Odd Couple, Review: Tying the not
It’s nice to be taken by surprise, especially if the film is not a suspense thriller. And Odd Couple does just that. Borrowing its title from the 1965 Neil Simon comedy play, The Odd Couple, made into a film (1968) starring Walter Matthau and Jack Lemmon, in which one of the two bosom friends does all the household chores that you would normally associate with a woman, this film has the man, of a man-woman couple, doing the laundry and the cooking, and ...
The reunion of the last living workers of the erstwhile Prabhat Studio becomes a reflection on celluloid dreams, fathers and sons, and the cyclical universe.
The reunion of the last living workers of the erstwhile Prabhat Studio becomes a reflection on celluloid dreams, fathers and sons, and the cyclical universe.
The reunion of the last living workers of the erstwhile Prabhat Studio becomes a reflection on celluloid dreams, fathers and sons, and the cyclical universe.
The reunion of the last living workers of the erstwhile Prabhat Studio becomes a reflection on celluloid dreams, fathers and sons, and the cyclical universe.
The reunion of the last living workers of the erstwhile Prabhat Studio becomes a reflection on celluloid dreams, fathers and sons, and the cyclical universe.
The reunion of the last living workers of the erstwhile Prabhat Studio becomes a reflection on celluloid dreams, fathers and sons, and the cyclical universe.
Part memoir, part reflection, the film celebrates life at the erstwhile Prabhat Studio (now Film and Television Institute of India), tracing the brief reunion of some of its oldest workers.
Part memoir, part reflection, the film celebrates life at the erstwhile Prabhat Studio (now Film and Television Institute of India), tracing the brief reunion of some of its oldest workers.
Part memoir, part reflection, the film celebrates life at the erstwhile Prabhat Studio (now Film and Television Institute of India), tracing the brief reunion of some of its oldest workers.