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Movie Review: Minimalist thriller ‘Hallow Road’ lets your imagination run wild
Bollywood

Movie Review: Minimalist thriller ‘Hallow Road’ lets your imagination run wild

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

There are scary movies where everything is fleshed out, where filmmakers and craftspeople show a nightmare in all its horrifying detail. In those kind of films, jump scares and reveals can even be a relief, allowing the tension and anticipation to deescalate so you can move on to the next thrill.

Movie Review: Minimalist thriller ‘Hallow Road’ lets your imagination run wild

Filmmaker Babak Anvari’s “Hallow Road,” in theaters Friday, is the opposite. Written by William Gillies, “Hallow Road” is the kind of minimalistic thriller that knows that sometimes all you need to do is establish the right mood and your audience’s imagination will take it from there. It is all ambiguity and escalation, and relief is not in the cards.

The film begins at 2 a.m., panning across a leafy forest floor to a bloodied sneaker on the ground before cutting to a long, eerie shot inside a family home, where dinner has been left out on the table, and glass has been broken and only partially cleaned up. Then the frame goes back to the woods again with fragmented shots of lights in the trees. It’s nearly six minutes of this scene-setting before we meet any characters or are given any information about what’s going on.

As if that’s not enough of a disorienting entry into this world, it’s followed with a one-sided phone call. Maddie accepts a call from Alice , her university-age daughter who left their house abruptly after a fight, taking her father Frank’s car. Before Maddie can get much information, the calls cuts off. When they speak again, the situation has changed: There’s a been a wreck, and another person is hurt, possibly dead.

There’s a lot of confusion as the stress of the situation escalates. Frank keeps asking Maddie to put Alice on speakerphone. Maddie is trying to get information from a panicked Alice. We feel Frank’s pain in only getting part of the story, but, thankfully for everyone, Maddie does finally cave to speakerphone when they start driving to the scene — a remote forest some 40 minutes away. And we have no choice but to go on this journey with them as they navigate their own issues, ideas about how to help their daughter in this situation, what exactly caused the fight to begin with, and Maddie’s very tense attempt to coach her daughter through emergency CPR while they wait for the ambulance to arrive.

“Hallow Road” is partly about the mystery of what’s happened and what will happen — there is even a bit of a folklore element introduced that makes everything that much creepier and more confusing. You might even wonder from time to time what kind of film you’re actually watching — I think the clever trick of “Hallow Road” is that it can be different things to different viewers. In many ways, it’s also about the real nightmare of being a parent and not knowing what to do. The impulse may always be to protect, to shield, to minimize the consequences in that moment, but what are the long-term implications of that? Frank and Maddie both have different theories about the correct way to handle this horrible situation and both are right and wrong — and then there is the hysterical teen on the other end of the line.

The film plays out in near real time and its confined setting of the car recalls the Steven Knight thriller “Locke,” though a little less glossily cinematic. But that’s also OK since there’s plenty of visual interest in the faces and performances of its very compelling leads and smart script. One could imagine it being staged as a play.

It’s hard to discuss too much about what transpires in “Hallow Road” without spoiling its surprises. But ultimately, it’s an effectively minimalistic thriller that leaves much room for interpretation and debate, and a good option for anyone looking for something creepy to watch this Halloween without the gore.

“Hallow Road,” an XYZ Films release in theaters Friday, has not been rated by the Motion Picture Association. Running time: 80 minutes. Three stars out of four.

This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

October 29, 2025 0 comments
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Cricket in L1
Lifestyle

Meet the Kolkata artists who are igniting our imagination

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

While Kolkata earned its sobriquet City of Joy from Dominique Lapierre’s 1985 novel that captured the resilience of its people, the storied city holds treasures far beyond – of art, culture and a timeless creative spirit. It’s a land of thinkers and of hands that shape beauty. Steeped in rich history and cultural heritage, the city has long inspired dreamers. We speak to designers, jewellers, and artists from Kolkata who are igniting our imagination – and our feeds.

Shreya Ghosh, Viraj Khanna and Ayushman Mitra

Viraj Khanna, Artist

Fascinated by striking moments from everyday life, Viraj Khanna, son of designer Anamika Khanna, translates them onto canvas through vivid hand embroidered imagery. For his collages, the 30-year-old reflects on the never-ending chase for perfection. These become the blueprints for his sculptures, which invite one to embrace imperfection with grace. For Viraj, no place inspires like Kolkata. ‘There is such an eclectic blend of tradition and modernity here – from the dazzling puja pandals to heritage architecture! It’s a city brimming with imagination, and our karigars have as much to teach you about life as they do about craft,” he says.

Ayushman Mitra, Fashion Designer and Artist

With his daak naam, Bobo, Ayushman Mitra is celebrated for blending art and fashion into designs steeped in psychedelic fantasy. A painter since childhood, Bobo translates his canvas into wearable art through his label, Bobo Calcutta. “The eyes you often see in my work, along with other recurring motifs, are drawn from Goddess Durga. She inspires me every day,” says the 36-year-old. For Bobo, Kolkata is both muse and beloved home. “The city offers endless artistic energy, with karigars whose hands move as if guided by the divine. What makes Kolkata unique is the harmony in which people of different faiths live and create,” he says.

Shreya Ghosh, Jewellery Designer

After 15 years in Mumbai’s fashion world, Shreya Ghosh returned to her roots in New Alipore, Kolkata. There, she turned her gaze to West Bengal’s famed joroa work – a unique blend of vintage British jewellery aesthetics and Indian craftsmanship – and felt the need for reinvention. Traditionally loved by Bengali brides for its gold vines, flowers, leaves and seed pearls, joroa finds a bold, edgy expression in her label, Goddess of Glocal. “I wanted to marry joroa with modern aesthetics to make it relevant for the fashion-forward,” says the 36-year-old. For Shreya, the city’s greatest gift is its creative spirit. “From childhood, we are encouraged to paint, sing, sculpt, and dance. This tapestry of artistic pursuit is a blessing,” she says.

Arka Patra, Photographer

A non-conformist in every sense, Arka Patra has built a visual language that is as unrestrained as it is deliberate. Trained as a mechanical engineer, he abandoned convention to pursue photography. His lens dismantles long-held perceptions with images that challenge and provoke. Arka’s work often draws inspiration from the Pre-Raphaelites, the 19th century art movement, marked by luminous colour and meticulous detail. “My gaze is coloured by Kolkata’s socio-political and cultural landscape, as well as the riverside town I grew up in – the historic Chandannagar, with its echoes of Indo-French architecture. I doubt I could ever bring the same authenticity to my work if I had lived elsewhere,” reflects the 31-year-old.

Monalisha Manna, Jewellery Designer

Monalisha Manna left behind an engineering career to chase her passion, launching the silver jewellery label Earthaments. The 31-year-old celebrates the rich tribal culture of West Bengal through designs with a modern edge. ‘Growing up in Kolkata meant being surrounded by art in its purest form. The colonial layers merging with Bengal’s own aesthetics shaped my world – whether it was heirloom jewellery or the textures of Kalighat roads,” she says. But above all, it is the women of Kolkata who she loves the most. “Fierce and fearless, they embody the Divine Mother. Their strength, resilience, and grace inspire every piece,” she says.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Ghostface Killah Taps Into the Power of Imagination
Music

Ghostface Killah Taps Into the Power of Imagination

by jummy84 August 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Last year, Ghostface Killah told Rolling Stone that he was disappointed by the rap landscape, lamenting, “A lot of stuff be regular darts.” He added, “I don’t hear niggas doing storytelling no more.” His thoughts went viral, even becoming the catalyst for an additional conversation with Stephen A. Smith. While bemoaning a “lack of substance,” he declared, “We’re the type of niggas that can rhyme about an eyeball falling out your face, and having the police pick it up and put it in a plastic bag.”

He said “we,” but it feels like only Ghost would concoct that scenario — off the cuff, at that. Ghost has long been a rap surrealist, imbuing one of hip-hop’s most no-nonsense scenes, gritty New York rap, with a streak of vibrance and borderline whimsy. Only someone still in touch with their inner child could rap about a pimpin’ version of SpongeBob Squarepants like he did on “Underwater,” from his 2006 album Fishscale.  

Supreme Clientele 2 rides the energy of his impassioned call for more creativity. He’s attempting to lead by example on a project with song concepts, skits, and lyrical highs reflecting someone that still loves making rap music. To be clear, Supreme Clientele 2 isn’t the masterpiece that the original 2000 album is. But there are plenty of credible rap fans who will argue you down that no other album is as good as Ghost’s id opus. This project, like his Wu-Brethren Raekwon’s Only Built 4 Cuban Linx 2, proposes that it doesn’t make sense to rate a sequel in terms of whether it’s as good as its decades-old precursor as much as how successfully the original concept was done justice. 

A million rappers have rhymed about being raided by the feds like he did on “Iron Man.” But few would follow that up with this visual: “I threw my raps in thе fireplace, then right out of the smoke rose a dead man/He had big chains, sick frame, sick flames/Even had a white glove with him, thought he was Rick James.” At his best, Ghost straps listeners in on an 80 mile per hour rollercoaster featuring locked-in co-stars like M.O.P. (“Sample 420”) and Nas (“Love Me Anymore”), and cinematic details like putting kids in a bathroom and distracting them with Cheetos before a gunfight, as he does on the crime caper “Georgy Porgy.” 

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On “4th Disciple,” he evokes his classic verse on Wu-Tang Forever’s “Impossible,” while depicting himself trying to revive his friend Taj. On “The Trial,” he comes together with Raekwon, GZA, Method Man, and Reek the Villain, who all play different roles in a fictional trial. It’s a standout track of the Wu’s later years that speaks to the sonic ingenuity that Ghost has said was lacking in current hip-hop. “Metaphysics” feels the closest to the original Supreme Clientele’s spirit, where he’s rhyming free associatively over a sparse breakbeat with horn hits then opens the second verse dishing, “I could put my mama face on the pancake box.” Like some of Ghost’s most memorable moments, it’s unclear what he’s getting at, but the phrase is so vivid and comedic that it just works. 

He’s similarly colorful on “Breakbeat,” where he spits rapid-fire over a pair of Eighties-style drum loops, rhyming, “Dodgin’ bullets while I’m guardin’ the base like Steve Garvey.” The attrition on his vocal cords is apparent throughout the album, including on this track, and it affects how cleanly his once flawless flow unfurls. But he’s still tearing through bars on the self-produced song. He follows that up with the more conversational “Beat Box,” where he’s flirtatiously rhyming back and forth with Aisha Hall over a Dougie Fresh-inspired composition. After those two overt Eighties tributes comes his lead single “Rap Kingpin,” where he and Scram Jones link Rakim’s “Check Out My Melody” with remnants of Supreme Clientele standout “Mighty Healthy.” Kudos to whoever imagined those two melodies blending as seamlessly as they do here. The song is another example of hip-hop’s capacity for cross-generation conversations — could we get a Rakim remix? 

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That said, the 22-track album has moments that it could’ve done without. “Soul Thang” runs long without him in the second half of the song. “Candyland” also doesn’t feel necessary, with his bar “Bill Cosby, K.O. roofies, this for the groupies” being a disturbing clunker. And while his “Pause” skit is a funny and self-deprecating take on fragile masculinity, his Dave Chappelle-featured ”Sale of the Century” skit is marred by a contestant on the track’s fictional game show who regressively boasts about waking up and slapping his wife in the morning. Sure, Ghost has his creative license to put that in a skit without anyone attributing it directly to him, but the skit was funny without joking about spousal abuse. 

Overall, in line with Slick Rick’s and Raekwon’s recent albums, which were also a part of Mass Appeal’s Legend Has It series, Ghost gives it all he has in 2025 over golden-era-evoking breakbeats and a mesh of soul and funk samples from his youth. No, it’s not a one-of-one monument of impeccable poetics like the original, but what is? It’s invigorating to hear and see the effort Ghost put into Supreme Clientele 2, one of the most imaginative, outrageous listens of the year.

August 26, 2025 0 comments
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