The Hungry Stones
- 2017
- 17m
IMDb RATING
8.6/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Neel, an ambitious businessman, has bought a crumbling palace to transform into a luxury hotel. He fails to realize that the stones come to life each night, engulfing anyone that dares to tr... Read allNeel, an ambitious businessman, has bought a crumbling palace to transform into a luxury hotel. He fails to realize that the stones come to life each night, engulfing anyone that dares to trespass.Neel, an ambitious businessman, has bought a crumbling palace to transform into a luxury hotel. He fails to realize that the stones come to life each night, engulfing anyone that dares to trespass.
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Featured reviews
Perfect
I've learned about it and studied it. It's absolutely true. I even saw it and realized it was perfect! Good according to me. If you people see this then you will know how much truth is there in it and how important it is to see this. When I googled it I found out that it is very true. I would say to everyone that you should know, see and read about the country.
10atuksl
Movie review
This movie is really good and full of excitement.it has lot of suspense and thriller.i really loved watching this movie.every aspect of the movie is worth watching.cast story graphics sound everything was perfect well.i have watched the movie 3 times so far and didnot get bored even single time.go and watch it.
Good movie
A haunting, poetic, and psychologically rich film, The Hungry Stones beautifully brings Tagore's eerie short story to life. With Tapan Sinha's masterful direction and a compelling performance by Soumitra Chatterjee, it stands as one of the finest Indian supernatural dramas of its era. A must watch movie.
Very good
The narrative is both a sports drama and a patriotic tale, blending themes of courage, unity, and resistance. Gowariker's direction is masterful, turning a three-hour-plus film into a gripping and emotionally charged experience. The cricket match, which forms the film's climax, is brilliantly executed-every ball and every run filled with tension and triumph.
Great
Here's a 300-word movie review for a fictional film I'll title **"Shadows of the Past"**:
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"Shadows of the Past" opens with a chilling glimpse into loss and regret. The story revolves around Anna (played with restrained intensity by Emma Dawson), who returns to her childhood hometown after the sudden death of her father. Once full of youthful promise, the town now feels haunted-by memories, unresolved relationships and the ghost of a forgotten tragedy. Director Marcus Lee uses long takes and muted colours to evoke the eerie stillness of memory, where time moves slowly and nothing is quite as it was.
Dawson anchors the film with a performance that balances quiet grief and simmering anger. When she confronts her old friend Michael (Jason Martin) and her estranged mother, Helen (Carmen Rivera), the tension crackles-small silences speak volumes. The screenplay, by Lydia Hart, excels in its subtle character work: it never rushes to explain the past, instead letting the viewer gradually assemble what happened from flickers of conversation and distant glances.
Visually, the film is compelling. Cinematographer Nina Patel frames the dilapidated house, the overgrown garden, the rusted swing set as characters in their own right-symbols of neglect, of memories left unaddressed. The pacing is deliberate, even slow, which may frustrate some viewers expecting brisk action, but it serves the central theme of what happens when we fail to move on. Composer Daniel Cho's haunting score weaves through the scenes, adding a layer of melancholy that lingers beyond the credits.
Where "Shadows of the Past" falters is in its final act. The revelation of the central secret feels slightly less surprising than hinted, and a few plot threads remain under-explored. Even so, by the time the credits roll, the film has delivered a quietly powerful meditation on grief, memory and redemption. For those willing to sit with its slow burn, it offers something emotionally rich and visually thoughtful-a film that doesn't shout but invites reflection.
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"Shadows of the Past" opens with a chilling glimpse into loss and regret. The story revolves around Anna (played with restrained intensity by Emma Dawson), who returns to her childhood hometown after the sudden death of her father. Once full of youthful promise, the town now feels haunted-by memories, unresolved relationships and the ghost of a forgotten tragedy. Director Marcus Lee uses long takes and muted colours to evoke the eerie stillness of memory, where time moves slowly and nothing is quite as it was.
Dawson anchors the film with a performance that balances quiet grief and simmering anger. When she confronts her old friend Michael (Jason Martin) and her estranged mother, Helen (Carmen Rivera), the tension crackles-small silences speak volumes. The screenplay, by Lydia Hart, excels in its subtle character work: it never rushes to explain the past, instead letting the viewer gradually assemble what happened from flickers of conversation and distant glances.
Visually, the film is compelling. Cinematographer Nina Patel frames the dilapidated house, the overgrown garden, the rusted swing set as characters in their own right-symbols of neglect, of memories left unaddressed. The pacing is deliberate, even slow, which may frustrate some viewers expecting brisk action, but it serves the central theme of what happens when we fail to move on. Composer Daniel Cho's haunting score weaves through the scenes, adding a layer of melancholy that lingers beyond the credits.
Where "Shadows of the Past" falters is in its final act. The revelation of the central secret feels slightly less surprising than hinted, and a few plot threads remain under-explored. Even so, by the time the credits roll, the film has delivered a quietly powerful meditation on grief, memory and redemption. For those willing to sit with its slow burn, it offers something emotionally rich and visually thoughtful-a film that doesn't shout but invites reflection.
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