-
Monica 2022-03-20 09:01:32
Spicy is really good 7...
-
Brain 2022-03-20 09:01:32
Sunny pawar's performance is so good that I think the devs are overshadowed. The Indian part is great but it's a bit slow, and the Australian part feels mindless at the end. The two mothers hug at the end. It's so touching and amazing. Sheru is hindi for LION ( Dev is so handsome I almost want to...
-
Jesus 2022-03-20 09:01:32
The stark contrast between India and Australia always feels strange (white left Madonna superiority? Western middle class superiority? ... Chinese are no strangers to the theme of lost children, this film looks awkward (the characters are all positive, but from the The lighting to the story structure is too deliberate? I think it is not as good as "Dear", but it may also be because one starts from the parents' point of view and the other starts from the child's point of view. I can't watch...
-
Wilfred 2022-03-20 09:01:32
The idea of the film is very good, no matter when and where, people's search for the root and the resonance of love are the only and eternal common language of mankind. But the movie is just so-so, focusing too much on the confusion and struggle of the male protagonist, making other parts of the movie seem boring; it also makes other characters except the male protagonist become cannon...
-
Domenick 2022-03-19 09:01:04
The neat composition of the rule of thirds throughout the text; flashbacks of memory correspond to real scenes, bridges, mountains, water, trains, the editing is calm and majestic; the story of finding the roots is very simple, there are many tears, and two emotional lines are looking for a lost mother Only in the process of experiencing the real "mother"'s love. Dev played a similar role to slumdog millionaire, and perhaps he himself has always been eager to explore that...
-
Louisa 2022-03-19 09:01:04
The director used many long shots to show the coast, desert, and railway tracks of India, which made the audience watch this work as if following the protagonist's mental journey, and also felt the 25 years since the protagonist was away from home. The most touching thing is the brotherhood between Saroo and his brother Guddu. They climbed the train together, walked the train track together, and walked through the countryside together. The beginning and the end echo each other, which is warm...
-
Geovany 2022-03-19 09:01:04
#LFF# First of all, I really have to admire the vision of spicy and spicy films. I took the director’s debut for three films in a row, and I didn’t go to the street. Although the characters in this film are very tasteless, it may be for the next time with the director. Partial cooperation to lay the foundation? But is such a lively Mala really too cute? Anyway, this movie doesn't have much shine, but everything works, as the first...
Lion Comments
-
Kasey 2022-04-22 07:01:07
Best one I've seen recently
It is no exaggeration to say that this is the best I have seen recently. The whole film is full of family, touching, emotional, and has a sense of substitution. You can experience every inner tangle of the male protagonist. The warm scene at the beginning of the film made me nervous. I thought that...
-
Melany 2022-04-22 07:01:07
Expect slightly bigger
7.5 is a little high. I watched it in the cinema at the time, and it seems that I have seen a wrestling (forgot the order), and I thought I had underestimated the Indian movie, so I tried to watch it. People, the film's narrative level is conventional, and the emotional presentation is not done...
-
Lucy: [Saroo goes into the kitchen to get a beer. On the way back, he sees some Jalebis, a fried Indian desert, on the counter in a plate. A memory takes him back to his childhood with his older brother, Guddu. He smells it and takes a bite slowly as his girlfriend Lucy comes beside him] Saroo... You OK?
Bharat: [a male dinner guest comes into the kitchen also and places his hand on Saroo's back] Saroo?
Saroo Brierley: I'm not from Calcutta... I'm lost.
-
[discussing how to find Saroo's family]
Dinner Guests: What paper trail?
Saroo Brierley: My mum could not read or write.
Dinner Guests: What did she do?
Saroo Brierley: A labourer... she carried rocks.