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Ghya Chang Fou

Ghya-chang-fou literally means 'suddenly beheading' in Bengali. it features thirteen unnamed people gathering in a mansion filled with archaic objects to celebrate what appears to be a communist revolution. Nothing seems real, roads open up to improbable places, places lead to impossible elevators, elevators lift people to unconvincing roads. Bacchanalian spirit steadily overtakes the initial deadpan seriousness. The encore of celebration sounds delusionary as the drunken conversation about communism, about its methods and means, about it intricate turns through history degenerates to bourgeois nonsense and decadence leading to absurd rifts, comic conflicts, unleashed orgies and debauchery.

Ghya Chang Fou

8.5 2017
LAKSHYA By Killhous3

Set entirely within a fictional cinema of the Killhouse franchise, the film unfolds as a performance for the viewer rather than a conventional narrative. Through advertisements, trailers, intermissions, and commentary, the audience watches a movie as it is being watched—self-referential and deeply personal. At its center is Neil, a man confronting the failure of art, identity, and intention. Guided by an intimate narrator and a sequence of evocative images, Neil undergoes an internal transformation, finding solace in a community of like-minded people. Yet the connection proves insufficient. His deeper longing is for absolute unity to dissolve the self and become one with the world. This impossible ideal is embodied by Siya and Shesha, figures representing infinity, idealism, and paradox. In questioning art, belonging, and perfection, the film embraces irony as its core truth: meaning emerges through failure.

LAKSHYA By Killhous3

10.0 2026
Rudraksh

Good and sinful are two sides of a same coin. If good grows in strength so does evil. Finally there comes a point when one must overcome the other. Dr. Gayatri (Bipasha Basu) is an Indian American paranormal researcher at University of California, researching esoteric practices like voodoo, spirit possession, magic and healing powers. She seeks the hidden knowledge that goes into such practices, the knowledge that cannot be explained by science or logic. Her search for answers brings her and her team of scientists to India. In India she comes across an uncommon man named Varun (Sanjay Dutt) who is gifted with special intuitive and healing powers which he claims to have developed through meditation. He can affect people's minds through his mental powers. He is a blend of Indian philosophy and modern culture, a master at martial arts and a devotee of Lord Hanuman. He heals people by absorbing their pain. He worships and trains by day, while working as a bouncer at a club by night.

Rudraksh

3.8 2004
Navashakthi Vaibhava

Ramkumar and Shruthi who make lot of oaths for the betterment of their children (Master Ramprasad and Kumari Arpitha) and once the children become a pair of very talented singers, they forget everything about their promises. It is only when the kids suffer through a crucial illness that they are reminded of their oaths and the couple set out on a pilgrimage along with their children to all the nine goddesses – Kollur Mookambike, Badami Banashankeri, Mysore Chamundeswari, Belgaum Yallamma, Horanadu Annapurneshwari, Katilu Durgaparameshwari, Annamma Devi of Bangalore, Shringeri Sharadambe, Gokarna Parameshwari. There are also villains in the film in the form of the other family members who are bent upon killing the children.

Navashakthi Vaibhava

NR 2008