The most iconic of child stars and America's truest sweetheart, Shirley Temple passed away on February 10. We pay a tribute.
'It might not be supercalafragilisticexpialidocious, sure, but at least it points us in that direction,' Raja Sen says after watching Saving Mr Banks.
Abhay Deol shoots himself in the foot by acting in (and, inexplicably, producing) this monstrosity called One By Two that sucks all the goodwill out of an actor we usually like, writes Raja Sen.
Strange Fruit will never quite sound the same again, says Raja Sen after watching 12 Years A Slave.
Salman Khan does his thing like only he can in Jai Ho. And the crowd responds. Raja Sen shows us, in his review.
'David O Russell delivers an over-the-top film in his dynamically striking style,' says Raja Sen about Oscar frontrunner American Hustle.
Oscar nominations 2014: According to Raja Sen, this year's chosen ones are (mostly) loud and showy examples of the best in the craft.
Raja Sen looks back at all the 'genuinely thrilling' films and artists that were honoured at the 71st Golden Globes.
Raja Sen feels Dedh Ishqiya is a genuinely smart film.
Inside Llewyn Davis is a fantastic film, feels Raja Sen.
The 3D version of Sholay is tedious and feels like a classic novel being turned into a children's pop-up book. But Raja Sen recommends this cult classic for a taste of how good the Indian entertainer can truly be.
Dhoom 3 is a children's film made for children who've never seen a film, writes Raja Sen.
It is a spread so full, rich and varied it'd satisfy most cinematic gluttons.
'He was the manliest of them all, a true man's man. Warrior, King, Pioneer, Thespian, Womaniser, Drunkard, Scoundrel -- he made it all look grander than ever, and he did so with fluent effortlessness.' Raja Sen salutes the great actor who passed into the ages on Sunday.
Raja Sen says What The Fish is an abysmal effort.
According to Raja Sen, Goliyon Ki Rasleela Ram-Leela is an overplotted, bloody mess.
Ashutosh Gowariker's new film has a nice romance, but the history seems to get in the way.
Director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra on how his Rang De Basanti has become a catalyst for India's youth.
The 1960 epic continues to enthrall unlike any Indian film ever