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Land of the Gods

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Land of the Gods (2016)

September. 10,2016
|
7.2
| Drama
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After a long exile, Rahul returns to his village in the Himalayas. It causes commotion amongst the villagers, who have never forgiven him for his sins in the past.

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Reviews

Mjeteconer
2016/09/10

Just perfect...

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Humaira Grant
2016/09/11

It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.

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Lucia Ayala
2016/09/12

It's simply great fun, a winsome film and an occasionally over-the-top luxury fantasy that never flags.

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Mandeep Tyson
2016/09/13

The acting in this movie is really good.

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Vijay Kumar
2016/09/14

The movie is as fresh as the locale it was shot in.Performances so true and the dialogues just real.The dance sequence at the wedding was a treat to watch and relished the pure pure music and dance.Fantastic.Victor Bannerjee excels in each and every frame so does Shanti and the rest of the crew.This kind of cinema comes your way very rarely.Watch it for its essential emotion...Thanks Goran & respect the execution with so much detail.Thanks to the crew for their splendid effort..Vijay Kumar Rao Goa

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elzaholt
2016/09/15

In this cinematic poem, a renowned Serbian/Balkan director/screenwriter makes movie magic when he tackles the subject of an NRI returning to his homeland, the northern Indian state where the land meets the sky (the country of the gods, Dev Bhoomi). The courage of women and the stubborn traditionality of men, as well as an intractable caste system and the struggle for enlightenment, are depicted with clarity and tenderness. A guruji in a Himalayan ashram prompting his devotee not to judge but rather, to know and love human beings, is typecast with the purity and simplicity of life affirmation. The colors are as vivid and wholesome as the mountain air, and the music is beguiling though unsentimental, unlike the standard syrupy songs by Bollywood. The Uttarakhand Himalayas are oddly evocative, to those of us who are familiar with the Balkans, of the ruggedness of the Balkan mountains. In fact, the two locales seem to be linked by a peculiar sense of familiarity in regards to the terrain as well as the treatment of women and attitude towards tradition. Thus, the film seems imbued with a synergic connection between the Balkans and northern India. Dare I conclude that it is very well possible that Serbia is closer to India than to its next- door Hungary?

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