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- Interview: Mari Selvaraj, Udhayanidhi Stalin, Vadivelu, Keerthy Suresh (‘Maamannan’)
- Interview: Rohini (‘Thandatti’)
- Interview: Vasanth Ravi (‘Asvins’)
- ‘Notes on this, that, and everything in between’ – Episode 3: Lyrics & Life
- ‘Notes on this, that, and everything in between’ – Episode 2: Watching older films…
- Interview: Pasupathy, director Ram Sangaiah, and DoP Mahesh Muthswami (‘Thandatti’)
- From the Web (FTW) #10: Things Are Looking Up At Box Office, But…
- Readers Write In #587: Asur: A Victim Of Main Text Overpowered By Not So Powerful Subtext
- Interview: Sanjay Narayanan, who made ‘Maalai Nera Mallipoo’ when he was 21/22 years old
- SJ Suryah gives a BIG performance in Radhamohan’s ‘Bommai’, but the film never convinces us about its central relationship
- Om Raut’s ‘Adipurush’ is a sci-fi/fantasy take on Ramayana that’s high on visual effects and low on drama
- Dileesh Pothan is fabulous in Ranjan Pramod’s ‘O.Baby’, a richly textured strike against all kinds of ownership
- Interview: SJ Suryah (Bommai)
- Suraj Varma’s ‘Kolla’ (Rajisha Vijayan, Vinay Forrt, Priya Varrier) has an interesting premise, but is content to remain vaguely watchable
- Interview: Sean Roldan (on ‘Uravu’, and his music)
- Readers Write In #586: Nanpagal Nostalgia
- Interview: Vignesh Raja (storyboarding Por Thozhil)
- Sanjay Narayanan’s exquisite, moving ‘Maalai Nera Mallipoo’, on aha, takes us into a sex worker’s psyche
- Karthik G Krish’s ‘Takkar’ is filled with good ideas, but none of them are fleshed out convincingly
- Vignesh Raja’s ‘Por Thozhil’ (Sarathkumar, Ashok Selvan) is a solid, well-crafted serial-killer thriller with enough pluses to overcome its issues
- Interview: Siddharth (Takkar)
- Readers Write In #585: Book Review: Plassey- The Battle that Changed the Course of Indian History
- Interview: Hansal Mehta / writer Mrunmayee Lagoo (Scoop, on Netflix)
- Readers Write In #584: Diving straight and dissecting into the micro level of why mass unnatural disasters happen
- Readers Write In #583: Objects in the rear view mirror: 2000s Kollywood
- Notes on this, that, and everything in between – Episode 1: Does age matter?
- A very happy 80th birthday, Ilaiyaraaja
- Ajitpal Singh’s ‘Fire In the Mountains’, on SonyLIV, peels back the beauty of the mountains to gaze at stark realities
- Akhil Sathyan’s ‘Pachuvum Athbutha Vilakkum’, on Prime Video, is proof that templates are never an issue if the storytelling is strong
- Interview: Sohum Shah (Maharani on SonyLIV, Dahaad on Amazon Prime Video)
- Readers Write In #582: The Story of Allen Dulles and his CIA
- Readers Write In #581: Virupaksha: The Succubus lies in the details
- From the Web (FTW) #9: Martin Scorsese on the Importance of Visual Literacy
- BR Live Season 2
- Thank you so much for this appreciation, Bits Of Info Tamil
- From the Web (FTW) #8: Nenendu Vethugudura (a translation)
- Readers Write In #580: The Imposter – The ramblings of a fundamentally uninteresting man
- Readers Write In #579: Daredevil Musthafa (DDM) – An outsider’s view
- Achyut Vinayak’s ‘Thrishanku’, with Anna Ben and Arjun Ashokan, has a super premise, but it’s content to remain a pleasant watch instead of the all-out riot it could have become
- Shashank Soghal’s ‘Daredevil Musthafa’ is a laid-back charmer filled with newcomers, and it covers up its flaws with a massive dose of can-do spirit
- Interview: Sarathkumar (Por Thozhil, etc.)
- Interview: Anna Ben / ‘Andhadhun’ producer Sarita Patil (Thrishanku)
- Readers Write In #578: Succession – A Saga of Kendall and Logan
- Apoorv Singh Karki’s ‘Sirf Ek Bandaa Kaafi Hai’ is an earnest, well-acted courtroom drama that needed more tension
- Yashowardhan Mishra’s ‘Kathal’, on Netflix, is a gently amusing detective story-cum-social commentary that involves missing jackfruits
- Readers Write In #577: The National Legacy of NTR
- From the Web (FTW) #7: The Magic of K Vishwanath’s songs
- Shamal Sulaiman’s entertaining ‘Jackson Bazaar Youth’ makes you think it’s a drama about the underprivileged before pulling the rug from under your feet
- Lights, Camera, Analysis: Ravi Varman (Ponniyin Selvan 1 & 2)
- Vijay Antony’s ‘Pichaikkaran 2’ is a sentimental, speech-heavy take on how the rich should help the poor
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