Lets see if the film manages to stay as slick as the trailer, writes Raja Sen.
This is not a film worth recommending, says Raja Sen.
This movie might involve the most 'acting' Khan has had to do in a while, says Raja Sen.
Sarbjit does indeed deal with a story worth telling, but does so in the most obvious and uninspired fashion, writes Raja Sen
In a world now over-stuffed with comic-book movies, X-Men: Apocalypse is far from being the finest movie yet may well rank among the most comic-booky, feels Raja Sen.
Emraan Hashmi and director Tony D'Souza try hard, and their effort shows. But Raja Sen wishes he could have said the boys played well.
The film's mechanics and motivations are laughable, says Raja Sen.
Raja Sen can't wait to see Raman Raghav 2.0.
One Night Stand isn't yet another tawdry skin-flick; it actually has something to say, feels, Raja Sen.
A Marvel film so good it makes all the others feel like a prologue, gushes Raja Sen. (Also, stay for the two end-credit scenes.)
This is a list of his films that would work wonders for any generation lucky enough to see them on the big screen.
Prince, remembers Raja Sen, snuck his way into an underage brain and sparked off deliciously inappropriate thoughts in style.
Take a bow, Shah Rukh Khan, raves Raja Sen.
Raja Sen has just watched the teaser of Sachin: A Billion Dreams a few times over, and he can't stop grinning.
This is a trailer dripped in testosterone but, for a change, Khan is bringing more than just muscles to the part, feels Raja Sen.
Take the kids you know (and the kid within you) and go watch The Jungle Book, Raja Sen advises.
Is this a Manoj Prabhakar biopic? Because Hashmi seems to resemble that middlebrow bowler much more than he does the disgraced India captain, writes Raja Sen.
Raja Sen hated Batman Vs Superman: Dawn of Justice and debates his reasons with Satyajit Chetri, who totally loved it.
In this film the Ka -- as in the Ka-poors, who act in the film -- are okay, it is the Ki -- as in Bal-Ki, who directs it -- who stumbles rather badly, feels Raja Sen.
Are the National Awards are bending over backwards trying to celebrate popular cinema, simply in order to gain more relevance and eyeballs, asks Raja Sen.