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Videos of hindi film horror: Dare to watch the scariest and creepiest films from India



Directed by Vikramaditya Motwane, this is one of the best thriller Bollywood movies on Amazon Prime. The movie was released on 17th March 2017 in India and was loved by the audience as well as by film critics. The plot of the movie is that Shaurya who is a call center employee wants to marry his girlfriend, Noorie.


Famously known as ZNMD, it is one of the favorite Bollywood films of all. Directed by Zoya Akhtar, the movie was released on 15th July 2011 and was a huge blockbuster. The movie is still loved for its cast, storyline, acting, and songs. The film highlights the story of three childhood friends, Imran, Kabir, and Arjun who decide to go on a three-week road trip after one of their friends gets engaged.




videos of hindi film



The movie won a lot of awards including the Best Film Award, Best Editor Award, and Best Production Designer Award by Asian Film Awards in 2012. Farhan Akhtar was awarded the best supporting actor award, while Hrithik Roshan was awarded the best actor award at Annual Central European Bollywood Awards, India 2012. The film gained 33 awards in total in different categories and all the cast members including Kalki Koechlin, Farhan Akhtar, Hrithik Roshan, and Abhay Deol received awards for the movie.


The film was highly praised by film critics and was the first Indian film to be premiered in the critics' week section of the 75th Venice International Film Festival. The movie was also screened at the El Gouna Film Festival, Morbido Film Fest, Nitte International Film Festival, Sitges Film Festival, Brooklyn Horror Film Festival, and the Screamfest Horror Film Festival.


It is one of the best Hindi movies on Amazon Prime in the action and thriller genre and was based on the character of the famous fictional detective Byomkesh Bakshi. Although the movie received mostly positive reviews from film critics, it failed to impress the audience. Its total box office collection was 50 crore rupees.


October is a one-of-a-kind movie that was released on 13th April 2018. It was directed by Shoojit Sircar and is considered one of the best Hindi drama films on Amazon Prime. The movie was praised a lot by the critics, and Varun Dhawan's performance got a lot of praise after the movie. Despite the great performance of the actors, the movie was a modest commercial success.


Shershaah is based on the life of Vikram Batra (an Indian military officer who got killed in the Kargil War). The film was released on 12th August 2021 and was a blockbuster. Directed by Vishnuvardhan and written by Sandeep Shrivastava, the movie covers the story of Param Vir Chakra awardee Indian soldier Captain. Vikram Batra killed the terrorists, defended Area Flat Top, and contributed to India's success in the Kargil war. He was an integral part of the Kargil War and was hit in the chest by an enemy sniper. After that, Captain Vikram Batra was hit by a Rocket Propelled Grenade that led to his demise.


The movie is one of the best biological war films and was loved by everyone. Amazon stated on 31st August 2021 that the movie had become the most-watched Hindi film on the platform in India. The movie received 31 award nominations, out of which it won 16 awards.


When we are talking about the best Hindi films on Amazon Prime, then there is no way we can miss one of the most epic Bollywood films ever made, and that is - Sholay. The movie was made around 47 years ago, but it's dialogue 'Kitne admi the?', and 'Holi kab hai?' are still remembered by everyone.


Directed by Ramesh Sippy, this epic action-adventure Bollywood movie was released on 15th August 1975. The movie is about a former police officer who wants to avenge his family's murder. For this, he hires two criminals who are best friends with each other - Jai and Veeru to capture the ruthless bandit Gabbar Singh. While on this mission, Jai falls in love with a widow Radha, while Veeru gets drawn to a talkative young lady Basanti. The movie is all about how Jai and Veeru capture the dacoit Gabbar. Sholay is considered one of the best Indian films and was ranked no. 1 in the British Film Institute's poll of "Top 10 Indian Films" of all time in the year 2002. It was even named the Best Film of 50 years by the judges of the 50th Filmfare Awards in 2005.


The movie received a lot of awards including Best Supporting Actor (Hindi) won by Amjad Khan, Best Art Director won by Ram Yedekar, and Best Cinematographer (Color) won by Dwarka Divecha at the Bengal Film Journalists' Award in 1976. It is an epic Bollywood film that must be watched at least once by everyone.


The movie shows the real struggles that students go through and the never-ending rat race that is prevalent in this world. It is a great Bollywood comedy movie that garnered a lot of appreciation from the audience and film critics. The movie became one of the few Bollywood movies to become successful in China and Japan and became the highest-grossing Indian film of the 2000s.


Chupke Chupke is one of the best Hindi films on Amazon Prime and is a remake of the famous Bengali movie Chhadmabeshi. The movie was released on 11th April 1975 and is still remembered for the epic duo of Amitabh Bachchan and Dharmendra. The movie is about a botany professor Parimal Tripathi who falls in love with Sulekha Chaturvedi, and later gets married to her. Sulekha admires her brother-in-law a lot for his wit and intelligence. So, Parimal Tripathi decides to take up the challenge of fooling her brother-in-law, which results in various humorous incidents.


This is regarded as one of the best Hindi films on Amazon prime and is loved for its songs too. All music is composed by S.D. Burman and the movie has some great songs like 'Ab Ke Sajan Saawan Mein', and so on.


Chak De! India is one of the best sports Hindi films on Amazon Prime that was released on 10th August 2007. The movie features the story of Kabir Khan, former captain of the Indian Men's National Field Hockey team who after losing to Pakistan is humiliated a lot. After seven years, he becomes the coach of the Indian National Women's Hockey Team and wishes to redeem himself by making the team win. However, the task seems near impossible as the 16 players have no unity. The movie shows the struggles of the coach and the players to win the championship trophy.


Rock On is one of the best musical drama films on Amazon Prime that was released on 29th August 2008. The movie was inspired by the South Korean movie 'A Happy Life' and was even archived at the Academy Film Archive library. The movie is about four best friends: Joseph Mascarenhas (Joe), Aditya Shroff (Adi), Kedar Zaveri / Killer Drummer "KD", and Rob Nancy who reunite to relive their glorious moments as a rock band.


Another Amazon Prime Video Indian original series, Breathe is the story of love and desperation. A father will go to any lengths, even to the point of murdering people, to save his son. Sounds all too familiar? Yeah well, it is the plot of multiple Hollywood films, including the famous Denzel Washington starrer John Q.


The video production and cinema emphasis readies students for a myriad of careers in fields ranging from motion picture, television and documentary film-making to commercial, corporate and web video production. Students will gain hands-on experience as they explore the elements and equipment necessary to create professional video and cinema projects.


Be sure to check out some of our student films shown at our Film Festival, Images in Motion, view our past awards won and our student run film studio 1901 Productions and student run media firm Millikin Creates.


passing as real. The most didactic among the fakes was Shashwati Talukdar's eight minute video My Life as a Poster (1995). The firstperson narration, about a girl whose family moves from India to the States after her sister is killed by her husband, is accompanied by images of Hindi film stars and overly-stylized, misty fades in and out of windows, gates, roads, and trees. After the screening, Talukdar explained the film as an ironic response to the pressure she feels as an Indian film maker to represent India. Several people then asked her to compare Indian and American judicial systems and to comment on Indian wife-killings. No further illustration of the distance between academic film theory and popular interpretation was needed (suggesting that people trained to read films might not always be trained to communicate). Similar problems confronted Marlon Fuentes, whose Bontoc Eulogy (1995), a seductive 57 minute black and white fl1m combining archival footage and short dramatic recreations, offers a first person account of the narrator's grandfather , who was featured in the 1904 World's Fair Filipino display. Though basic premise about the grandfather is true, Fuentes invented details and made creative use archival footage from many sources. For those who benefit from Fuentes' theoretical explanation of his work (offered at the symposium co-sponsored by the festival, the Center for Media Culture and History, and the Anthropology department at NYU), the film could be appreciated as an illustration of the "space ofoscillation" between the authenticity of history and the weakness of the film maker and the film process. But again, others take the film at face value, as straight documentary. Both of these ftlm makers suggested that their motives were to question documentary authority, but that authority often proves strong enough to cancel out their messages. The message was made more clearly by the least self conscious of the fakes, Pieter Kramer's 30 minute video Born in the Wrong Body (1995). Described in the program as "Offensive? Perhaps;' it tells ofa Dutch farmer who has an identity crisis and realizes, after many sessions with his psychiatrist, that he is a black African living in the body of a white Dutchman. Interspersed with interviews with the parents (who blame themselves) and wife (whose patience and love are being tested), the ftlm follows the farmer's attempts to becofu.e trans-raced: pigment treatments, lip broadening and nose-widening operations, hunting with a home-made spear in the backyard and cooking food in the garage, culminating in a move to a "reserve" in Africa where, we are told in a textual postscript, he was rejected as an outsider and sent back to Holland. Is it an inverted colonial fantasy, a sinister comment on assimilation, or a jab at identity politics? The premise of racial alteration is far from mBJournal of Contemporary African Art Summer/Fall 1997 new, but the deadpan presentation of the subject as what, for the first eight minutes, seems like a somewhat odd but basically believable documentary, jolts viewers with the shock of surpassing the suspension of disbelief. The fl1m could be dismissed as a tasteless joke (the characters are base parodies all round) or lauded as a critique of modern conceptions of identity. Either way, it was effective, and . American reactions are likely to be strong. Though many important ethnographic films have been made in Africa (by Jean Rouch, John Marshall, David and Judith MacDougall), the continent featured in few of this year's films (and Born in the Wrong Body does not count). There were two shorts by Senegalese film maker Ahmed Diop: Le Pirogue de rna Memoire (1994) and Abraham If Gorin aims to shock with his subject's frank statements about killing and death, the authentidty effect is lessened by the fictionalized scenes. As in many of et les Petits Metiers (1996), both U.S. premieres . The first is an autobiographical revery on Dakar's fishermen and their place in the film maker's childhood. The second is a portrait of a young man named Abraham who wants to be a classical opera singer. He says that he is mocked in Dakar, and must sell tissue packets to... 2ff7e9595c


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