□ The 100 best feminist films of all-time □ The 50 most controversial movies ever made ❤ The 100 best romantic films of all-time □️ The 35 steamiest erotic thrillers ever made Written by Dave Calhoun, Joshua Rothkopf, Cath Clarke, David Ehrlich, Phil de Semlyen, Daniel Walber, Trevor Johnston, Andy Kryza, Daniel Walber and Matthew Singer So turn off the lights, light a candle, and let’s get it on. And sometimes, yes, it exists to be arousing. Sometimes it’s supposed to make you uncomfortable. On this list of cinema’s greatest sex scenes, you’ll find multiple examples where a roll in the hay is meant to convey more than just mere titillation – it’s part of the story itself. Well, allow us to offer a counterpoint – 101 of them, to be exact. It’s a flawed viewpoint, but in fairness, given Hollywood’s general shift away from showing sexuality on screen, it’s entirely possible that younger folks have simply never seen a good sex scene. The argument goes that sex scenes rarely add anything to the plot of a movie, nor develop characters, and exist simply to gratify the perv in the director’s chair and make the prudes in the audience squirm in their chairs. If you’ve followed the ongoing debate over sex scenes that’s carried out on social media over the last few years – and if you haven’t, well, congratulations – then you’ll know the one thing that unites progressive-minded zoomers and pearl-clutching conservatives is an aversion to cinematic boning. What Muslim Women Want: Overwhelming majority in favour of 21 years as legal age for marriageĦ7.We are living in puritanical times. WATCH: 35 crude bombs recovered from pond in Bengal's Murshidabad on repolling dayĭelhi's drainage system not designed to withstand so much rain, says Arvind KejriwalĪccording to a flood bulletin, the water level at the Old Railway Bridge increased from 203.18 metres at 1 pm on Sunday to 203.58 metres at 10 am on Monday. Over 8,035 Muslim women participated in the survey from 25 states and Union Territories India Speaks on UCC: Majority Muslim women in favour of common laws on marriage, divorce, inheritance Naqvi talking about the News18 UCC survey that showed that an overwhelming number of Muslim women in India want uniform laws on inheritance, marriage and divorce across age and education brackets NOTA, by and large, is enjoyable, racy and relevant to its time.Ĭongress, Opposition parties will split down the middle when UCC goes to vote in Parliament: Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi He is there in almost all frames and along with Nasser and Sathyaraj, the young superstar holds the film together. The film belongs to Vijay Devarakonda who has given a riveting performance. However, it lacks powerful dialogues and there are some loose ends in the script which should have been tied up. But the film does not turn preachy at any time. To a large extent, what Devarakonda and director Shankar want to convey is that you need big money to control and run a political party. In a way, it is a sarcastic dig at what has been going on in Dravidian politics in the last few years. In one scene, Nasser tells his MLAs not to bend too low showing servitude otherwise they will forget his face when his statue has to be built. Every major political incident that happened in Tamil Nadu has been weaved into the script – dynastic politics, hero-worship culture, Chennai floods, how news channels controlled by politicians whitewash their leader and create fake news, godmen manipulating political leaders, and resort politics to keep MLAs safe from poaching. By making Vijay Devarakonda lead the film, the director has made it more convincing and realistic. There is no romance or a leading lady in the film which also does not have any humour and mass action scenes. There have been films of the same pattern, but what makes NOTA different is that the director has not added any unwanted commercial ingredients. Once out of the hospital, Vinodhan wants to get his chair back and plans to bring down his son’s ministry. As Varun becomes strong as an able administrator (in handling the Chennai floods), his dad comes out of the jail but is caught in a bomb blast and gets hospitalised. He is helped by a journalist and commentator Mahendran (Sathyaraj, modelled on the late Cho Ramaswamy), who was once giving political advice to his dad before they had a fallout. But soon as the situation spirals out of control fuelled by an ambitious opposition leader and his daughter, Varun is forced to become a “Rowdy CM”. The idea is clear that Varun will only be a “dummy CM” till daddy gets bail. He makes Varun, who is not even a party member, as the temporary new CM. He runs his party with an iron hand but is convicted in an illegal assets case and has to go to jail. Varun (Vijay Deverakonda) is a London returned happy go-lucky guy and son of chief minister Vinodhan (Nasser), a former superstar-turned-politician.
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