natpe thunai characters Videos

Did you mean?

Search Results - Showing 48 - 60 Of 79

Sir Ridley Scott has enjoyed a long and illustrious career, one that extends all the way back to \
⏲ 1:7 👁 540K
Rogue One director Gareth Edwards is adding another sci-fi movie to his filmography, and it may somehow be his biggest one yet, despite being outside the Star Wars universe. The Creator stars John David Washington and more whose characters are in the midst of a fictional war between AI and humanity, and the futuristic adaptation has attracted great reviews from critics calling it \
⏲ 1:5 👁 525K
A 5th ‘Matrix’ Movie , Is in the Works.<br/>Lana Wachowski will produce another <br/>'Matrix' movie, The Verge reports.<br/>Drew Goddard will write and direct.<br/>Jesse Ehrman, production head at <br/>Warner Bros. Motion Pictures, .<br/>said that Goddard has a fresh idea that will honor \
⏲ 1:31 👁 855K
STORY: Mr. Raj Kapoor (Ashwin Kaushal), a resident of Sunflower housing society, is found dead in his apartment. When the police officers begin their investigations, majority of the residents and frequent visitors become suspects. Will the cops be able to crack this case?<br/><br/>REVIEW: Based in Mumbai, ‘Sunflower’ revolves around a murder that occurs in a middle-class housing society of the same name. When Mumbai police officers— Digendra (Ranvir Shorey) and Chetan Tambe (Girish Kulkarni) begin investigating the case, they suspect nearly everyone. However, Sonu Singh (Sunil Grover), a simpleton living in the same society, is drawn into the murder mystery and becomes the prime suspect. What happens next forms the crux of the story.<br/><br/>This engaging eight-part situational crime comedy is co-written by Vikas Bahl (writer-director of popular Bollywood films 'Queen' and 'Super30') and Chaitali Parmar. Along with Rahul Sengupta, Vikas wears the director's hat in this series, which marks his digital debut as well. Right from the start, the audience is aware of how one of the society's occupants (Raj Kapoor) died. But it’s the narrative—which revolves around the investigation proceedings and how everyone fits into the suspect category—that has been interestingly penned down with a dash of humour and plenty of thrills.<br/><br/>The screenplay is intriguing throughout, thanks to its quirky characters with odd tics and characteristics that define them, as well as the subplots that blend well into this character-driven plot. For instance, Sonu Singh, a 35-year-old eccentric salesperson with Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), keeps everything perfectly organised—from his foot mat to everything on his work table. Dilip Iyer (Ashish Vidyarthi) is another character who aspires to be the chairman of Sunflower Society in order to make it a happier place to live. Imagine he has a committee of members that interview everyone who wishes to stay in this society and have stringent rules against allowing unmarried people, divorcees, queers, and so on. Then there's Mr Ahuja (Mukul Chadda), a lecturer by profession with a smirky appearance and a courteous demeanour, and his ever-supportive wife (Radha Bhatt). Overall, the majority of the scenes revolve around a small group of society members, depicting everything from internal society politics to nosy neighbours.<br/><br/>While the first few episodes keep you hooked primarily due to the involvement of so many characters and their personal lives, as well as their link to the crime, there are some that drag on, especially those involving Sonu caring for Mr. Tondon (Sameer Kakkar). Ideally, the shorter episodes and tight editing (by Konark Saxena) would have aided the plot's progression while maintaining the show's pace. The background score composed by Sahej Bakshi and Vesh Shrivastava is interesting and complements the story well.<br/><br/>Sunil Grover plays Sonu Singh to perfection, never straying from his role as a lonely man with no social circle d
⏲ 38:44 👁 1.2M
STORY: Mr. Raj Kapoor (Ashwin Kaushal), a resident of Sunflower housing society, is found dead in his apartment. When the police officers begin their investigations, majority of the residents and frequent visitors become suspects. Will the cops be able to crack this case?<br/><br/>REVIEW: Based in Mumbai, ‘Sunflower’ revolves around a murder that occurs in a middle-class housing society of the same name. When Mumbai police officers— Digendra (Ranvir Shorey) and Chetan Tambe (Girish Kulkarni) begin investigating the case, they suspect nearly everyone. However, Sonu Singh (Sunil Grover), a simpleton living in the same society, is drawn into the murder mystery and becomes the prime suspect. What happens next forms the crux of the story.<br/><br/>This engaging eight-part situational crime comedy is co-written by Vikas Bahl (writer-director of popular Bollywood films 'Queen' and 'Super30') and Chaitali Parmar. Along with Rahul Sengupta, Vikas wears the director's hat in this series, which marks his digital debut as well. Right from the start, the audience is aware of how one of the society's occupants (Raj Kapoor) died. But it’s the narrative—which revolves around the investigation proceedings and how everyone fits into the suspect category—that has been interestingly penned down with a dash of humour and plenty of thrills.<br/><br/>The screenplay is intriguing throughout, thanks to its quirky characters with odd tics and characteristics that define them, as well as the subplots that blend well into this character-driven plot. For instance, Sonu Singh, a 35-year-old eccentric salesperson with Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), keeps everything perfectly organised—from his foot mat to everything on his work table. Dilip Iyer (Ashish Vidyarthi) is another character who aspires to be the chairman of Sunflower Society in order to make it a happier place to live. Imagine he has a committee of members that interview everyone who wishes to stay in this society and have stringent rules against allowing unmarried people, divorcees, queers, and so on. Then there's Mr Ahuja (Mukul Chadda), a lecturer by profession with a smirky appearance and a courteous demeanour, and his ever-supportive wife (Radha Bhatt). Overall, the majority of the scenes revolve around a small group of society members, depicting everything from internal society politics to nosy neighbours.<br/><br/>While the first few episodes keep you hooked primarily due to the involvement of so many characters and their personal lives, as well as their link to the crime, there are some that drag on, especially those involving Sonu caring for Mr. Tondon (Sameer Kakkar). Ideally, the shorter episodes and tight editing (by Konark Saxena) would have aided the plot's progression while maintaining the show's pace. The background score composed by Sahej Bakshi and Vesh Shrivastava is interesting and complements the story well.<br/><br/>Sunil Grover plays Sonu Singh to perfection, never straying from his role as a lonely man with no social circle d
⏲ 42:42 👁 1.3M
Fans like to complain. Comic book movie fans really like to complain. And DC Studios fans basically live to complain online. OK, not ALL of them. But given the volume of grievances logged by DC fans on social channels over the years—especially as they watch all the DC Films in order—it’s safe to say they are a “Prove It To Us” fanbase. Which is what current DC Films Co-President James Gunn tries to do. He explains his decisions. He practices transparency. And when fans have questions, he usually answers them online. <br/><br/>Like when casting announcements started rolling out regarding co-stars for James Gunn’s planned \
⏲ 1:6 👁 1.6M
STORY: Mr. Raj Kapoor (Ashwin Kaushal), a resident of Sunflower housing society, is found dead in his apartment. When the police officers begin their investigations, majority of the residents and frequent visitors become suspects. Will the cops be able to crack this case?<br/><br/>REVIEW: Based in Mumbai, ‘Sunflower’ revolves around a murder that occurs in a middle-class housing society of the same name. When Mumbai police officers— Digendra (Ranvir Shorey) and Chetan Tambe (Girish Kulkarni) begin investigating the case, they suspect nearly everyone. However, Sonu Singh (Sunil Grover), a simpleton living in the same society, is drawn into the murder mystery and becomes the prime suspect. What happens next forms the crux of the story.<br/><br/>This engaging eight-part situational crime comedy is co-written by Vikas Bahl (writer-director of popular Bollywood films 'Queen' and 'Super30') and Chaitali Parmar. Along with Rahul Sengupta, Vikas wears the director's hat in this series, which marks his digital debut as well. Right from the start, the audience is aware of how one of the society's occupants (Raj Kapoor) died. But it’s the narrative—which revolves around the investigation proceedings and how everyone fits into the suspect category—that has been interestingly penned down with a dash of humour and plenty of thrills.<br/><br/>The screenplay is intriguing throughout, thanks to its quirky characters with odd tics and characteristics that define them, as well as the subplots that blend well into this character-driven plot. For instance, Sonu Singh, a 35-year-old eccentric salesperson with Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), keeps everything perfectly organised—from his foot mat to everything on his work table. Dilip Iyer (Ashish Vidyarthi) is another character who aspires to be the chairman of Sunflower Society in order to make it a happier place to live. Imagine he has a committee of members that interview everyone who wishes to stay in this society and have stringent rules against allowing unmarried people, divorcees, queers, and so on. Then there's Mr Ahuja (Mukul Chadda), a lecturer by profession with a smirky appearance and a courteous demeanour, and his ever-supportive wife (Radha Bhatt). Overall, the majority of the scenes revolve around a small group of society members, depicting everything from internal society politics to nosy neighbours.<br/><br/>While the first few episodes keep you hooked primarily due to the involvement of so many characters and their personal lives, as well as their link to the crime, there are some that drag on, especially those involving Sonu caring for Mr. Tondon (Sameer Kakkar). Ideally, the shorter episodes and tight editing (by Konark Saxena) would have aided the plot's progression while maintaining the show's pace. The background score composed by Sahej Bakshi and Vesh Shrivastava is interesting and complements the story well.<br/><br/>Sunil Grover plays Sonu Singh to perfection, never straying from his role as a lonely man with no social circle
⏲ 36:14 👁 795K
KGF: Chapter 2' is a tale from history. Once it completes its theatrical run, the two-part franchise is sure to make history in Kannada cinema.<br/><br/>It had been over three years since the gripping underdog story of Rocky ended on a cliffhanger. Minutes before the title card comes on screen, director Prashanth Neel makes us ready for what to expect from the follow-up of the blockbuster 'KGF: Chapter 1'. In a jaw-dropping opening scene, he shows how his passion and grandeur of scale are still intact.<br/><br/>Rocky bhai, the dreaded gangster, has full control of KGF after his epic elimination of Garuda, son of Suryavardhan, the heir of the gold fields. But once you own one of the most precious pieces of land, you are sure to face the heat of people with power. In comes Adheera (Sanjay Dutt), Suryavardhan's brother, and Ramika Sen (Raveena Tandon), the prime minister of India.<br/><br/>For the first 20 minutes, the film rides on an intense tempo with many characters slowly finding their places in the plot. In the build-up to the interval, Neel strikes a surprise that none of us can predict. And then, 'KGF: Chapter 2' takes an almighty leap.<br/><br/>Neel's freaky ideas are ridiculously uncompromising. He has the confidence to translate his wacky and even over-the-top thoughts on screen in an enjoyable fashion. Two scenes that bring the roof down with this kind of approach are the one inside a police station and Rocky's second big face-off with Adheera. Giving company to Neel's outrageous verve is Ravi Basrur's score, which keeps our blistering excitement at the highest level. Cinematographer Bhuvan Gowda completes the technical department triumvirate with his visuals of breathtaking appeal.<br/><br/>One sharp criticism of 'KGF: Chapter 1' was that it unabashedly celebrated machismo with little emphasis on conflicts. However, this film is never a one-man show as it shows Rocky consistently challenged by his rivals. He is also no longer invincible. His vulnerability makes him slightly emotional and even pushes him to think smart to defeat his powerful foes.<br/><br/>Neel's writing triumph lies in how we are completely accustomed to his fiery attitude of Rocky. His character graph gets interesting as Rocky becomes greedy and selfish. His relentless pursuit of fulfilling his mother's wishes might unsettle us but that makes the character authentic. It does justice to the film's idea of a powerful people making places powerful.
⏲ 2:45:58 👁 1.9M
There's much more to these unassuming Star Wars characters than you think.
⏲ 11:2 👁 490K
STORY: Mr. Raj Kapoor (Ashwin Kaushal), a resident of Sunflower housing society, is found dead in his apartment. When the police officers begin their investigations, majority of the residents and frequent visitors become suspects. Will the cops be able to crack this case?<br/><br/>REVIEW: Based in Mumbai, ‘Sunflower’ revolves around a murder that occurs in a middle-class housing society of the same name. When Mumbai police officers— Digendra (Ranvir Shorey) and Chetan Tambe (Girish Kulkarni) begin investigating the case, they suspect nearly everyone. However, Sonu Singh (Sunil Grover), a simpleton living in the same society, is drawn into the murder mystery and becomes the prime suspect. What happens next forms the crux of the story.<br/><br/>This engaging eight-part situational crime comedy is co-written by Vikas Bahl (writer-director of popular Bollywood films 'Queen' and 'Super30') and Chaitali Parmar. Along with Rahul Sengupta, Vikas wears the director's hat in this series, which marks his digital debut as well. Right from the start, the audience is aware of how one of the society's occupants (Raj Kapoor) died. But it’s the narrative—which revolves around the investigation proceedings and how everyone fits into the suspect category—that has been interestingly penned down with a dash of humour and plenty of thrills.<br/><br/>The screenplay is intriguing throughout, thanks to its quirky characters with odd tics and characteristics that define them, as well as the subplots that blend well into this character-driven plot. For instance, Sonu Singh, a 35-year-old eccentric salesperson with Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), keeps everything perfectly organised—from his foot mat to everything on his work table. Dilip Iyer (Ashish Vidyarthi) is another character who aspires to be the chairman of Sunflower Society in order to make it a happier place to live. Imagine he has a committee of members that interview everyone who wishes to stay in this society and have stringent rules against allowing unmarried people, divorcees, queers, and so on. Then there's Mr Ahuja (Mukul Chadda), a lecturer by profession with a smirky appearance and a courteous demeanour, and his ever-supportive wife (Radha Bhatt). Overall, the majority of the scenes revolve around a small group of society members, depicting everything from internal society politics to nosy neighbours.<br/><br/>While the first few episodes keep you hooked primarily due to the involvement of so many characters and their personal lives, as well as their link to the crime, there are some that drag on, especially those involving Sonu caring for Mr. Tondon (Sameer Kakkar). Ideally, the shorter episodes and tight editing (by Konark Saxena) would have aided the plot's progression while maintaining the show's pace. The background score composed by Sahej Bakshi and Vesh Shrivastava is interesting and complements the story well.<br/><br/>Sunil Grover plays Sonu Singh to perfection, never straying from his role as a lonely man with no social circle d
⏲ 36:45 👁 955K
Grimace is one of the most lovable characters in McDonaldland — so why was he ever called evil? Is he a taste bud, or something more sinister? These questions and more are answered as we uncover the weird and wild history of the iconic mascot.
⏲ 12:45 👁 7.8M
STORY: Mr. Raj Kapoor (Ashwin Kaushal), a resident of Sunflower housing society, is found dead in his apartment. When the police officers begin their investigations, majority of the residents and frequent visitors become suspects. Will the cops be able to crack this case?<br/><br/>REVIEW: Based in Mumbai, ‘Sunflower’ revolves around a murder that occurs in a middle-class housing society of the same name. When Mumbai police officers— Digendra (Ranvir Shorey) and Chetan Tambe (Girish Kulkarni) begin investigating the case, they suspect nearly everyone. However, Sonu Singh (Sunil Grover), a simpleton living in the same society, is drawn into the murder mystery and becomes the prime suspect. What happens next forms the crux of the story.<br/><br/>This engaging eight-part situational crime comedy is co-written by Vikas Bahl (writer-director of popular Bollywood films 'Queen' and 'Super30') and Chaitali Parmar. Along with Rahul Sengupta, Vikas wears the director's hat in this series, which marks his digital debut as well. Right from the start, the audience is aware of how one of the society's occupants (Raj Kapoor) died. But it’s the narrative—which revolves around the investigation proceedings and how everyone fits into the suspect category—that has been interestingly penned down with a dash of humour and plenty of thrills.<br/><br/>The screenplay is intriguing throughout, thanks to its quirky characters with odd tics and characteristics that define them, as well as the subplots that blend well into this character-driven plot. For instance, Sonu Singh, a 35-year-old eccentric salesperson with Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), keeps everything perfectly organised—from his foot mat to everything on his work table. Dilip Iyer (Ashish Vidyarthi) is another character who aspires to be the chairman of Sunflower Society in order to make it a happier place to live. Imagine he has a committee of members that interview everyone who wishes to stay in this society and have stringent rules against allowing unmarried people, divorcees, queers, and so on. Then there's Mr Ahuja (Mukul Chadda), a lecturer by profession with a smirky appearance and a courteous demeanour, and his ever-supportive wife (Radha Bhatt). Overall, the majority of the scenes revolve around a small group of society members, depicting everything from internal society politics to nosy neighbours.<br/><br/>While the first few episodes keep you hooked primarily due to the involvement of so many characters and their personal lives, as well as their link to the crime, there are some that drag on, especially those involving Sonu caring for Mr. Tondon (Sameer Kakkar). Ideally, the shorter episodes and tight editing (by Konark Saxena) would have aided the plot's progression while maintaining the show's pace. The background score composed by Sahej Bakshi and Vesh Shrivastava is interesting and complements the story well.<br/><br/>Sunil Grover plays Sonu Singh to perfection, never straying from his role as a lonely man with no social circle
⏲ 45:14 👁 1.1M
Pages 5 Of 7
... ...
« Previous | Next »

Related Searches

Search Videos

Recent Searches

bangla chad chudi si | hotstar tamil ipl live today | habib and puja | maine mohabbat kali song from movie kahin pyaar na ho | mili phone | geetha | 2015 ro | عکس کیر وکون پسر های ۲۰ساله | forth fm | lnkdztxfuls | tsst 1 testing | গল্প 2019 নতুন | tore mone diya agun julies | rabbit 1st od vs ban | nons3fcz0 s | wash weekly sun city | hindai catre | what is a function in python coding | خوردن کوس | airport code clt airport | isteli bordeaux | hwang in yeop movies | chakma new song 3gp | in wheel gal hamster | yuld6r5r g0 | nbsfqs4npzo | 3xpg1si3zpu | hzzbr0nic1s | vdm462027779 | bangla movie 007য়েদের বা করাকরি ভিডিও hot দেশেপু বিশবাস এর এক্সনক্সক্সএ | movieseox িà¦à¦«à¦¬à¦¾à¦‚লা চà§à¦¦à¦¾à¦šà§à¦¦à¦¿ | yah ali maahi queen | o1vt rm ugo | thegamesdownload net | x8yti8s | djsonu wapath com | কলিজার ভিডিও ফাঁস | স্নেহের প্রতিদান ছবি | telugu madhar sentment songs | raavan bangla movie | ​မရေ။။ | নাইকা চিদাচুদি | bangladeshi basor gor xa bangla চুদ্চুদিোট ছোট দুধলা নায়িকাদের | indian paglu2 video songs grace prem kolkata song besh karachi mp3 | ahde wafa 1 episode | anupom roy audio song | headed shark attack | koil photho | www comvidogladesher unny leone big hot sunny leone latest hd ka mahia mahi photoa movie | ak book jala asif new mobi song com | رقص سه تا دختر دبیرستانی در مدرسه زن خوب | alternatif rock | পপির ফুল পিকচার চাই বাংলা ভিডিও comla puraton mp3 মেয়েদের mollick নায়িকা পপি নেকেটতীর hot dood | tdgtm | hannah burrows no escuses | full form of cibc | 02 karma is bitch | google as shubo bada | صدیق مدگار | bollywood ka number actor who news | ashemir waz | vdm148803071 | দেলুয়ার হোসেন সাইদি | vdm67594626 | bangla new song imran ar audio 2015 dwonload com মৌসমী download comwww xvibeos coma videobangla movie by shakib imran bangla album song puja cfg contactform upload parser imran puja cfg con | bewafa tune mujhko pagal hi kar diya | stokes twin | chiti likheche bou amar banga hathe mp | cid episod 957 | hw9pwtyz k0 | zaswiadczenie o dochodach | imran bangla inc | pedo boys | cxc past papers 2016 integrated science | ddbv3kavysy | vdm3641375 |