Nimma Vasthugalige Neeve Javaabdaararu
- 2025
- 2h 12min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.9/10
3.3 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Un análisis de la relación con las pertenencias y cómo se vinculan a las inseguridades. Explora cómo estos temores pueden manifestarse en la vida real y afectar el comportamiento y las decis... Leer todoUn análisis de la relación con las pertenencias y cómo se vinculan a las inseguridades. Explora cómo estos temores pueden manifestarse en la vida real y afectar el comportamiento y las decisiones.Un análisis de la relación con las pertenencias y cómo se vinculan a las inseguridades. Explora cómo estos temores pueden manifestarse en la vida real y afectar el comportamiento y las decisiones.
Govind Madhusudhan
- Rohith
- (as Madhusudan Govind)
Hari Samashti
- Sanketh
- (as Hari Samasti)
Prasanna V Shetty
- Inayath
- (as Prasanna Shetty)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Nimma Vasthugalige Neeve Javaabdaararu, translated as You Are Responsible for Your Belongings, is a rare Kannada film that blends crime, introspection, and urban disquiet with artistic restraint. Now available on Sun NXT, the film unfolds in three segments, each telling a distinct story of theft-of bikes, objects, emotions, and identity-set in modern-day Bengaluru. This isn't a thriller in the traditional sense; it's more of a slow-burning exploration of human frailty, responsibility, and what it means to "possess" something.
Director Keshav Moorthy, in his debut, shows remarkable confidence. He avoids loud exposition, relying instead on atmosphere, body language, and silence.
Director Keshav Moorthy, in his debut, shows remarkable confidence. He avoids loud exposition, relying instead on atmosphere, body language, and silence.
. It tells you stories not to teach you a lesson but to make you sit with your discomfort. It explores how people express loneliness, trauma, and longing through things bikes, bags, phones, and even strangers. Every item in the film holds emotional weight. Every theft is a symptom of something deeper
This is a film that trusts its audience. It doesn't explain everything, and it doesn't apologize for its pace or ambiguity. If you give it your time and attention, it'll reward you with reflection, empathy, and maybe even a bit of self-awareness.
In a sea of predictable OTT content, this one stands out quietly but confidently.
In a sea of predictable OTT content, this one stands out quietly but confidently.
Watching Nimma Vasthugalige Neeve Javaabdaararu on Sun NXT is like uncovering a softly glowing ember in Kannada cinema-a film that doesn't dazzle with spectacle but warms through subtlety, empathy, and psychological insight. The title-borrowed from announcements in bus depots and stations meaning "you are responsible for your belongings"-resonates across three loosely connected crime drama segments set in contemporary Bengaluru. Each story explores how attachment, whether to objects or to relationships, can spiral into insecurity, obsession, or betrayal. As the film unfolds, it becomes clear that these tales are less about theft and more about the emotional voids that prompt it.
Visually, Nimma Vasthugalige Neeve Javaabdaararu is a quiet marvel. Harsha Kumar Gowda's cinematography doesn't shout-it whispers. Yet each frame is deliberate, composed, and emotionally loaded.
Rohith and Rathna's segment shifts to warmer tones, with handheld shots and open framing. The visual texture feels alive, impulsive, just like their love story turned thrill ride. Natural light dominates, making the scenes feel voyeuristic, as if we're eavesdropping on private chaos.
The final chapter is stark and modern. There's contrast-shadow and sharp angles-enhancing the cold manipulation at play. Screens dominate the frame, suggesting surveillance and detachment. It's a digital noir for a new generation.
Rohith and Rathna's segment shifts to warmer tones, with handheld shots and open framing. The visual texture feels alive, impulsive, just like their love story turned thrill ride. Natural light dominates, making the scenes feel voyeuristic, as if we're eavesdropping on private chaos.
The final chapter is stark and modern. There's contrast-shadow and sharp angles-enhancing the cold manipulation at play. Screens dominate the frame, suggesting surveillance and detachment. It's a digital noir for a new generation.
Provoking "I didn't expect to be thinking about this film hours after watching it. Each story made me reflect on how materialism and emotions are intertwined. The performances are subtle, no overacting. It's not everyone's cup of tea - the pacing is slow and the endings are open. But for me, it worked. One of the better Kannada OTT films in recent times Dileep Raj totally carried the third story with class. I appreciated that the film didn't preach, but instead just showed people as they are. Very watchable."
Need support 💪 for this kind of experiments
Must watch 💯 definately a Narrative mosque.
Must watch 💯 definately a Narrative mosque.
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 2h 12min(132 min)
- Color
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