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Jul 24, 2015 · Masaan review: Neeraj Ghaywan's debut movie Masaan captures the true essence of Banaras. Read Masaan movie review by Shubhra Gupta. Masaan review: It announces the arrival of new talents in its writer and director: Grover’s story is eminently worth telling, and Ghaywan tells it beautifully.
Debutant director Neeraj Ghaywan and writer Varun Grover construct a tapestry of bruised and broken lives set against a 5,000-year-old backdrop: The city of Varanasi. Masaan. Direction: Neeraj ...
Set against the visually powerful backdrop of funeral pyres and the burning ghats in Varanasi, Masaan is a poetic narrative of pathos and love. The film takes on the tragedy of life, death and...
Performance-Wise: Richa Chadda & Sanjay Mishra lead 'Masaan', with heartbreaking performances. As the conflicting father-daughter, Chadda & Mishra deliver magnificently. Newcomer Vicky Kaushal & Shweta Tripathi are sincere. Pankaj Tripathi is priceless in a cameo.
Jul 24, 2015 · Two journeys are twinned, one beginning in despair and the other in hope. Devi (Richa Chadha) has an ill-advised tryst with her boyfriend that invites blackmail and harassment from a police ...
Jun 24, 2015 · Masaan: Directed by Neeraj Ghaywan. With Richa Chadha, Sanjay Mishra, Vicky Kaushal, Pankaj Tripathi. Along India's Ganges River, four people face prejudice, a strict moral code and a punishing caste system as they confront personal tragedies.
Masaan (transl. 'Crematorium'; also known as Fly Away Solo in English) is a 2015 Indian Hindi-language independent drama film starring Richa Chadda and Vicky Kaushal in lead roles. It is Kaushal's debut Hindi film, and also the directorial debut of Neeraj Ghaywan.
Jul 26, 2015 · ‘Masaan’, which recently won two prestigious awards at Cannes, is a bold debut from Neeraj Ghaywan, who assisted Anurag Kashyap on ‘Gangs of Wasseypur.’ Ghaywan takes a narrative that could have turned out trite and infuses it with freshness and originality.
Jul 24, 2015 · Masaan, Neeraj Ghaywan’s debut that has been sweeping accolades on its journey from Cannes to India, is a very salt of the earth kind of film. Set in present-day Varanasi, the film explores small-town existential angst, through its deeply layered characters.
Masaan - Review. Rating: Add to 'must watch' list. Despite being set in a crematorium and having a sense of morbidity throughout, Masaan isn't grim. Nor is it gay despite its wit. Masaan carries equanimity of sorts in the “life is what it is” kind of a way with simplicity and flair in equal measure.