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Rangrezz Movie 2013

Rangrezz is an upcoming Hindi film directed by Priyadarshan starring Jackky Bhagnani, Priya Anand, Rajpal Yadav and Amitosh Nagpal in the lead roles. Rangrezz is a Hindi remake of Tamil hit film Naadodigal, which has already been remade in Telugu, Malayalam and Kannada.After a gap of over fifteen years filmmaker Priyadarshan and Santosh Sivan have come together for this film. The film is produced by Vashu Bhagnani and releases on March.
Rangrezz is an upcoming Hindi film starring Jackky Bhagnani, Priya Anand, Rajpal Yadav and Amitosh Nagpal in the lead roles, directed by Priyadarshan.
The film is produced by Vashu Bhagnani and releases on March 21, 2013
Rangrezz Movie were doing something special for release their music.Rangrezz movie Crew planning to have the music launch of their film in Dharavi.Rangrezz music will be special in also their music.

It`s explained of which good friends are family members you select on your own, `Rangrezz` is really a film about companionship in addition to enjoy! Starring Jackky Bhagnani in addition to Priya Anand, the film`s been recently directed simply by Priyadarshan. `Rangrezz` furthermore signifies the comeback connected with Priyadarshan in addition to Santosh Sivan after having a gap connected with 15 several years.

Rangrezz (2013) Free

Snitch: The Rock in a Hard Place


Cast :Dwayne Johnson, Susan Sarandon, Barry Pepper

 Story :Inspired by true events, the film is about a father whose teenage son is wrongly accused of a drug distribution crime and is looking at a mandatory minimum prison sentence of 10 years. Desperate and determined to rescue his son at all costs, he makes a deal with the U.S. Attorney to work as an undercover informant and infiltrate a drug cartel on a dangerous mission- risking everything, including his family and his own life.

The likeable Dwayne Johnson tries so hard to be taken seriously in the ponderous and preposterous drama Snitch that it hurts to watch him in much the same way it hurts to watch the weightlifting competition at the summer Olympics. Playing John Matthews, a squeaky clean small-business owner in the construction trade who improbably goes undercover in the drug world to save his son, Johnson struggles to heft emotions into the air, pauses to be admired, and then drops them with a thud. The former professional wrestler and football player
 makes a more convincing Tooth Fairy than he does an avenging father.
But Snitch wasn’t going to be good no matter what Johnson did; it is so poorly directed that even Academy Award winner Susan Sarandon, playing a shrewish federal prosecutor, comes off as a hack straight off a soap opera. Director and co-writer (and longtime stuntman) Ric Roman Waugh seems to be enjoying a new career as a director of one-word titled flicks (his last was Felon; his next, Currency) that deal with an ordinary Joe being oppressed by the government’s unfair laws. If Snitch makes a case for anything other than action sequences that utilize shiny new semis—Waugh shoots John Matthews’ 18-wheeler plowing through obstacles as if it were a magnificent elephant on a freeway rampage—it is the
easing of drug laws so that nice young men like John’s son Jason (Rafi Gavron) aren’t derailed on their way to college.
(Read: Dwayne Johnson’s plans for the future.)
Poor Jason. One day he’s sitting on the couch Skyping with a friend who wants to send him a package of drugs and resisting mightily, even though gee, it would be fun to do some Ecstasy with his girlfriend. He has about five seconds to drool over the clutch-purse-sized package of MDMA that arrives some days later, before his face is being pressed into asphalt and an undercover agent (Barry Pepper, sporting a goatee that would embarrass even Brad Pitt) is leading him off to prison. Pressured by the DEA, his buddy gave him up. According to Jason’s gloomy attorney (David Harbour), mandatory-minimum sentencing for that many pills is 10 years. “Are you out of your mind?” shrieks Jason’s mom Sylvie (Melina Kanakaredes). “He just got accepted into college!”
Sylvie is John’s first wife: Tired, resentful, muttering about layoffs as she comes in the door for her first scene. His new model, Analisa (Nadine Velazquez from Flight) has a smoother complexion and such unnaturally puffy lips that she has a hard time throwing words out over them. Both of them are presented as essentially hysterical unhelpful women who let John do all the hard work in rescuing young Jason. And what work it is. His hopes of sweet-talking the feds into downgrading Jason’s sentence are dashed in his first encounter with nasty Joanne Keeghan (Sarandon). But somehow he persuades her that he can bring in a drug dealer or two since he’s in the construction business and employs ex-cons.


(Read: Mary Pols on Johnson’s Journey 2: The Mysterious Island )
The felon on his crew, Daniel James (Jon Bernthal, who gives Snitch’s only credible performance), gets roped into making introductions even though he’s trying hard to go straight. Soon, John is transporting drugs in his big rigs and getting into the kinds of situations that cause other characters to make
observations like “he’s way out of his depth.” Drug runner Malik (Michael K. Williams from Boardwalk Empire) thrusts his gun at John, watches him blanch and is quickly satisfied he’s not a cop. “If you was the po-po you’d be the biggest p—- pig I’d ever seen.” Then he strokes his rosary beads. Did Waugh tell Williams to
channel his inner Brando, stroking that cat in The Godfather, as he set up this scene? It’s tired, awkward and empty. The logical lapses mount as the movie goes on, until in the last scenes, absolutely no effort is made to address why a dying man conveniently cooperates, or how a boy is both kidnapped and saved.
Visually, the movie is all over the place. While Waugh allows us full, loving glimpses of say, the grill of John’s car, or the gleaming hulk of that semi, when it comes to people having deep, painful conversations, we get fractions of faces.
When John
owns up to what an absent dad he’s been to Jason, in an emotional talk over the prison telephones,
we see mostly backs of heads. There’s some handheld camera work, but only at precisely the moment when there’s action you might want a decent look at. Things we don’t need to see, like John looking through old job applications to find someone who checked the felony conviction box, get far too much attention. And then there are the prop and costume clichés. The bad guy clutches a rosary. Daniel puts up his hoodie whenever he’s feeling criminal. During a visit to Daniel’s apartment, the dialogue takes a back seat to car alarms and police sirens. In his quest for gritty authenticity, Waugh has fussed over the details but  his version of the underbelly of drug dealing looks like a knock-off. It’s not seamy, it’s silly.

Snitch Official Trailer #1 (2013) - Dwayne Johnson Movie HD

 



Dhoom 3 (2013) | Movie Review, Trailers



Dhoom 3 (2013) 

Dhoom 3 (English: Blast 3) is an upcoming Hindi action thriller film, written and directed by Vijay Krishna Acharya and produced by Aditya Chopra. It will be the third installment of the popular Dhoom series.
Abhishek Bachchan, Uday Chopra will reprise their original roles, while Aamir Khan will play the negative role and Katrina Kaif will play lead actress. Jackie Shroff will also feature in a cameo appearance in the film. The first promo of the film will be releasing with Yash Raj’s Next on Nov 13, 2012. It is the first Bollywood movie to be released in Dolby Atmos surround sound. 

Dhoom 3 will release in Christmas 2013 on 25 December 2013 in regular 2D and IMAX formats.

Directed byVijay Acharya
Produced byAditya Chopra
Screenplay byVijay Krishna Acharya
Story byAditya Chopra
Vijay Krishna Acharya[1]
StarringAamir Khan
Abhishek Bachchan
Katrina Kaif
Uday Chopra
Music byPritam
StudioYash Raj Films
Distributed byYash Raj Films
CountryIndia
LanguageHindi

Dhoom 3 (2013) Latest Movie Theatrical Trailer