Vimarsana.com

kheya chattopadhyay: Live & Latest News Updates : Vimarsana.com

OTT releases to watch this weekend: Laapataa Ladies to Ranneeti, The Veil and more

OTT releases for your binge-list: From Kiran Rao's much-loved Laapataa Ladies to Vidyut Jammwal's Crakk, here are some of the new titles to watch this week. | Bollywood

Mumbai
Maharashtra
India
France
London
City-of
United-kingdom
Istanbul
Turkey
French
Elizabeth-moss
Anupama-parmeswaran

Atanu Ghosh on his film 'Binisutoy' - Telegraph India

Atanu Ghosh on his film 'Binisutoy' - Telegraph India
telegraphindia.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from telegraphindia.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Kerala
India
Chandreyee-ghosh
Atanu-ghosh
Samamtyak-dyuti-maitra
Vincent-van-gogh
Ritwick-chakraborty
Krishnakishore-mukherjee
Appu-prabhakar
Jaya-ahsan
Koushik-sen
Kheya-chattopadhyay

Pondering love and loss amid COVID at the Berlinale | Film | DW

Pondering love and loss amid COVID at the Berlinale The Bengali film "Jole Dobe Na" at the Berlinale mirrors the sense of disorientation and loneliness that most of us face, especially those who care for the sick. A still from "Jole": Reading and speaking function as distractions, but also as memories The opening scenes of "Jole Dobe Na" — Bengali for "Those Who Do Not Drown" —  are apocalyptic. The camera moves slowly, visually documenting parts of an abandoned building, its doors and walls stripped of paint, until it reaches a large window that overlooks the courtyard. A man's voice says, "What if I told you, all this never happened. We are fine and we will be fine. [That] The whole catastrophe was a dream after all? They promised, science could do everything, cure the sick, bring Lazarus back to life…"

Bengali
Bangladesh-general
Bangladesh
Japan
United-states
United-kingdom
Mexico-city
Distrito-federal
Mexico
Pakistan
Germany
Umea

Pondering love and loss amid COVID at the Berlinale

news Pondering love and loss amid COVID at the Berlinale dw.com 05/03/2021 Manasi Gopalakrishnan The Bengali film "Jole Dobe Na" at the Berlinale mirrors the sense of disorientation and loneliness that most of us face, especially those who care for the sick. © Naeem Mohaiemen A still from The opening scenes of "Jole Dobe Na" — Bengali for "Those Who Do Not Drown" — are apocalyptic. The camera moves slowly, visually documenting parts of an abandoned building, its doors and walls stripped of paint, until it reaches a large window that overlooks the courtyard. A man's voice says, "What if I told you, all this never happened. We are fine and we will be fine. [That] The whole catastrophe was a dream after all? They promised, science could do everything, cure the sick, bring Lazarus back to life…"

Bengali
Bangladesh-general
Bangladesh
Japan
Umea
Vasterbotten
Sweden
United-states
India
United-kingdom
Dhaka
Kolkata

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.