Raja Sen thinks Premium Rush is a very tight film.
The brilliant Looper is one for the ages.
Raja Sen : Shanghai is all Dibakar, who we must lift on our shoulders with grateful pride.
Director Rohit Shetty defends his latest film, Bol Bachchan.
Music composer Sneha Khanwalkar has worked hard on this extremely versatile album, and it bloody well shows.
Raja Sen raves about the big wins at the 70th Golden Globe awards.
Dredd 3D is excessive and glossy and uninspired, writes Raja Sen.
Anurag Basu's Barfi! is a well-crafted script with an intriguing back-and-forth narrative but it all goes south towards the end, writes Raja Sen.
There is much joy to be found in watching the stories unravel in their wonderfully unpredictable ways in To Rome With Love, writes Raja Sen.
Raja Sen lists movies that would work wonders for any generation lucky enough to see them on the big screen.
Ranvir Shorey gives a fine performance, one that deserved a better script around it.
There isn't a single line in Shirish Kunder's film that actually works, leaving us with a film that, while commendably brisk in a 100-minute package, refuses to get going at all, writes Raja Sen.
Raja Sen feels that Dabangg 2 is less unwatchable.
Now that Apple's media player and library application has finally created an online store specifically for Indian consumers, Raja Sen sizes up what it has to offer -- and at what cost.
Salman and Katrina do not fail to impress but the film could have been much better.
Hotel Transylvania is atrociously unfunny.
Director Anurag Kashyap's visual flair has just grown with each film, and this one is not just cinematically self-assured but also highly nuanced.
The film redefines the level of stupid comedy in films.
The film is a sexless sex comedy.
Raja Sen reviews Jab Tak Hai Jaan.
Raja Sen presents the drivers who are likely to define the 2012 Formula One season.
The hits and misses of the week.
Halle Berry talks about her latest film, Cloud Atlas, Bond, and much more.
The actor tells us what attracted him to his latest film Cloud Atlas.
The India F1 GP is upon us and Rediff.com's Raja Sen is at the Buddh International Circuit to get a pulse of the goings on the pit lanes and the paddock.
Raja Sen salutes Jaspal Bhatti.
Raja Sen looks at the journey of the legendary director who introduced to Hindi cinema to the picturesque locales of Switzerland, the chiffon saris, the picturesque nararted some complex romantic stories.
Hollywood actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt talks about his films Looper and Premium Rush.
The film is essentially Freaky Friday pretending to be Mulan: and both those Disney productions were decidedly more entertaining.
Here's yet another assembly-line actioner, and, for what it's worth, it's not as awful, really.
Kareena Kapoor impresses in Heroine, but is let down by the film itself.
An experiment this may well be, but it is a pointless one.
Three-time world champion Sebastian Vettel, says Raja Sen, needs to make his way up the grid in a year where Ferrari looks nearly invincible, and the Lotus cars are blindingly fast.
There is much craft on display, and some lovely moments, but the immense promise shown by the first half of the film turns out as hollow as a politician's.
The film isn an exquisite and gorgeous motion picture.
Those in the need for the real, cerebral Holmes can find him in the BBC's terrific Sherlock, featuring Benedict Cumberbatch (Season Two starts on the first day of 2012) but for a rollicking winter evening, director Guy Ritchie provides stupid but striking fireworks.