Gullak Season 3 Review: Mishra Family’s Drama Fills You Up With Nostalgia Yet Again

The Mishras are back with witty anecdotes, intelligent humour and some unprecedented challenges in Gullak Season 3.
The Mishras are back with witty anecdotes, intelligent humour and some unprecedented challenges in Gullak Season 3.
Review of This is a Robbery: The World’s Biggest Art Heist, directed by Colin Barnicle. After dreaming for many years of visiting Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, I was surprised by its dour presence when I finally arrived on its doorstep. The original building presented a rather austere face to the world, its stolid facade […]
 For someone who enjoys watching women own the space and sail through it wearing very attractive clothes, this show is for you.
The show also touches upon several issues including infidelity and open relationships as a depiction of the changing times, without passing a judgement on either.
Gullak season two is a proof that even the most decent budget can give way to beautiful art – it is the creators’ imagination and the artists’ performances that matter the most.
Brigerton goes beyond just showing us pretty ballgowns, but its stock characterisations, skin-deep conversations on race and one extremely disturbing nonconsensual sex scene makes up for quite some blind spots.
There is an unnecessary emphasis on erotic scenes, a majority of which neither serve any purpose nor are shot well, making you wonder why soft-porn is being paraded off under the garb of historical fiction.
Can socially enlightened men who stand up for feminism forget to apply the same concepts in their own lives? Can a professional, outspoken woman be a victim of domestic violence in the confines of her home?
Dark comedy is not something that is widely explored in Indian TV shows and Black Widow does a great job in nudging the genre ahead in this country.
Bhaag Beanie Bhaag stars Swara Bhaskar, Dolly Singh and Ravi Patel, and follows the journey of a woman who dreams of becoming a stand-up comedian.