Nandita Roy
Raktabeej 2 Review: A watchable face-off
Raktabeej 2, directed by Shiboprasad Mukherjee, sets its panoramas high, shifting the chronology from Bengal to Bangladesh to essay themes like terrorism, political pandemonium, and covert cross-border missions. It’s an ambitious leap, no doubt, and while the final payoff is solid, the expedition getting there is often uneven and cogitated down by its own excesses. The film struggles to find its emotive core. There's a evident attempt to build tension and high-stakes drama, but the storytelling rarely settles prolonged enough to | Click Here...
Raktabeej 2 Trailer: A Grit-Fuelled Sequel That Sets The Screen On Fire
The trailer of Raktabeej 2 storms in like a force of nature—urgent, explosive, and unapologetically intense. Following the resounding success of its predecessor, this sequel, directed by the seasoned Nandita Roy and Shiboprosad Mukherjee, produced by Windows, promises not just another chapter—but a full-throttle escalation. From its opening moments, the trailer pulses with energy. There’s no easing in; instead, it dives headfirst into a volatile world of political unrest, covert missions, and the shadows of terrorism that bl | Click Here...
Raktabeej 2 Teaser: Unleashes Power, Politics, And Pulse-Racing Action
The teaser for Raktabeej 2 explodes onto the screen with high stakes, much action, political intrigue, and a gripping continuation of a story that held audiences in 2023. Directed by the celebrated duo Nandita Roy and Shiboprosad Mukherjee, this sequel goes deeper into the dark realm of terrorism, espionage, and moral conflict with a decided uplift in scale and intensity. Right from the very first moments, the teaser sets a tension-filled and compelling mood. Lines like "What is terrorism to some, maybe revolutionary struggle to others" set the ideological battle at the center of the | Click Here...
Raktabeej 2 Teaser: A Tense Manhunt And Deeper Ideological Battle
The teaser for Raktabeej 2 dropped without fanfare but made plenty of noise. Directed by Shiboprosad Mukherjee and Nandita Roy, the follow-up to their 2023 hit quickly finds its footing. It is intense, politically charged, and clearly more ambitious in scale and tone. There is no time wasted here. From the opening scene, the teaser pushes you into a manhunt, a country on edge, a fugitive at large, and a system trying to hold itself together. The focus this time is on Munir Alam, a wanted man whose capture is not just a matter of law enforcement but one of ideology. His presence looms | Click Here...
Aamar Boss Review: A love letter to the ones who raised us
You start to count on your days with your parents once you hit that juncture. You begin to notice the greys, the childlike reverts, and the hissy fits. So much so that you end up screaming and scratching your own head; how do you escalate this situation alone? What did you do to deserve this? Why are parents no longer your parents now, but have they become your grown-up children? Shifting from toddler-like conduct to becoming adolescent, you still ought to hold your patience out of love for your life sources. Aamar Boss feels personal. Directed by | Click Here...