Ned Benson’s 2024 film The Greatest Hits is romance and sci-fi, but it also pulls you into an unexpected orbit. It’s about grief, time, memory, and an impossible urge to go back and fix what’s already happened. The movie makes you stop and contemplate on tough thoughts: Ned Benson’s 2024 film The Greatest Hits is romance and sci-fi, but it also pulls you into an unexpected orbit. It’s about grief, time, memory, and an impossible urge to go back and fix what’s already happened. The movie makes you stop and contemplate on tough thoughts: What if we could revisit the moments that broke us? And; What if letting go means losing access to the very person…
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The Residence on Netflix | Twists, Characters, and Why It’s Binge-Worthy
I had planned to watch The Residence on Netflix slowly, one episode each night for a week. Instead, I ended up spending two days in a row completely absorbed, watching the whole thing in a single stretch. I can’t say I regret it. There’s a certain quiet pleasure in letting a story pull you in and not fighting it. This isn’t really a review. It’s more like a handful of thoughts from someone who spent a weekend living inside The Residence. I’m not here to critique, just to share what stayed with me, what caught me off guard, and why the time felt well spent. First impressions The series wastes…
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That Time I Rewatched Swades and Had an Existential Crisis
Let me set the scene straight. The last time I watched this movie, I was probably more interested in Shah Rukh Khan’s dimples than thinking about social dilemma and moral commentary. I mean, come on — I was a kid! My biggest life decision back then was choosing between Maggi and Top Ramen. Fast forward to now, and here I am, knee-deep in my first year of MBA, drowning in case studies about MNCs and global organizations, while my friends casually drop bombshells about their plans to move abroad for “better opportunities.” A lot of them have already moved abroad, trying to create an ideal life for themselves. And then Mohan Bhargava…
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Why Napo Made Me Well Up (and Think About Life)
There’s a short film on YouTube called NAPO. It’s only a few minutes long, but it really hit me. There are no dialogues and no dramatic background music throughout the movie. Just some soothing music and an old man with fading memories, a grandson with a pencil, and a quiet kind of love that sneaks up on you. By the end of the short film, I was warm in my heart, thinking about the people and moments we sometimes take for granted. Here’s what stayed with me: The little boy doesn’t force his grandfather to “remember.” Instead, he draws. He turns old photos into sketches, and suddenly, memories start to come back. It’s…
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What White Nights by Fyodor Dostoevsky Reminded Me Of — Bollywood Edition.
You know how sometimes you’re reading a classic Russian novel about existential crisis, loneliness, ek tarfa pyaar and you suddenly think, wait a minute… I know this from somewhere. That’s exactly what happened when I read White Nights by Fyodor Dostoevsky. It’s a sad, four-night-long torment of unrequited love, hopeful delusions, and one very lonely man who just wants to be seen. Argh! The number of Nice-Guy-Syndrome and Friend-Zone memes I witnessed when reading reviews of the book had me roll up laughing. As I finished reading, I couldn’t stop but think that the book reminds me of some Bollywood movie that I know of. It took me right about 5 minutes to pin-point, and…