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Prometheus

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Distributor: Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation
Release Date: 2012-06-08
Starring: Michael Fassbender, Charlize Theron, Idris Elba, Ben Foster, Guy Pearce, Noomi Rapace, Logan Marshall-Green, Kate Dickie, Sean Harris, Rafe Spall, Benedict Wong, and Lucy Hutchinson
Directed by: Ridley Scott
Produced by: David Giler, Walter Hill, Ridley Scott, Tony Scott
Written by: Damon Lindelof, Jon Spaihts

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Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted

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Distributor: DreamWorks Distribution, Paramount Pictures
Release Date: 2012-06-08
Starring: Voices: Ben Stiller, David Schwimmer, Frances McDormand, Chris Rock, Jada Pinkett Smith
Directed by: Eric Darnell
Produced by: Mireille Soria, Mark Swift
Written by: Noah Baumbach



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Brave

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Since ancient times, stories of epic battles and mystical legends have been passed through the generations across the rugged and mysterious Highlands of Scotland. In “Brave,” a new tale joins the lore when the courageous Merida (voice of Kelly Macdonald) confronts tradition, destiny and the fiercest of beasts. 

Merida is a skilled archer and impetuous daughter of King Fergus (voice of Billy Connolly) and Queen Elinor (voice of Emma Thompson). Determined to carve her own path in life, Merida defies an age-old custom sacred to the uproarious lords of the land: massive Lord MacGuffin (voice of Kevin McKidd), surly Lord Macintosh (voice of Craig Ferguson) and cantankerous Lord Dingwall (voice of Robbie Coltrane). Merida’s actions inadvertently unleash chaos and fury in the kingdom, and when she turns to an eccentric old Witch (voice of Julie Walters) for help, she is granted an ill-fated wish. The ensuing peril forces Merida to discover the meaning of true bravery in order to undo a beastly curse before it’s too late. 

Directed by Mark Andrews and Brenda Chapman, and produced by Katherine Sarafian, “Brave” is a grand adventure full of heart, memorable characters and the signature Pixar humor enjoyed by audiences of all ages. The film takes aim at theaters on June 22, 2012, and will be presented in Disney Digital 3D™ in select theaters. 

A grand adventure full of heart, memorable characters and signature Pixar humor, “Brave” uncovers a new tale in the mysterious Highlands of Scotland where the impetuous Merida (voice of Kelly Macdonald) defies an age-old custom and inadvertently unleashes chaos, forcing her to discover the meaning of true bravery before it’s too late.”

Distributor: Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures
Release Date: 2012-06-22
Starring: Kelly Macdonald, Emma Thompson, Kevin McKidd, Julie Walters, and Billy Connolly
Directed by: Mark Andrews and Brenda Chapman
Produced by: Katherine Sarafian
Written by: Brenda Chapman

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Lootera

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LOOTERA OVERVIEW
Starring : Ranveer Singh, Sonakshi Sinha    more...
Director : Vikramaditya Motwane 
Language : Hindi 
Genre : Romance
Release Date : Friday 28th of December 2012

Lootera is a upcoming Hindi movie starring Ranveer Singh, Sonakshi Sinha and is directed by Vikramaditya Motwane . The expected release date of Lootera movie is Friday 28th of December 2012. 

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Bol Bachchan Official Trailer

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Finding Nemo 3D Trailer

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Men in Black 3

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Watching director Barry Sonnenfeld’s Men in Black III it’s easy to tell that it’s a movie that went through troubles during production. Because of a stoppage and a script rewrite, the beginning, middle and end were not really planned together, and it shows in the final product. That said, it’s actually impressive that the film is as entertaining as it is. 

The film begins when an evil alien known as Boris The Animal (Jemaine Clement) manages to escape from a maximum security prison on the moon and vows to take revenge on the man that put him there: Agent K (Tommy Lee Jones). Using time travel, Boris goes back to 1969 – the year that his plans for world domination were thwarted – and kills the young Men in Black agent, leaving Agent J (Will Smith) living in a future without his longtime partner. After discovering what is going on, J travels back in time himself to both stop young K (Josh Brolin) from being murdered and save the world from Boris. 

Men In Black III is riddled with enormous plotholes, from the suggestion that a main character doesn’t know that the first man landed on the moon in 1969 (is there anyone out there who doesn’t know this?) to inconsistencies in the time travel plot. For example, it is never explained why J remembers K, despite the fact that Boris went back and killed K years before J met him. These things gnaw on you while you’re watching the movie, but even worse is how they pile up on the ride home from the theater. 

At the very least the script does give a good platform for the film’s uniformly great performances. After a four year break from movies – and an even longer break from straight comedies – Smith shows that he still has plenty of magnetism and charisma left, earning laughs with both his verbal timing and physical humor. Though it’s a tad gimmicky, Brolin puts in a magnificent turn using his impression of Tommy Lee Jones as the young Agent K. While few would have compared the two prior to seeing them working in this (even when they starred together in No Country For Old Men), Brolin disappears into the character and perfectly matches Jones’ mannerisms and sound. Surprisingly, it’s not Brolin who steals the show, but Michael Stuhlbarg. Playing an alien known as Griffin – a being that can see all possible timelines and variations of universes at once – Stuhlbarg is a thrill to watch as he rapidly thinks out loud about what’s going to happen next and worries about the most negative of outcomes. It’s a wonderful performance backed with an interesting character design and the highlight of the movie. 

It's ultimately a sense of fun that keeps Men in Black III afloat. Once the movie finally travels back to the late 60s, the story actually gets interesting and is just clever enough to keep the audience’s attention. As with the other films in the series, there are many Easter Eggs hidden throughout, from the revelation that Tim Burton and Yao Ming are both aliens on monitors in the Men in Black headquarters, to the great cameo by Bill Hader as Andy Warhol, who is just an undercover MIB agent out of ideas (“I’m just painting soup cans and bananas”). As a whole the movie still makes very little sense, but at least it doesn’t hurt your throat while you’re swallowing it. 

Perhaps Men In Black III’s greatest accomplishment is washing the terrible taste of the second movie out of our mouths and bringing us back closer to the level of entertainment from the first movie. It has far too many problems to be considered good, but if you’ve already seen everything else in theaters you could do a lot worse

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Yeh Khula Aasmaan

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YEH KHULA AASMAAN OVERVIEW
Starring  : Vicky Chopra, Yashpal Sharma, Raj Tandon, Anya Anand    more...
Director : Gitanjali Sinha 
Language : Hindi 
Genre : Musical / Family Drama / Motivational
Banner : Gitanjali Creations 
Release Date : Friday 25th of May 2012

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Horrible Bosses

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This is disappointing, or rather, horrible! While Horrible Bosses was scheduled to release in India last summer, it is releasing this summer! The film hits the big screens across India tomorrow, 31st May! 

While most of you must have already seen the film on the internet itself, for those who haven’t, we say do watch Horrible Bosses in a theatre! It looks to be a smartly tackled Hollywood comedy-crime film! 

The movie is about three frustrated employees Nick (Jason Bateman), Kurt (Jason Sudeikis) and Dale (Charlie Day)! The reason for their annoyance: their respective bosses! While one of the bosses is a psycho, second is a man-eater, and the last one wants to fire employees who are fat from his company! So cool it sounds! 

What will definitely draw footfalls to the theatres is that the role of the man-eater boss is played by none other than Jennifer Aniston! She looks damn hot in the trailer with all the seductive acts! I certainly won’t mind her as my boss! 

Anyhow, the main plot of the movie is that these employees plan to murder their bosses, since they feel they (the bosses) are ruining their lives! Hope my boss reads this one and be nice to me from now, since I usually draw a lot of inspiration from movies! 

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Snow White And The Huntsman

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In Snow White and the Huntsman, a series of characters insist over and over again that the titular princess is "very special" or "the one" or "the only one who can save us;" it's a classic instance of telling instead of showing that reveals a lot about this glossy but unsatisfying fairy tale revision. Snow White is special because she has to be for the story to work, not because director Rupert Sanders, the trio of screenwriters or Kristen Stewart give us any reason to believe it. And the more the movie tells you something you know isn't true, the harder it is to invest in a story you know already, and in a world that's all surface sheen and no logic or stakes.

First-time director Sanders famously got the job after presenting a self-shot visual reel, and it's clear he cherishes the grim, fantastically curated visuals of the film above all else. That goes double for every scene featuring Ravenna (Charlize Theron), the evil stepmother queen who handily kills Snow White's father then locks the girl up in a tower, all the better to execute her reign of terror on the land. Far from your run-of-the-mill despot who can only poison an apple, Ravenna maintains eternal beauty by sucking out the youthful souls of women culled from the countryside; she can also sic glass knights on her enemies, shapeshift, and somehow also extend the youth of her doting brother (Sam Spruell). 

Theron commits admirably to the evil but broken Ravenna, but beyond outfitting her with a series of phenomenal dresses and a few nifty CGI transformations, Sanders basically abandons her. Theron's high-pitched, ferocious performance frequently borders on camp, but Sanders never lets her take it there, leaving her fuming in her castle in a series of dresses and severe crowns that imprison what could have been the most interesting part of the movie. Because beyond Ravenna, we're left with "the one" Snow White, her handsome but boring would-be savior William (Sam Claflin), a band of hastily sketched-out dwarves played by barely recognizable famous people like Ian McShane and Bob Hoskins, and then the Huntsman (Chris Hemsworth), who with a gruff Scottish accent and axe-throwing skills frequently seems as bored to be stuck with Snow White as we are.

The Huntsman is initially assigned to kill Snow White and bring back her heart, just like in the fairy tale, but winds up traveling with her through the dark forest, which Sanders overstuffs with horrors early on but eventually looks like regular old woods. For a movie that ends in an epic battle on horseback, Snow White and the Huntsman is remarkably aimless for a while-- the main two evade capture, run into some dwarves and a hauntingly beautiful village of women (the movie's best scene by far), and then eventually work up the stones and the manpower to fight back against Ravenna. 

The easiest way to liven up the proceedings would have been a romance, and the way Snow White and the Huntsman bungles this might be its most baffling mistake, especially given the Twilight-adjacent fanbase they're aiming for. Stewart, giving a nicely rounded performance in a badly written role, does spark up a nice chemistry with Hemsworth, which should have made for an easy and juicy conflict when William arrives to join the fight. But Sanders, who either doesn't know how to direct his actors or doesn't bother with them when there's CGI scenery to adjust, doesn't give us any emotions to invest in at all, leaning instead over and over on the same portentous notes of good vs. evil, fate and loyalty and all the other things you've seen done better in better fantasy epics. Sanders has approached a classic fairy tale with a few strong visual ideas and a very game Charlize Theron, and it's almost impressive how little he's managed to make of it. 

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THE CABIN IN THE WOODS

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THE CABIN IN THE WOODS REVIEWS 
Movie Review : 'Cabin In The Woods' - intense commentary on human insensitivity (4/5)
Cabin In The Woods movie review. Cast: Kristen Connolly, Chris Hemsworth and Anna Hutchison. Director: Drew Goddard; Rating ****

THE CABIN IN THE WOODS OVERVIEW
Starring : Richard Jenkins, Bradley Whitford, Jesse Williams, Chris Hemsworth    more...
Director : Drew Goddard 
Language : English 
Genre : Thriller / Horror
Banner : Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), United Artists, Mutant Enemy 
Release Date : Friday 1st of June 2012
The Cabin In The Woods is a English movie starring Richard Jenkins, Bradley Whitford, Jesse Williams, Chris Hemsworth and is directed by Drew Goddard .

The Cabin in the Woods before you see it? Ideally, nothing-- so if you click away from this review now, I understand. But interest is high enough in the horror film from first-time director Drew Goddard and his co-writer, Joss Whedon, that plenty of people have already seen the trailer, in which we're told explicitly that this story of college kids in a creepy cabin has quite the twist, and that the generic title gives way to a complete deconstruction of the horror genre. Believe it or not, it's OK to know that-- that's the premise of the film, not a spoiler. 

But from that premise The Cabin in the Woods sets up a high-energy and electric game of chess with its audience, setting up every trope of its creepy-house genre, tearing it apart, and then going even deeper into a central mystery that only gets more satisfying as it goes. Goddard and Whedon's script functions both as a haunted-house movie-- there are great moments of tension throughout-- and a spirited romp right past the genre, held together by an impeccable sense of humor and a constant ability to surprise. The central characters aren't quite as interesting as they ought to be, and the story wraps up with a little more whimper than bang, but those are minor tradeoffs for a movie that's otherwise such a ball.

Even when the story sticks firmly in standard horror territory, this particular group of attractive kids is especially fun to spend time with. Our bookish heroine (Kristen Connolly) sets up a nice rapport with her blond bestie (Anna Hutchison), who in turn quickly establishes a believable relationship with her jock boyfriend (Chris Hemsworth). Add in a bookish guy love interest (Jesse Williams) and a stoner dork (Fran Kranz) and you've got a deliberate assortment of horror movie stereotypes, but the actors commit nicely even as Goddard and Whedon's clever writing pushes it all just over the edge into satire.

What happens from there? You'll have to see it, and you really have to see it if you love horror, hate horror, or have any interest in seeing how the genre can function as a playground for something completely fresh. Richard Jenkins and Bradley Whitford are involved, though in roles that are more fun to discover as you go along-- they do get a lot of the best jokes, though, and their scenes show a lot of Goddard's skill in handling the rhythm of a scene. He does plenty of showing off elsewhere, though, making a really elegant transition from writer to director by handling the narrative of every scene, dishing out scares and laughs and even dramatic heft by knowing where to take the audience at every turn.

The Cabin in the Woods is a genre exercise at heart, and though it has the potential for real greatness-- at certain points you might think Goddard could take this story anywhere-- it settles for ultimate audience satisfaction, which is pretty close to greatness anyway. It's so, so much fun to watch with an audience-- any audience, anywhere-- and to revel in that experience of being perfectly manipulated by a director and writer who know every button to push.  

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Rowday Rhathore

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ROWDY RATHORE REVIEWS
Movie Review : Akshay Kumar makes 'Rowdy Rathore' rip-roaring! (2.5/5)
The Badi Picture movie review of Rowdy Rathore. A rip-roaring Akshay Kumar rescues a raggedy Rowdy Rathore from the clutches of banality with his sheer punch power and hilarity.

Cast: Akshay Kumar, Sonakshi Sinha
Director: Prabhu Deva
An air of unabashed, if generally harmless, imbecility pervades Rowdy Rathore. With very little substance to play around with, the film spreads itself dangerously thin. But even when it teeters on the brink of snapping point, it hurtles along like an armoured vehicle on four flat tyres. It makes much din but covers little ground. 

Let’s hand it to director Prabhu Deva. He throws every trick that he knows in the book into this predictable remix of a Telugu hit – song, dance, crass humour, romance, thunderous action and a fearless supercop out to outsmart a bunch of murderous marauders. 

It’s the good old unstoppable all-or-nothing approach. Prabhu Deva obviously has no faith in any form of subtlety. He goes the whole hog and revels in unbridled excess every step of the way. 

Actually, for a film of this kind, a cross between Dabangg and Singham with stray traces of Agneepath, over-the-top methods are par for the course. Some of them do pass muster. 

Rowdy Rathore is a shrill action flick designed to help Akshay Kumar return to his hit-making ways. Accept that obvious intent and you might actually end up enjoying certain parts of the film against your own better counsel. Isn’t that the effect that many a Bollywood potboiler of the 1980s would have on us? 

Yes, Rowdy Rathore employs narrative elements that hark back to a bygone era of Bollywood potboilers: two men who look like each other without any apparent reason, a bunch of baddies that snarl and snap at the slightest provocation and indulge in rape and pillage with abandon, and the good old back-from-the-dead revenge seeker who goes back dispensing rough-and-ready justice.

The only surprise that the film springs is in the opening credits: SLB, maker of Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam and Devdas, is one of the producers of this no-holds-barred entertainer designed for easy mass consumption.

The first half of the film ambles through an hour and a bit of mostly insignificant narrative detail, including the circumstances in which the male protagonist, a small-time Mumbai conman Shiva (Akshay Kumar), meets and falls in love with Paro (Sonakshi Sinha), a pretty girl from Patna who is in town for a wedding. 

It is only in the second half that Rowdy Rathore gets down to serious business as the action moves to a hamlet called Devgarh where a rural tyrant, Baapji (Tamil character actor Nasser), calls the shots. Cops shiver in front of him and his lecherous men, and a minister dances to his tune. The villagers are mere lambs to the slaughter. 

Away from this hell-hole, Shiva is taken by surprise when a little girl mistakes him for her father. After with a life-threatening attack on him by a gang of goons, he decides to get to the bottom of things. He discovers that the girl’s father was actually a random doppelganger, a lookalike police officer who is eventually killed before the crook’s eyes by the rustic gang.

Shiva assumes the garb of the dead policeman, transforms into a violent rabble-rouser and goes all out to avenge the murder. 

The film’s romantic track is mere window-dressing – it offers the director a pretext to stage a couple of song and dance set pieces that only serve to slow down the film’s pace. 

You know what is coming next – the hero’s beloved and the dead cop’s daughter are abducted by the villains and the policeman who is masquerading as one takes the law into his own hands and sends the bad guys scurrying for cover. 

The thing about a film like Rowdy Rathore is that it lets the viewer stay a step ahead of the action, which is a perfect recipe for an instant connect with the masses.

Riddled with an array of loud, lame and specious contrivances, Rowdy Rathore plays out pretty much like a comic-book fantasy rendered in the form of a live-action film. Go for it if you must, but don’t expect the earth from it. 

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