Friday, July 15, 2011

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (2011/TS) XviD AC3-P2P






Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (2011/TS) XviD AC3-P2P | 1.46 Gb
Russian | TS, XviD | avi | 720x304, 1650 Kbps | AC3, 128 kb/s (2 ch) | 1h 56 mins | 1.46 Gb
Genre: Action | Adventure | Drama








http://malluparadise.com/forums/showthread.php/34390-Harry-Potter-and-the-Deathly-Hallows-Part-2-(2011-TS)-XviD-AC3-P2P

Tournament (2010) - DVDRip - XviD - AC3 5.1 - Esubs



Movie Info:


Duration.........- 02:04:56
Avg Bitrate......- 1855 Kb/s

Audio Format.....- AC3
Bitrate..........- 448 Kb/s
Channels.........- 5:1
Sampling Rate....- 48000 Hz
Video Format.....- MPEG4
Resolution.......- 640x272
Frame Rate.......- 23.976 FPS
Subtitles........- English














Karayilekku oru kadal dooram (2011) - 1CD - DVDRIP - x264 - MP3






Christian Brothers (2011) - DVDRip - x264 - AAC 2.1 - Esubs [DmE]





Release Notes.....- 903 MB
Duration..........- 03:00:16
Bitrate...........- 701 Kbps

Audio Format......- AAC
Sampling Rate.....- 24000 Hz

Video Format......- x264
Resolution........- 640x288
Frame Rate........- 23.976 FPS
Subtitles.........- English



















Chappa Kurishu (2011) (Theeye Theeye) - Single Track




Directed by Sameer Thahir
Produced by : Listen Stephen
Written by : Sameer Thahir | Unni.R
Cast : Vineeth Sreenivasan | Fahad Fazil | Roma Asrani
Music by : Rex Vijayan
Cinematography : Jomon T John




001 Theme song
002 Theeye Theeye



Exclusive Review : Harry Potter & Deathly hallows 2





RATING - 4.5 / 5





Fourteen years, seven books, eight movies, billions of dollars in profit and an incalculable amount of affected imaginations all lead up to one point. Numbers might help define J.K. Rowling‘s Harry Potter franchise for some, but true fans know that emotion is best way to quantify the impact of the series. The mere words “Harry Potter” can elicit emotional reactions specific to the characters and the series, and help recall experiences we’ve shared with the story over the years.

The release of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 marks the emotional climax of an era and is laden with almost insurmountable expectations. Unless Rowling decides otherwise (and she might), this film could very well be the final piece of the Harry Potter canon. So does Deathly Hallows Part 2 live up to the hype? I’m happy to say it does.

Before we get into the film, I feel a little bit of personal Potter context is needed. Harry Potter is a series that I’ve been a fan of since the beginning. Even though I was in college when the series began, I was endlessly entertained and fascinated by Rowling’s world. These books were not just for kids, and reading the first few helped fill a void the Star Wars prequels could not. I’d attend midnight releases of the books, read them greedily, then line up to see the movies opening night. Family and friends all joined in my passion as I passed the books along. To further extend the connection, the first film – Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone – was actually one of my first on-camera video interviewing experiences. Suffice to say, Potter holds a special place in my heart and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 was my most anticipated film of the past several years.

It left me feeling very, very happy indeed.

If you haven’t seen Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1, watch it now. It’s required viewing. Director David Yates and screenwriter Steve Kloves have no interest in playing catch up. Deathly Hallows Part 2 begins – even before the Warner Bros. logo – right where Part 1 left off. However, instead of immediately jumping into the action, the film takes a slow, methodical, even stoic approach at the start. We’re dropped back into the world fully aware this is the calm before the storm.

One spectacular – albeit semi-rushed – action scene later, the story finally returns to Hogwarts. Yates and composer Alexandre Desplat mark the occasion by invoking John Williams‘ now iconic themes and fans of the series will will began to get weak at the knees. Yates evokes that nostalgia throughout the film in an attempt to raise the stakes by reminding us that the whole world – not just Harry, Ron and Hermione – is affected by this hunt for Horcruxes.



From there, Deathly Hallows Part 2 is basically an action-packed, physically-draining sprint towards the inevitable finish line. When it does take the rare, extremely important detour, adrenaline is replaced by heartache.

That pacing is both the film’s biggest strength and greatest flaw, though. Because we’re moving so fast, major moments tend to feel tacked on or glossed over. Yates beautifully punctuates some of the iconic, signature moments but as well as those work, others are equally disappointing. For a fan, it’s easy to forgive these faults because we’re so engrossed in the story – which is my personal stance – but it’s a totally valid criticism to say Yates misses the mark on occasion.

Another criticism fans familiar with the source material might excuse are the spots where Deathly Hallows Part 2 is too faithful to the original text. Several crucial, but weird, scenes from the book remain untarnished and, after seven films, could seem out of place. Fans will love them and say Yates didn’t want to go off book, but in contrast there are other cases where he not only goes off book but actually improves on Rowling’s text. The movie foreshadows and clears up some of the more confusing story elements and presents a more exciting climactic confrontation than Rowling’s. Much as the audience will choose what to love and hate about the film, Yates himself made some questionable choices. His biggest choice though, one the studio was certainly a big part of, was to post-convert Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 into 3D. The effect is unnecessary, but rewarding and cool nonetheless. Pick your poison.

Finally, when the foot comes off the gas pedal and we know the end is near, that’s when Deathly Hallows Part 2 really shines. This is an important film in many ways and as an audience member you feel that towards the end. The emotions are layered on thick, and while it fades to black much sooner then Peter Jackson did with Return of the King, it’s obviously reaching for that level of Oscar-winning gravitas. It doesn’t totally succeed, but it does enough to be extremely gratifying.

Whether you’ve been a fan of the books and movies for years, or only know Potter’s story from the silver screen, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 doesn’t disappoint. Non-fans might find it strange at times, but ? They shouldn’t have come to a seventh sequel in the first place. This movie is the close-enough-to-perfect cherry on top of a franchise that will be remembered for years to come. It’s ripe, beautiful, and you’ll be sad – but satisfied – when you’re done with it.

'Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara' : Movie Review (Must Watch movie for youth)




Cast: Hrithik Roshan, Farhan Akhtar, Abhay Deol, Katrina Kaif, Kalki Koechlin
Directed by Zoya Akhtar



Rating: 3.5 / 5


Films dealing with life-altering epiphanies are always shot in stunning locations. And Hindi films dealing with the same, need a stunning cast as well. A possible rationale: beautiful places relieve stress and bring things into perspective. And beautiful people experiencing divine realizations can hold your perspective on the screen, often resulting in a 'ka-ching' sound at the box office. 'Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara' (ZNMD) is one such film.

In true 'Hangover' meets Vikas-Krishna-Barcelona spirit, the film deals with a bachelor adventure marinated with stories of finding, losing and forgetting love. Kabir (Abhay Deol), an affluent construction tycoon is about to take the marital plunge. But not before he completes a much-postponed trip with school buddies, investment banker (and constantly grumpy) Arjun (Hrithik Roshan) and freestyle flirt Imraan (Farhan Akhtar).

So, the boys with biceps shoot off to Spain, a land where sunny means a summery glow and not sweaty and stinky, much like an AC studio in Mahalaxmi. Now, the deal is that each would pick a secret adventure sport and the others would have to join him at it.

The problem arises when Kabir's fiancé, poisonously possessive Natasha (Kalki Koechlin) lands up in Spain suspecting a wild orgy (don't get your hopes up, there aren't any). Soon, Kabir takes over as grumpy and Arjun finds hope underwater, as spunky skiing instructor Laila (Katrina Kaif) shows him corals and also offers morals like 'seize the day' and 'live in the moment for you could die tomorrow'. These prophetic pearls of wisdom (from the rough draft of Guzaarish 2?) pierce through Kabir and he realizes how he cherishes things besides money. On Arjun's exaggerated revelations, Imraan remarks, "Ek hi dubki mein zindagi ke saarein raaz khul gaye? Tujhe toh underwater hi rehna chahiye." But then Imraan only spends his screen presence saying and doing things that would be considered unacceptable or just down-right silly in adult society.

The film isn't as simplistic as it seems and each character has a back story and internal conflicts that surface intermittently between thrill-seeking stunts, sugary love, drunk talking and some seriously childish pranks. What is aesthetic in this film apart from the charming Spanish countryside is that scenes which would usually be served with heightened melodrama are quite well contained and subtle, yet convey the emotion.

The music is hummable but the choreography usually finds Abay Deol playing the part of 'Senorita'. Farhan's comic timing is immaculate but his shayari is cocaine-infused and like a soft murmuring background score it could lull you to sleep. Kalki is deliciously annoying as her character required her to be and Katrina's performance doesn't make or break this film. The film's overall humour quotient is not very high and is mostly situational and there are usually more people laughing on the screen than in the audience.

In a tasteful manner, ZNMD has managed to do for Spain, what 'Dil Chahta Hai' did for Goa, beautifully selling the beaches, babes, tomatoes, tortillas and thrilling adventure sports. Spaniards should only be cautious that this tourism AV doesn't do to their country what the malls did to the mills of Lower Parel.