14 episodes

The Indian Express brings you a new weekly podcast about movies and shows where our hosts Rohan Naahar and Sampada Sharma from the Indian Express’ entertainment desk unpack the bizarre web shows, old Hindi films that haven't aged well, and the terrible truths of blockbusters that earned crores.
To know more log on to indianexpress.com/audio or write to us at podcasts@indianexpress.com

Movie Police by The Indian Express Express Audio

    • TV & Film

The Indian Express brings you a new weekly podcast about movies and shows where our hosts Rohan Naahar and Sampada Sharma from the Indian Express’ entertainment desk unpack the bizarre web shows, old Hindi films that haven't aged well, and the terrible truths of blockbusters that earned crores.
To know more log on to indianexpress.com/audio or write to us at podcasts@indianexpress.com

    Introducing Pages from the Past: The Reluctant Princes

    Introducing Pages from the Past: The Reluctant Princes

    The Southern state of Travancore was one of the first among the princely states to refuse accession to the Indian union. It wanted to remain independent, but things changed after an assassination attempt on the dewan of the state, Sir CP Ramaswamy Aiyer. In this episode, historian Manu Pillai and renowned painter and descendant of the Travancore royal family, Rukmini Varma join us to tell us more about the story of the state’s integration.

    Hosted by Adrija Roychowdhury and Damini Jaiman
    Edited by Damini Jaiman
    Mixed by Suresh Pawar
    Editorial Support: Shashank Bhargava

    Listen to all five episodes on the Indian Express://indianexpress.com/audio/pages-from-the-past/
    Or download The Indian Express app:
    iOS link: https://apps.apple.com/in/app/indian-express-news-epaper/id506351833
    Android link: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.indianexpress.android&hl=en_IN&gl=US&pli=1

    • 30 min
    The panopticon experiment in 'Do Ankhen Barah Haath'

    The panopticon experiment in 'Do Ankhen Barah Haath'

    In this last episode of Movie Police, our hosts Rohan Naahar and Sampada Sharma bring us the 1950s "Do Aankhen Barah Haath" in which a jailer conducts an experiment on six prisoners. Our hosts talk about how the movie tried to address the prison system but failed to make the audience root for it due to its problematic storylines.

    • 27 min
    The high human and moral cost of 'Cheap Thrills'

    The high human and moral cost of 'Cheap Thrills'

    In this episode hosts Rohan Naahar and Sampada Sharma bring us the black comedy horror "Cheap Thrills" by E. L. Katz. The film is about a rich couple pitting two down-in-luck friends against each other and giving them challenges. Whoever wins the challenge, gets handsomely rewarded by the couple. But where will the challenge take them? What happens when the rich couple's "cheap thrills" starts getting costlier and costlier and what does that say about morality, class question, and society as a whole?

    • 21 min
    'Fight Club: Members Only' is a film not worth fighting for

    'Fight Club: Members Only' is a film not worth fighting for

    In this episode, our hosts Sampada Sharma and Rohan Naahar bring us the 2006 "Fight Club: Members Only". They talk about how the movie, starring Sohail Khan, Zayed Khan, Ashish Chaudhary, Ritesh Deshmukh, Sunil Shetty and others, is about a group of college-going men whose egos are as fragile as their punches.

    • 23 min
    You probably don't know about this Alia Bhatt film (and that's a good thing)

    You probably don't know about this Alia Bhatt film (and that's a good thing)

    In this episode hosts Rohan Naahar and Sampada Sharma bring us Mahesh Bhatt’s 2020 film “Sadak 2” starring Alia Bhatt, Sanjay Dutt, and Aditya Roy Kapoor. Our hosts discuss how the film tried to continue Sanjay Dutt's journey from the first "Sadak" but failed miserably. They also point out how the director, Mahesh Bhatt, forgot his own daughter to make space for Dutt who wasn't even part of the main storyline.

    • 24 min
    In Kunal Kohli's "Mujhse Dosti Karoge", beauty is skin deep

    In Kunal Kohli's "Mujhse Dosti Karoge", beauty is skin deep

    In this episode, hosts Sampada Sharma and Rohan Naahar, talk about the 2002 film "Mujhse Dosti Karoge", directed by Kunal Kohli and produced by Yash Raj Films and enlisted actors like Rani Mukherjee, Kareena Kapoor Khan, Hrithik Roshan, and Uday Chopra. Our hosts discuss how the movie is situated in an aesthetically pleasing world where beauty is as skin-deep as the film's storyline.

    • 31 min

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