- How does it turn out to be so calm? - I am at a different stage of grief than you, that's all. Tara learns that her husband, with whom they lived only 6 weeks after the wedding, in a severe accident, is in intensive care. In the hospital, she meets Shiv, who cares for his wife, who has been in a coma for almost a year.
A deep film that leaves a mark on the soul.
The surface of modernity, the “values” of a generation photographing food and gaining “friends” in social networks and the depth of the past, calmness, modesty and thoughtfulness.
The wicked selfish Tara and the virtuous thoughtful Shiv. What do they have in common? Woe. Grief that unites and destroys from within, grief that gives and takes away hope, grief that helps to find forgiveness and freedom, helps not just to look, but to see, to be grateful here and now, to appreciate the moments of your life.
Oddly enough, the subtitles did not interfere at all, but rather helped to perceive the actors’ play more holistically. And Kalki K and Nasiruddin Shah played great.
Maybe because I know what it's like to wait for your loved one to be in intensive care, maybe because the actors managed to convey all the pain and "stages" of grief, the film is very moving.
10 out of 10