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Jai Arjun Singh

Jai Arjun Singh's reviews only count toward the Tomatometer® when published at Tomatometer-approved publication(s).
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Reviews

Movies TV Shows
Anubhav (1971) EDIT “Anubhav, Bhattacharya’s frank and intimate treatment of marriage, employs a language very different from most other narrative Hindi films of the 1970s.” – Firstpost Aug 27, 2024 Full Review Narthanasala (1963) EDIT “...one of the loveliest conceits of this film about a marketplace of illusions where anything can happen...” – Firstpost Aug 27, 2024 Full Review Midsommar (2019) 83% EDIT “Midsommar is packed with reminders that if a film succeeds in depicting the darkness within vividly, then a sunshine-y environment can make the experience even more unnerving. Because viewers have nowhere to hide.” – Firstpost Aug 27, 2024 Full Review Promising Young Woman (2020) 90% EDIT “Promising Young Woman is both a fast-paced thriller and a powerful account of grief and retribution.” – Firstpost Aug 27, 2024 Full Review The Elephant God (1978) EDIT “...as this film suggests, there are other forms of (more personal, more individualistic) worship too, and other types of temples...” – Firstpost Aug 27, 2024 Full Review Bhavai (2021) 2.5/5 EDIT “Pratik Gandhi's Bollywood debut is a mostly innocuous, bland comment on religious hegemony...” – Firstpost Aug 27, 2024 Full Review Munich: The Edge of War (2021) 83% 3/5 EDIT “Munich: The Edge of War is an uneven, sometimes perplexing narrative, but moreover it's a touching story about friendship, about the ways in which the personal and the political can collide.” – Firstpost Aug 27, 2024 Full Review Last Night in Soho (2021) 75% EDIT “Last Night in Soho serves as a worthy nostalgia piece, but also warns against perils of living in the past.” – Firstpost Aug 27, 2024 Full Review Deep Water (2022) 35% 2.5/5 EDIT “Around halfway through, as the ambiguity of the early scenes is lost, and we get a clearer sense of what exactly is happening, Deep Water also becomes more predictable, and refuses to gather steam as a thriller.” – Firstpost Aug 27, 2024 Full Review 420 IPC (2021) 3/5 EDIT “420 IPC is an engrossing depiction of a world where the line between small finance and big finance – or small scams and enormous ones – isn't clear, and where it is hard to say who holds the reins of power at any given time.” – Firstpost Aug 27, 2024 Full Review
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