Divya Nair makes a list of Tamil films you must watch at least once. The good news is that they're on OTT right now.
The latest season of Bridgerton takes a bolder view at handling troubled relationships and marriages as it teases displeased viewers from the previous season with enough fodder to last until the next season, feels Divya Nair.
This is a film written for an audience that thrives on Vijay's stardom and it satisfies them thoroughly, observes Divya Nair.
Ariyippu is not a movie where you ask for a happy ending and you are served it on a platter. As situations change, the central characters conceal and display their vulnerability as any other real-life couple, observes Divya Nair.
Like the countless other things that were made possible online by the deadly coronavirus, Connect adds demonic possession and exorcism to the list, observes S Saraswathi.
Half Pants Full Pants will instantly warm your heart, Divya Nair tells us.
The first step to keeping your job safe, experts tell Rediff.com's Divya Nair, is understanding why layoffs happen.
What makes Wonder Women brilliant is the breeziness of the events and issues it tackles without delving on it too much or surrendering to it completely, observes Divya Nair. Wonder Women Review
There is nothing exceptional in the plot that will blow your mind away, warns Divya Nair. Yashoda Review
A savoury snack for Diwali of fried rice flakes, roasted lentils, peanuts and spices.
Hush Hush starts on a mysterious note that sustains our curiosity for the first few episodes. Then it veers off in different directions aimlessly, notes Divya Nair.
Rasam is my Amma's go-to solution for all ailments, be they a cold, cough, fever or a headache.
'To set up a successful business, one must have a solution to an existing problem or a better way of addressing the current solution.'
'Remember to pick a mentor, with whom there are one or two degrees of separation.' 'Any more than that, you are wasting time.'
Criminal Justice 3: Adhura Sach is watchable for Pankaj Tripathi's brilliant portrayal of Madhav Mishra, observes Divya Nair.
'My father is a postman. My mother is a homemaker. No one in my family had studied medicine.' 'I wanted to be the first doctor in my family so I could listen to people like me and help them feel better about themselves,' says Archana Vijayan, an MBBS student with a disability, who was initially denied admission into medical school, even after passing the NEET twice.
'God has given me everything -- wealth, success, a good wife and good friends. I wish He gives me good health.'
Malayankunju is a coming-of-age survival drama that has its heart in the right place, notes Divya Nair.
'Generic skills are in abundance, but technological advancements have left staple skills redundant.' 'It is why employers are now looking for alternate sources of hiring -- deploying gig workers, looking at Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities for relevant talent.'
Sita Ramam is a subtle reminder that, in a world where you can be anything, the best thing you can be is kind