Barfi!

Missouri 2022-03-23 09:02:05

Watching "Broken Life" some time ago changed my understanding of Indian films, and this time, "Barfi" made me appreciate the splendor of Indian films; a very wonderful film. A pure and romantic love story of a happy, mischievous, caring young man (deaf and dumb), and an autistic girl, Jhilmil, who begins with a very beautiful Shruti who loves him, but fails to get along with him in the end Doing the foreshadowing together reflects the reality of the current situation, environment, and temptation, which will easily drown your true feelings, make you lose important things, and make your life very tired; the music in the play is also very beautiful and very nice. (Although I don't understand the lyrics). There is also another feature: three lonely musicians interspersed throughout the play from beginning to end, and each plot transformation will appear; the helpless encounter of the thin-haired, big-bellied policeman and the happy mischievous guy form a sharp contrast to add to the plot. A lot of laughter; there are also some very familiar childhood play scenes, such as looking in the mirror together, spitting watermelon seeds, putting nails on the road to play pranks, etc.

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Extended Reading
  • Korbin 2022-03-28 09:01:04

    The old problem of Indian films is that they are too long, and the clues in the middle section can be used for another story. But it cannot hide the outstanding performance of the film itself in terms of camera and music. The performance of the male protagonist is particularly outstanding. There are some shadows of Master Zhuo, and the ending is even more regrettable and happy. In a word: Love must be complete.

  • Ivory 2022-04-21 09:02:23

    The magic of Ah San's movie is that no matter how vulgar the plot is, they can also match flowers to the soundtrack. French-Indian songs or something is too timeless... surprisingly good.