IMDb रेटिंग
7.1/10
2.9 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
किशोरी मीरा क्लास टॉपर है, पर जब कक्षा में आया नया छात्र मीरा में दिलचस्पी दिखाता है, मीरा का ध्यान भटकने लगता है. वो अपनी माँ के बनाए नियमों को तोड़ देना चाहती हैं। पर क्या उसका यूं बागी हो... सभी पढ़ेंकिशोरी मीरा क्लास टॉपर है, पर जब कक्षा में आया नया छात्र मीरा में दिलचस्पी दिखाता है, मीरा का ध्यान भटकने लगता है. वो अपनी माँ के बनाए नियमों को तोड़ देना चाहती हैं। पर क्या उसका यूं बागी हो जाना सबको रास आएगा?किशोरी मीरा क्लास टॉपर है, पर जब कक्षा में आया नया छात्र मीरा में दिलचस्पी दिखाता है, मीरा का ध्यान भटकने लगता है. वो अपनी माँ के बनाए नियमों को तोड़ देना चाहती हैं। पर क्या उसका यूं बागी हो जाना सबको रास आएगा?
- पुरस्कार
- 21 जीत और कुल 30 नामांकन
Megha Aggarwal
- Tina
- (as Megha Singh Aggarwal)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Watched this at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival.
Filmmaker Shuchi Talati creates a beautiful, tender and complex story on exploring female sexuality, culture, and mother & daughter relationship with strong performances, great camerawork, and ambitious writing. Talati's writing and direction felt genuine, sweet and nature on capturing the characters interactions and personalities that were well-developed and interesting and approaching the themes and cultures of India with sweet tenderness and complexity.
The camerawork shooting in 4:3 aspect ratio felt purposeful and helped create the atmosphere of the setting. Many of the performances are really good and the characters are interesting as I felt genuine connection and investment to the characters. You are able to get engagement, connection and understanding of many of the characters and the mother and daughter aspects were strong. Good costumes and production designs throughout as well.
The only gripe I have is that I felt certain aspects were a little too long and could have been shorten.
Art-house India cinema is interesting as they are not something I have often seen but Girls Will Be Girls is likely going to be my newest favorite art-house India movie.
Filmmaker Shuchi Talati creates a beautiful, tender and complex story on exploring female sexuality, culture, and mother & daughter relationship with strong performances, great camerawork, and ambitious writing. Talati's writing and direction felt genuine, sweet and nature on capturing the characters interactions and personalities that were well-developed and interesting and approaching the themes and cultures of India with sweet tenderness and complexity.
The camerawork shooting in 4:3 aspect ratio felt purposeful and helped create the atmosphere of the setting. Many of the performances are really good and the characters are interesting as I felt genuine connection and investment to the characters. You are able to get engagement, connection and understanding of many of the characters and the mother and daughter aspects were strong. Good costumes and production designs throughout as well.
The only gripe I have is that I felt certain aspects were a little too long and could have been shorten.
Art-house India cinema is interesting as they are not something I have often seen but Girls Will Be Girls is likely going to be my newest favorite art-house India movie.
But to tell that, the film raises your expectations and slaughters them using its own hands. There's a nice group of actors, and a lucky handy teddy bear. But this is nothing new. And children nowadays experience such a phase much earlier in their lives. So while watching it, most of us can get a glimpse of some irrational delusions of the director.
I can understand it's compulsory to speak in English inside the institutions but the film itself here is the institution. Language matters a lot, and that's a reason why it can't reach out to many. Sometimes it feels like Bombay with mountains. Local dialect exist krta hai?
Anyways, makers should talk with students directly, make a nice use of their experiences.
Nice attempt, best wishes.
I can understand it's compulsory to speak in English inside the institutions but the film itself here is the institution. Language matters a lot, and that's a reason why it can't reach out to many. Sometimes it feels like Bombay with mountains. Local dialect exist krta hai?
Anyways, makers should talk with students directly, make a nice use of their experiences.
Nice attempt, best wishes.
Absolutely obsessed with Shuchi's work-what an incredible talent! I loved "Girls Will Be Girls" from start to finish. There were some truly scream-out-loud moments (I even got shushed in the theatre at Sundance London). The sharp social commentary on mother-daughter relationships was brilliantly executed (the chai scenes broke my wee heart). The 'realness' of young female sexual awakening (the teddy scene) was amazing as it's so rarely seen on screen! The characters were complex and relatable, making the story both engaging and thought-provoking. I can't wait to watch and analyze it all over again. The cinematography, in particular, was exceptional, capturing the nuances of each scene beautifully. Shuchi has truly crafted a masterpiece with this film.
The movie is well crafted and acted. All actors were nice and were able to evoke the right emotions in the viewers.
It took us back to our school days when we first time experience bully, sexual development and how to control it. We didnt knew.
I was into the movie, found almost all the technicalities to be near perfect. How the boy and girl meet and come together. Of course it was the pre smartphone era, how to they exchanged numbers and the intricate plan to call, I am sure it brought a nostalgic memory to so many 90s kinds. It really hit the right cord. Totally loved it.
In simple, its a story about how a girl in her school days discovers about her sexuality. I must appreciate the director and the writer for this movie.
It took us back to our school days when we first time experience bully, sexual development and how to control it. We didnt knew.
I was into the movie, found almost all the technicalities to be near perfect. How the boy and girl meet and come together. Of course it was the pre smartphone era, how to they exchanged numbers and the intricate plan to call, I am sure it brought a nostalgic memory to so many 90s kinds. It really hit the right cord. Totally loved it.
In simple, its a story about how a girl in her school days discovers about her sexuality. I must appreciate the director and the writer for this movie.
The coming of age process is different for everyone, and that's especially true for those of different generations. Those who underwent this rite of passage years ago, however, arguably may have faced more challenges and restrictions than what's present in these more liberated and open-minded times, and such individuals may be somewhat envious of the privileges that have been afforded their younger counterparts. That's very much the case with Anila (Kani Kusruti) and her teenage daughter, Mira (Preeti Panigrahi), who has (or at least should have) a comparatively easier time with this than her mother did. Nevertheless, Anila still expects Mira to conform to the rigid standards of her own youth, enrolling her in a strict Himalayan boarding school and hovering around her like an overprotective helicopter parent, particularly when she befriends a young man, Sri (Kesav Binoy Kiron), who becomes a budding - if severely restricted - romantic interest. Despite these constraints, though, Mira is supremely curious to clandestinely explore her emerging sexuality and female drives while at least superficially maintaining the image of propriety expected of a young Indian girl. Matters become further complicated, however, when Anila takes more than a passing supervisory interest in her daughter's new beau, a dynamic that produces added friction between mother and daughter. As if adolescence weren't complicated enough in itself, these circumstances raise the tension level inside the family household, in the relationship between the two youngsters and in the mind of someone who's trying to figure out her life under conditions fraught with confusion, contradiction, constraint and more than a few double standards. Writer-director Shuchi Talati's debut feature takes a nuanced, mature look at what can often be a baffling time of life, one that's made even more complex by the potent influences impacting it. The film tends to fizzle somewhat as it approaches its conclusion, almost as if the director doesn't quite know how to wrap up the story. But that doesn't hinder the production overall when it comes to covering some previously unexplored fertile ground when it comes to a subject that's often handled tritely and riddled with clichés. This recipient of two Independent Spirit Awards - for Kusruti's supporting performance and as a candidate for the competition's John Cassavetes Award - definitely makes a mark among 2024's releases, even if, as the premiere offering from a new filmmaker, it could use some shoring up at times. That aside, though, "Girls Will Be Girls" is an impressive start for a promising new auteur, one well worth streaming online. Indeed, through this work, audiences may never view the coming of age process in quite the same way ever again.
क्या आपको पता है
- साउंडट्रैकTake it or leave it
Written by George Robertson Mcfarlane, Mary Carewe
Performed by George Robertson Mcfarlane, Mary Carewe
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- दुनिया भर में सकल
- $17,156
- चलने की अवधि
- 1 घं 58 मि(118 min)
- रंग
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.44 : 1
इस पेज में योगदान दें
किसी बदलाव का सुझाव दें या अनुपलब्ध कॉन्टेंट जोड़ें