Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA 16-year-old girl embarks on a journey of life where she deals with understanding herself, the changing world, bullying, academic pressure and her transcending journey of first love.A 16-year-old girl embarks on a journey of life where she deals with understanding herself, the changing world, bullying, academic pressure and her transcending journey of first love.A 16-year-old girl embarks on a journey of life where she deals with understanding herself, the changing world, bullying, academic pressure and her transcending journey of first love.
Pruthvi Banwasi
- Principal
- (as Pruthvi Banawasi)
Avis en vedette
A wonderful movie with excellent direction wading through the complexities of a relationship between a young couple in the nineties. Depth, subtlety and realistic scenarios take you through the whole movie and you end up coming out content. A topic not explored in kannada cinema, atleast not in the way that has been portrayed in this movie. The lead characters do justice to their respective roles and take you through a nostalgic ride through your school days and that experience is worth it! Well done! Please appreciate quality cinema made by our Kannada industry and please watch the movie and appreciate their efforts.
Raw and beautiful love story. This is a cinematic gem. Free from artificial complexities, the story embraces raw emotions, touching the soul. The stellar cast delivers performances that feel destined for their roles, adding depth and authenticity. As scenes unfold with exquisite precision, the plot keeps you engrossed, while cinematography captures life's raw essence. A remarkable film that leaves an indelible mark, celebrating the pure and genuine power of love.
This film truly portraits the situation of a teenage girl living in a small suburb in India. The story and acting is so relatable that it feels like the reflection of every teenage kid living in similar context.
This film truly portraits the situation of a teenage girl living in a small suburb in India. The story and acting is so relatable that it feels like the reflection of every teenage kid living in similar context.
Movie is about journey of girl through her high school. This sticks to its core and do not divert from its main subject.The story flows so good and I could feel moments felt from school days .Seems slow but keeps me indulged 👍👍
This move has taken sandalwood industry to a next level, it's really a feather in the cap..the actors seems to have given their best..strong and connective story! I would suggest all movie lovers to watch this movie..and thanks for the whole movie team for their efforts to create a masterpiece movie..
A highly relateable film with occasional laughter. Gantumoote did not bore me for a single second. This certainly will be one of the 10 films between 2010 and 2020 I would recommend to my friends.
What I liked: 1. Female protagonist character who does not rely on oh-I-am-such-a-victim or radical feminist values. 2. Female protagonist who is not a female version of a regular male protagonist. (We have seen the latter happening). 3. Strong and mature character of Meera, in which strength and maturity are not defined by conventional standards. 4. The film isn't afraid to talk about child marriages in certain homes (you will know why I said it the way I said it, after watching the film. I don't have the the kind of balls the film has). 5. Nothing is on-your-face. 6. Attention to detail. Small things like having white number plate instead of yellow for public transport vehicles, and hiding 'BBMP' with trash props on a wall where 'By order - BBMP' was written, mattered. I would have liked it even better if BTS buses were shown instead of BMTC. 7. Meera's father gets way less dialogues than her mother, despite having similar screen time, quite like urban uncles of 90s. 8. Director's cameo. 9. The school has a cool teacher who makes total sense, again relateable.
Watch it before it goes out of theatres
What I liked: 1. Female protagonist character who does not rely on oh-I-am-such-a-victim or radical feminist values. 2. Female protagonist who is not a female version of a regular male protagonist. (We have seen the latter happening). 3. Strong and mature character of Meera, in which strength and maturity are not defined by conventional standards. 4. The film isn't afraid to talk about child marriages in certain homes (you will know why I said it the way I said it, after watching the film. I don't have the the kind of balls the film has). 5. Nothing is on-your-face. 6. Attention to detail. Small things like having white number plate instead of yellow for public transport vehicles, and hiding 'BBMP' with trash props on a wall where 'By order - BBMP' was written, mattered. I would have liked it even better if BTS buses were shown instead of BMTC. 7. Meera's father gets way less dialogues than her mother, despite having similar screen time, quite like urban uncles of 90s. 8. Director's cameo. 9. The school has a cool teacher who makes total sense, again relateable.
Watch it before it goes out of theatres
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 8 100 000 INR (estimation)
- Durée1 heure 55 minutes
- Couleur
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