cv.sarathi

15.2K posts

cv.sarathi banner
cv.sarathi

cv.sarathi

@cvsarathi

closet critic,full time movie bum,part time nut,dreamer,couch potato..trying hopelessly n unsuccessfully to b atleast a pseudo intellectual..

Katılım Ekim 2009
131 Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
cv.sarathi retweetledi
huise
huise@huise001·
尼古拉斯·凯奇用10年烂片,还清8000万 2008年金融海啸,尼古拉斯·凯奇房产崩塌,身负巨债8000万美元。 他的亲叔叔,是能凭一句话摆平一切的好莱坞教父科波拉,但他选了另一条路。 不靠施舍,不破产​ “破产申请,债主最多拿回三成。”他说。 而他决定:我欠的,我亲自还。 从影帝到“烂片之王”​ 奥斯卡影帝的片酬,从2000万跌到50万。 评分3.0的恐怖片,剧本仅两页纸,他接。 片场只有三人,他对着空气嘶吼到嗓音沙哑。 十年,200多部电影,无论多“烂”。 开破车,吃三明治,一块钱一块钱地攒​ 最困难时,狗仔拍到他醉倒餐厅门口,网友嘲讽他是“好莱坞捡破烂的”。 他开一辆破旧丰田,在剧组吃最便宜的盒饭。 没人知道,他正在将一座债务大山,一铲一铲移平。 还清那天,他拍了一部叫《天才不能承受之重》的电影​ 在戏中,他扮演一个过气明星,台词如自白: “我挥霍了钱,但没挥霍责任。” 这个时代,跑路的富豪很多​ 但愿意钻进烂片堆十年、不拖累任何一个债主的人却不多。 有人说他傻,有人笑他疯。 但当灯光再次亮起, 他站在那里的样子, 比拿奥斯卡那年,更像一个真正的“影帝”。
huise tweet media
中文
446
478
6.3K
896.1K
cv.sarathi retweetledi
കീടാണു
കീടാണു@that_keedanu·
#Dridam That climax was worth the slow burn.. Shane nigam was phenomenol as young inexperienced newbie cop.. paisa vasool
English
0
1
1
198
cv.sarathi retweetledi
Cinephile
Cinephile@AH_cinephile·
#Dridam സത്യം! വേറെ LEVEL Climax 👏🔥 Predictable ആവുമായിരുന്ന കഥയെ വഴി തിരിച്ചുവിട്ട writing 👏 slow start,Good interval block,towrds good second and Excellent climax 👍 #shanenigam As usual കൊള്ളാം 👍 Good Debut Directorial 👍 overall Good investigation thriller👏
Cinephile tweet media
English
0
2
3
299
cv.sarathi retweetledi
SmartBarani
SmartBarani@SmartBarani·
#Dridam A generic investigation thriller with neat written screenplay also with flaws & evident logic mistakes took much time to get into the story after that it’s gripping enough to hold our attention Interval block & final act was good enough !! Shane Nigam tried his best & rest did their part well.. no songs and maintained the mystery till end with a satisfying twist.. perusa engayum bore adikala.. Overall a decent thriller !! Rating : 3.25/5
SmartBarani tweet media
English
2
3
21
3.1K
cv.sarathi retweetledi
Marcus Legranda
Marcus Legranda@marclegrande·
#Dridam starts off on a typical Jeethu Joseph note with his usual set of actors, leading to an average first half. However, the fast-paced second half, followed by a terrific climax, lifts the movie considerably. And yes, there’s a terrific reference to #Drishyam as well. Shane Nigam was superb as a rookie cop, supported by a dependable cast. As usual, some of the new faces turned out to be weak links. Easily watchable and maybe a sleeper hit!! #Drishyam3 #Mohanlal #Dhridam
Marcus Legranda tweet media
English
1
4
37
6.1K
cv.sarathi retweetledi
Aarif Mohamed
Aarif Mohamed@Rif213·
#Dridam: Good Movie. Loved it. Slow burn thriller n climax is 🔥 Shane nigam good. Adrenaline rush peaked at the climax🔥 Definitely worth a try 👌 Not able to understand why chettans didn't welcome this movie 😕
English
0
1
4
206
cv.sarathi retweetledi
Rishi Bagree
Rishi Bagree@rishibagree·
Dance of Indian Democracy !!!! While Bengalis are struggling to get a resignation letter, Tamils are struggling to get an appointment letter. Malayalis already have both the resignation letter and the appointment letter… but don’t have a name for the appointment letter !!
English
131
1.9K
11K
137.3K
cv.sarathi retweetledi
Donald
Donald@Donald_Offcl·
A solid thriller ride that keeps you hooked 🔥 The screenplay is engaging with good twists, suspense and emotional moments. Director maintains the intensity really well till the climax. #ShaneNigam is superb throughout. #Dridam ~ A well-made thriller experience...!!
Donald tweet media
English
0
1
0
303
cv.sarathi retweetledi
Varun R 🇮🇳
Varun R 🇮🇳@VarunNR_79·
#Dridam Review Dialogue driven police procedural drama Suspense Mystery Thriller Genre Shane Nigam was good as police officer Good tight screenplay, well made by Jeethu assistant Great shock value in Climax Blood soaked violent climax action set piece was lit Decent 👍
Varun R 🇮🇳 tweet media
English
0
3
4
603
cv.sarathi retweetledi
Jack Fletcher
Jack Fletcher@jack_fletcher25·
Watched #Dridam 😍🤍 നല്ല പടം 🤍👌 ഒരു പുതിയതായി ജോലിയിൽ കേറുന്ന പോലീസ് ഓഫീസറും, ആ പോലീസ് സ്റ്റേഷനെ ചുറ്റിപറ്റി നടക്കുന്നതുമാണ് കഥ 🤍 നല്ല ഒഴുക്കുള്ള ഫസ്റ്റ് ഹാഫും, കിടിലൻ ത്രില്ലിങ് എലമെന്റ്സ് ഉള്ള സെക്കന്റ്‌ ഹാഫും 💥👌 കൂടെ ആ ക്ലൈമാക്സും 🥶🤌 #ShaneNigam Performance 🤍👌
Jack Fletcher tweet media
മലയാളം
0
1
1
362
cv.sarathi retweetledi
Crazy Views
Crazy Views@MyCrazyViews·
#Dridam ok first half with a good interval, followed by a very good second half and a superb climax. Liked the movie. Shane was really good . Our rating 3/5. #ShaneNigam
English
0
1
1
297
cv.sarathi retweetledi
Patrick
Patrick@patrick_stories·
#Dridam whatt a movie👌 A good first half followed by an extraordinary second half, loved every bit of the movie, especially the climax portion 🔥 #ShaneNigam shines once again, A slowburning thriller with great technical quality 4.5/5 ⭐ Must must watch.
Patrick tweet media
English
0
3
5
943
cv.sarathi retweetledi
SK Reviews
SK Reviews@SK_SHA_KOLLAM·
കിടിലൻ പടം 😳👌 Absolute Thriller എന്നൊക്കെ പറഞ്ഞാൽ ഇതാണ് 👏 ഷെയ്ൻ പൊളിച്ചടുക്കിയിട്ടുണ്ട് 😳 അവസാനത്തെ 20 മിനിറ്റ് ചുമ്മാ കത്തിച്ചു വച്ചിട്ടുണ്ട് 😯😱 വൻ Banger സംഭവം 👏 ഈ വർഷത്തെ കിടിലൻ തിയേറ്റർ എക്സ്പീരിയൻസ് കിട്ടിയ മറ്റൊരു പടം 💯✅ #SK #SKreviews #Dridam #shanenigam
SK Reviews tweet media
മലയാളം
0
1
3
268
cv.sarathi retweetledi
Sajin Shrijith
Sajin Shrijith@SajinShrijith·
What a lovely little surprise Shane Nigam's new crime thriller #Dridam turned out to be! For a long time, it creates a certain kind of impression, and then that stunning ending happens. My spoiler-free review: theweek.in/review/movies/…
English
0
16
120
13K
cv.sarathi retweetledi
Echoes of War
Echoes of War@EchoesofWarYT·
Doc Holliday was a dentist with a classical education in Greek and Latin who killed his first man at 19, coughed blood into a handkerchief for the next 17 years, and died in bed with a glass of whiskey, saying, "This is funny." Funny because he'd spent his entire adult life expecting to die in a gunfight. He never did. John Henry Holliday was born in Griffin, Georgia in 1851. He came into the world with a cleft palate and a partial cleft lip, a deformity that in 1851 was usually a death sentence for an infant. His uncle, a surgeon named John Stiles Holliday, performed the corrective surgery himself when the baby was two months old. His mother Alice spent the next several years patiently teaching the boy to speak clearly. She taught him piano. She taught him manners. She taught him how to bow to a woman and how to address a gentleman. By the time he was a teenager, John Henry could quote Virgil in the original Latin, play Chopin from memory, and dance a quadrille. Then she died of tuberculosis when he was 15, and so did the small, soft world she'd built for him. He was sent to Philadelphia to study dentistry. He graduated from the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery in 1872 at the age of 20, one of the youngest in his class, and his entry "Diseases of the Teeth" was considered exceptional. He won an award at a dental fair for "Best Set of Artificial Teeth in Gold." His diploma still exists. You can look at it. He moved back south, set up a practice, and started coughing. By 1873 the diagnosis was unmistakable. Pulmonary tuberculosis. The same disease that killed his mother. Doctors gave him a few months, maybe a year. They told him his only chance was to move west, where the dry air might slow the lungs from drowning. He kissed his cousin Mattie goodbye. He had been in love with her for years. She would later become a Catholic nun, Sister Mary Melanie, and she was the woman Margaret Mitchell would model Melanie Hamilton on in Gone With the Wind. They wrote each other letters until the day he died. Nobody has ever found those letters. The family burned them. He went to Dallas. He set up a dental office. And his patients, watching this thin polite young man cough blood into a handkerchief between extractions, stopped coming. So he turned to cards. Faro, mostly. Poker when he could find it. He had a gambler's gift and a dying man's nerve, and within two years he was making more in a week at the tables than he'd made in a year pulling teeth. He moved through Texas and into the Colorado mining camps, then New Mexico, then Arizona. He drank an estimated two to three quarts of whiskey a day, partly because it numbed the lungs and partly because nothing else did. Here is what made him terrifying. Most gunfighters in the Old West were cowards in expensive boots. They picked fights they could win and avoided fights they couldn't. Doc Holliday already knew he was dying. There was nothing you could threaten him with. There was no future you could take from him. He would walk into a room of armed men with that thin slow smile and a Colt and a knife and sometimes a sawed off shotgun under his long grey coat, and the math running behind his pale blue eyes was simple. Every day he was alive was already stolen. The men across the table had something to lose. He had nothing. He weighed about 135 pounds. He was five foot ten. He was usually drunk. And by the time he reached Tombstone, men crossed streets to avoid him. His common law wife was a Hungarian woman named Mary Katharine Horony, better known as Big Nose Kate. She had been born to nobility in Budapest, run away as a teenager after her parents died, worked as a prostitute in Iowa, and ended up on the frontier with a temper that matched his. He once got her out of jail by bribing a guard. She once got him out of jail by setting fire to the hotel next door as a distraction, then walking him out at gunpoint. They fought constantly. They loved each other in the way two people love each other when they both know one of them is going to die soon. He met Wyatt Earp in Fort Griffin, Texas, in 1877. The friendship that followed would shape both their lives. The legend goes that Doc saved Wyatt's life in Dodge City, walking out of the Long Branch Saloon to find Wyatt surrounded by cowboys with guns drawn, and putting his pistol to the leader's temple before anyone saw him move. Wyatt later said he owed Doc his life. He said Doc was "the most skillful gambler, and the nerviest, fastest, deadliest man with a six gun I ever knew." Wyatt Earp said that. About a tubercular dentist who could quote Cicero. At the OK Corral on October 26, 1881, the fight lasted thirty seconds. Doc was carrying a 10 gauge coach gun under his coat. He killed Tom McLaury with both barrels. When Morgan Earp was assassinated months later in retaliation, Doc rode with Wyatt on what history would later call the Vendetta Ride, a three week killing spree across Arizona that left every man they believed responsible dead in the dirt. They were never caught. They were never tried. They simply rode out of the territory and disappeared. By 1887 the disease had finally caught up with him. He was 36 years old. He weighed less than 120 pounds. He had outlived nearly every man who had ever tried to kill him, and most of the ones who had only thought about it. He checked into the Hotel Glenwood in Glenwood Springs, Colorado, where the sulfur springs were said to ease the lungs. They didn't. On the morning of November 8th, the nurse brought him a glass of whiskey. He had always sworn he would die with his boots on, the way a gunfighter was supposed to die. He looked down at his bare feet under the white hospital sheet. He looked at the whiskey. He started to laugh. "This is funny." Then he drank it. And he died.
Echoes of War tweet media
English
271
2K
13.1K
719K
cv.sarathi retweetledi
Anupama Chopra
Anupama Chopra@anupamachopra·
Loved the ambition, ideas & artistry in #Patriot & that so many superb actors have come together to support the vision of writer-director Mahesh Narayanan. The film is inconsistent & scattered but there is enough to admire, especially the quietly formidable @mammukka. #dowatch
English
4
49
502
35.5K