Post Credits Scene: Starring Fahadh Faasil and Vadivelu, the Tamil-language film Maareesan gaslights you into giving a thumbs-up to a mass murdering maniac.
Post Credits Scene: It would be a stretch to even describe Maa as a horror film, seeing how far it strays from the genre in its final act. This is when Kajol's character delivers a lecture about why female infanticide is bad.
Post Credits Scene: Netflix's new spy drama, Saare Jahan Se Accha, feels like it has been edited by Edward Scissorhands; it's tantamount to self-sabotage. Poor Tillotama Shome, Sunny Hinduja, and Suhail Nayyar are done particularly dirty.
Post Credits Scene: There is a grave idea at the core of Weapons: what is worse; the grief of losing a loved one to a tragedy, or the guilt of having to resume regular life after some time has passed?
Post Credits Scene: Writer-director Celine Song's Materialists can't distance itself from the objectively concerning worldview of its protagonist, played by Dakota Johnson.
Post Credits Scene: Sitaare Zameen Par asks its audience to get behind a particularly nasty man before preaching to them about things that, truth be told, they should already know. Sure, many might not, but it's probably going to take more than an Aamir Khan to convert them.
Post Credits Scene: It's an unusual comparison to make, but Shazia Iqbal's Dhadak 2 has more in common with Joaquin Phoenix's billion-dollar-grossing Joker movie than you'd imagine.
Post Credits Scene: Co-produced by Karan Johar, Sarzameen feels like it was butchered beyond recognition on the editing table. The final film accidentally gets you to root for a terrorist, played by Ibrahim Ali Khan, to kill his father, a soldier played by Prithviraj Sukumaran.
Post Credits Scene: Not a single person in Bollywood would've had the patience or the palate for the extended epilogue in writer-director Shahi Kabir's Ronth, starring Dileesh Pothan and Roshan Mathew.
The 100-day vigil: How a custodial death case ended in a state-ordered cremation
India19 min ago
After 100 days, the body of 26-year-old Dalit man Akash Delison was finally removed from a government hospital and cremated under police protection. His family had demanded justice for his alleged death in police custody and refused to accept the body until all 16 involved officers were arrested. Despite actions taken, their demand for accountability remains unmet.