say, eager to win woke points.

Sat, February 28 2026

Image of scene from the film Kerala Story 2
Kerala Story 2

Crime, Drama (Hindi)

Three young Indian women across different states choose love over tradition, only to become trapped. Their parallel lives show how romance and rebellion transform into control and silence, turning love into a weapon that destroys freedom.

Cast: Ulka Gupta, Aishwarya Ojha, Aditi Bhatia, Arjan Aujla
Director: Kamakhya Narayan Singh, Kena Punde
Writer: Amarnath Jha, Vipul Amrutlal Shah


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Saibal Chatterjee | NDTV

The Film Is Insufferably Screechy

Sun, March 1 2026

What it does is demonstrate how not to do propaganda. If there is anything that it goes beyond, it is muckraking

Three M’s - Muslims, Malayalees and Meat - are what The Kerala Story 2: Goes Beyond tilts at with quixotic gusto. In the process, it goes completely overboard and loses its way. Propaganda demands no major creative acumen. All it calls for is a willingness to flow with the tide and pass off street-corner tittle-tattle as truth. That is all there is to this film. TKS2, heavy-handed and mealy-mouthed, would have been dismissed as the rant of a fevered mind had it not been so vituperative. The overcooked cinematic harangue proves that while it may be easy to profit monetarily from alarmist postulations, agenda-driven filmmaking can sink quickly and completely into inanity when not backed by solid research and rigour.

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Anmol Jamwal | Tried & Refused Productions

This time, it's worse

Sun, March 1 2026

Image of scene from the film Thaai Kizhavi
FCG Rating for the film Thaai Kizhavi: 77/100
Thaai Kizhavi

Comedy, Drama (Tamil)

Pavunuthaayi is a fiercely independent, intimidating elderly woman in a rural village, known for being tough, ruthless, and blunt-especially as a moneylender whose strict enforcement of dues makes her feared by locals.

Cast: Radikaa Sarathkumar, Singampuli, Aruldoss, Balasaravanan, Munishkanth, Muthukumar, Raichal Rabecca Philip, Ilavarasu, George Mariyan
Director: Sivakumar Murugesan
Writer: Sivakumar Murugesan


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Sudhir Srinivasan | The New Indian Express

The Long Review

Sun, March 1 2026

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Kirubhakar Purushothaman | News 18

Radikaa steals the show in Sivakarthikeyan's riveting film

Sat, February 28 2026

Sivakumar Murugesan's directorial debut is as warm and wry as the village it inhabits, and it earns every laugh it gets

From Disney’s Snow White to our own Vidaathu Karuppu, the evil grandma stereotype shines, making an old woman the face of terror and crudeness. Indian TV and its serials have furthered this trope of this evil old matriarch harassing the hapless daughter-in-law. On the other hand, there’s another popular archetype of a benevolent old woman, who “melts like a candle” to produce light for those around them. Manormama has been the quintessential choice of Tamil filmmakers for this cardboard cutout. The scene from Shankar’s Gentleman, of her telling her son (Arjun Sarja), “Naan irukaen pa” (“I’m there for you”). She is the all-giving mother, and men are supposed to find her godly love and care in their potential mates.

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Avinash Ramachandran | The New Indian Express

Radikaa Sarathkumar powers a grandmother’s tale rooted in truth, honesty, and a whole lot of fun

Fri, February 27 2026

It might seem like a poignant tale of parents and children, but it is also a film that makes you unabashedly laugh out loud

Money. In a world that is all about division, money holds the ultimate power to make you breach such hierarchies. Of course, it also results in the decimation of a few age-old structures, but that’s par for the course in a world that doesn’t wait for people to catch up. But is money really the ultimate thing? Does the presence or lack of it really determine your worth in the world? As a character in the debutant filmmaker Sivakumar Murugesan’s film says, “Has any parent refused to take care of their child because they didn’t have the financial resources?” One might think it is a poignant tale of parents and children, and how the world treats the geriatric. In a way, Thaai Kizhavi is definitely that kind of a film, but it is also a film that makes you unabashedly laugh out loud with a consistency that has been missing in Tamil cinema for quite a while.

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Image of scene from the film The Secret Agent
The Secret Agent

Crime, Drama, Thriller (Portuguese)

Brazil, 1977. Marcelo, a technology expert in his early 40s, is on the run. Hoping to reunite with his son, he travels to Recife during Carnival but soon realizes that the city is not the safe haven he was expecting.

Cast: Wagner Moura, Carlos Francisco, Tânia Maria, Robério Diógenes, Roney Villela, Gabriel Leone, Alice Carvalho, Hermila Guedes, Isabél Zuaa, Maria Fernanda Cândido
Director: Kleber Mendonça Filho
Writer: Kleber Mendonça Filho


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Sucharita Tyagi | Independent Film Critic

Gives the viewers the space and respect, not scoffing, not preaching

Sat, February 28 2026

Image of scene from the film Hamnet
Hamnet

Drama, Romance, History (English)

The powerful story of love and loss that inspired the creation of Shakespeare's timeless masterpiece, Hamlet.

Cast: Jessie Buckley, Paul Mescal, Emily Watson, Joe Alwyn, Jacobi Jupe, Noah Jupe, Olivia Lynes, Justine Mitchell, David Wilmot, Louisa Harland
Director: Chloé Zhao


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Sucharita Tyagi | Independent Film Critic

Paul Mescal as William Shakespeare is once again, devastatingly good.

Sat, February 28 2026

Image of scene from the film The Bluff
FCG Rating for the film The Bluff: 43/100
The Bluff

Action, Adventure (English)

When her tranquil life on a remote island is shattered by the return of her vengeful former captain, a skilled ex-pirate must confront her bloody past and unleash her deadly talents to save her family from a ruthless siege.

Cast: Priyanka Chopra Jonas, Karl Urban, Ismael Cruz Cordova, Safia Oakley-Green, Pacharo Mzembe, Greg Hatton, Gideon Mzembe, Temuera Morrison, Angela Russo-Otstot, Vedanten Naidoo
Director: Frank E. Flowers
Writer: Joe Ballarini, Frank E. Flowers


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Rahul Desai | The Hollywood Reporter India

Priyanka Chopra Jonas Stars In A Gory and Generic Pirate Actioner

Sat, February 28 2026

There’s nothing to write home about in 'The Bluff,' a middling 19th-century swashbuckler starring Priyanka Chopra Jonas as a former piratebluff-3

It takes a considerable amount of skill to make big-budget action movies — in this case, a period pirate swashbuckler — that are neither great nor terrible. How is it possible to be so safe when the scale is lavish and the stakes are high? How is it possible to be so deliberately sterile and precisely average when the resources are limitless? But one of the magic tricks of this decade has been the way streaming platforms have legitimised the middling-and-forgettable genre. Heck, it’s almost an art form. “Produced by the Russo brothers” is usually a tell, and The Bluff is another bullseye for ambient action (I vowed to get through this review without using the word “algorithmic”). The Bluff has some texture, a pinch of personality, bone-crunching violence and gore, a spirited lead even, yet I can’t remember a single moment right now. And it’s been only 8 minutes since the end credits rolled. I suppose that’s a win for the content ecosystem.

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Udita Jhunjhunwala | Mint, Scroll.in

A brutal, landlocked pirate drama

Sat, February 28 2026

Priyanka Chopra Jonas stars in this revenge drama set that lacks the sweep of classic seafaring adventures

Set in 1846, at the ragged end of the pirate era in the Caribbean, The Bluff (Amazon Prime Video) pits a former pirate in hiding against a relentless hunter chasing stolen gold. Unlike most films in the genre, the action unfolds largely on dry land rather than on rolling decks and cannon-blasted ships. Piracy defines these characters’ past, but this story is about what happens when that past refuses to stay buried. On a quiet stretch of Cayman Brac, in a fishing community of white sands and shell-lined paths, the Bodden family awaits the return of Captain T.H. Bodden (Ismael Cruz Córdova). His wife, Ercell (Priyanka Chopra Jonas), keeps the household steady. Their young son Isaac (Vedanten Naidoo), physically disabled but resolute, counts the days of his father’s absence. Aunt Lizzy (Safia Oakley-Green) has her own reasons for keeping an eye on the horizon. Life in this small British colony moves at an unhurried pace—until it doesn’t, because Ercell has a past she has carefully tried to outrun.

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Priyanka Roy | The Telegraph

Priyanka Chopra Jonas is in fine form, but The Bluff isn't

Wed, February 25 2026

Despite its thrilling sequences and Priyanka's compelling performance, the film lacks depth in emotional storytelling and thematic exploration.

Within the first few minutes of The Bluff, Priyanka Chopra Jonas slices and dices, swoops down and slashes a bunch of buccaneers in a relentless, action-packed, adrenaline-pumping sequence. Except that her character is no ordinary damsel in distress and neither is this a regular home invasion. The men who break in aren’t your streetside thugs either. They are, in fact, tied inextricably to Ercell Bodden’s past (Priyanka) and now stand to threaten her future. For Ercell wasn’t always Ercell. Known as “Bloody Mary”, she grew up sailing the seven seas as a pirate but gave up her swashbuckling, edgy ways for a domesticated life in Cayman Brac. The invasion — in which Priyanka plunges into the blood and gore with both physical solidity and psychological grit — is just the beginning of the high-stakes action that defines this Frank E. Flowers-directed film.

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Image of scene from the film Members of the Problematic Family
Members of the Problematic Family

Drama, Family (Tamil)

A man dies young. Funeral rites – yes; mourning – not so much. A death that stirs and shakes things up. A film that shows the violence of family relationships with uncanny subtlety and verve, the pendulum of void and solace.

Cast: Karuththadaiyaan, Ara. Ajith Kumar, Kanchana Senthil, T Paneer Selvam, Saravana Siddharth, Hari Krishnan Senthil, Uvesri, Thiyagu, Ram Kumar, Ramesh
Director: R Gowtham
Writer: R Gowtham


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Prathyush Parasuraman | The Hollywood Reporter India

One of the Most Distinctive, Disjunctive Films to Come out of India

Sat, February 28 2026

A grimy, formally anarchic Tamil indie that rejects coherence for sensory overload, R Gowtham’s film turns death into spectacle and fragmentation into method

If the film’s story is a skull, Members of the Problematic Family, set in Red Hills, a suburb in North-West Chennai, smashes that skull, and trying to glue it back together, revels in its failure to do so. It is simply one of the most distinctive if disjunctive films to come out of India, filled with a fractured irreverence and putrefying rot, where scenes have the inertia of a hiccup and the texture of filth—liquor breath, burning vomit, spit, blood, and that eternal sheen of sweat. There is a funeral. There is the spectacle around it—which last year, Rohan Kanawade in Sabar Bonda imbued with gentle irony, which debutante R Gowtham here, instead, dials up by sticking microscopically close to the action, the dead body being passed around, held aloft, undressed and dressed, oiled, soiled with ash, garlanded, paraded, the nostrils being pressed close by a child, and eventually, caked in cow dung and hay, and even a smattering of alcohol, burnt to ash.

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Aditya Shrikrishna | Independent Film Critic Writing for Mint

Introduces new grammar to Tamil film

Wed, February 25 2026

R Gowtham's film, which premiered at the 2026 Berlinale, is a raw, unflinching portrait of a family rationing grief and despair

A new dissenting voice emerges in Tamil cinema. R Gowtham’s debut Tamil feature, Members of the Problematic Family, premiered at the 76th Berlin International Film Festival last week in the Forum section. Everything about this film is distinct yet unfamiliar, beginning with its title. The Tamil title, Sikkalana Kudumbathin Uruppinargal, a literal translation, rolls off the tongue. For decades we’ve had the word kudumbam (family) in Tamil film titles that have often alluded to the spotless, divine status accorded to the unit. But here is a film that makes no such promise. It invites you not to witness a few days in the life of irascible characters but just human beings who, as fate would have it, need to function as a society sanctioned order.

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Image of scene from the film Sangamarmar
Sangamarmar

Drama, Family (Hindi)

Amrita sacrifices her budding romance with Aditya to fulfill family responsibilities. Their tender love endures through years of separation, becoming a poignant tale of sacrifice, silent strength, and unchanging devotion.

Cast: Saurabh Raj Jain, Smita Bansal, Avinash Wadhawan, Sheen Dass, Khalid Siddiqui, Swati Tarar, Jaya Ojha


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Srivathsan Nadadhur | Independent Film Critic Writing for M9 News

A Fluffy, Soulless Romance

Sat, February 28 2026

Twenty years after her parents’ love story began, Amrita faces a sudden family collapse. Following the tragic deaths of her mother, Vasudha, and her father, Neeraj, she must step up as the eldest sibling. Amidst overwhelming debt, legal crises and family grief, Amrita stops relying on her partner Aditya and takes over her father’s business to fight her battles alone.

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Image of scene from the film Secret Stories: Roslin
Secret Stories: Roslin

Mystery, Drama (Malayalam)

A 17-year-old girl is plagued by nightmares of a green-eyed stalker, pulling her into a spiral of fear and despair.

Cast: Sanjana Dipu, Meena, Vineeth Radhakrishnan, Sija Rose, Hakkim Shajahan, Nala Nabhan, T G Ravi, Shankar Ramakrishnan, Anishma Anilkumar, Sreeja Das
Director: Sumesh Nandakumar
Writer: Vinayak Sasikumar


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Srivathsan Nadadhur | Independent Film Critic Writing for M9 News

Snail-Paced Thriller With a Solid Climax

Sat, February 28 2026

Seventeen-year-old Roslin is haunted by recurring nightmares of a mysterious shadow. Reality blurs when Jerry, a charming but enigmatic paying guest, moves in, winning over her family despite Roslin’s growing dread. As Shobha uncovers unsettling truths, Jerry is forced to leave, briefly restoring peace. However, the terror is far from over, with Jerry returning for one final, dark confrontation.

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Image of scene from the film Monarch: Legacy of Monsters S02
Monarch: Legacy of Monsters S02

Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Drama, Action & Adventure (English)

After surviving Godzilla's attack on San Francisco, Cate is shaken yet again by a shocking secret. Amid monstrous threats, she embarks on a globetrotting adventure to learn the truth about her family—and the mysterious organization known as Monarch.

Cast: Anna Sawai, Kiersey Clemons, Ren Watabe, Mari Yamamoto, Anders Holm, Joe Tippett, Wyatt Russell, Kurt Russell


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Sonal Pandya | Times Now, Zoom

Monsterverse Spinoff Balances New Titan With Family Drama And Lore

Fri, February 27 2026

The spinoff series from the film Godzilla (2014) delves into Titan lore and follows troubled family dynamics for the Randa family.

After two and a half years, Monarch: Legacy of Monsters returns with an answer to the cliffhanger ending of Season 1. Will Colonel Lee Shaw (Kurt Russell) be rescued from Axis Mundi? Affirmative. Kurt and son Wyatt Rusell, who plays the younger version of Lee in the past, are back as the Monsterverse spinoff series adds yet another Titan to the mix and deals with the complicated Randa family relationships now that Keiko Miura (Mari Yamamoto) has returned from the dead. Developed by Chris Black and Matt Fraction, the second season of Monarch: Legacy of Monsters tries its hand at family conflict again.

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