Mastram Rating: 2.25/5
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Showing 5 Reviews
Mastram Hindi Movie Reviews
Ratings:2/5 Review By: Madhureeta Mukherjee Site: Times Of India (TOI)
Jaiswal's premise is different and daring; he bares the hypocrisies of a society that shames, silences and devours sex - all in the same breath (ahh!). Even the typography of the title symbolizes a male organ, but the film is far from pornographic. It's about the psyche and dilemma of a writer torn apart between art and erotica. The problem is the storytelling that's languid and uninventive for a subject so explorative. The story lacks stamina, and the background music drags the plot. The film that had a lot of potential, but what's missing is the 'woh wali baat'.Visit Site for more
Ratings:1.5/5 Review By: Prasanna Zore Site:Rediff
The 98-minute film moves at a languid pace for the first 30 minutes. Then Rajaram becomes Mastram and brings in the much-needed sexual energy into the proceedings, which sadly is the only selling point of the film. Bagga, as both Rajaram and Mastram, is a mixed bag of emotions. In some scenes he succeeds in bringing about the nuances of a novelist who writes porn to earn money. In others, he looks lost and unconvincing. Director Jaiswal, who wrote Gangs of Wasseypur, seems unable to make up his mind as to how to firmly hold the narrative.The result then is a film that fails to make you feel good.Visit Site for more
Ratings:1.5/5 Review By: Shubhra Gupta Site:Indian Express
The re-creation of an era, and why this series became so successful, which could have lent the film some heft, is wholly missing from the story. Those dying to watch ‘porn’ on the big screen – both the curious young ‘uns and the nostalgic middle-aged fans – will be disappointed. Better to access cached page views of Savita Bhabhi instead.Visit Site for more
Ratings:4/5 Review By: Mohar Basu Site:Koimoi
It is a risky film that arouses and amazes with its unique and unusual story. With writer’s block prevailing as a persistent problem, here’s a story that isn’t even remotely heard of. Mastram is a film that must definitely not be missed. It is a indulgent tale which makes for quite an unconventional watch. Requiring its audiences to remain consistently emotionally invested in the film, the narrative is alluring and fiddles with the sexual repression that is ingrained in the Indian psyche with the hypocrisy that plays an accomplice.Visit Site for more
Ratings:-- Review By: Nandini Ramnath Site:livemint
For Jaiswal, the very fact that he has peeked under the sheets and found a much-thumbed copy of a Mastram novel there is satisfying enough. No surprises into the nature of Indian sexual desire disturb Rajaram’s orderly journey, and Bagga’s limp performance makes the character even less interesting. There are only moments of the frisson that characterises humankind’s fascination with the verboten, conveyed more through Mastram’s language than the visuals of open-mouthed women waiting to spill out of their clothes at the slightest provocationVisit Site for more
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