Goliyon Ki Raasleela Ram-Leela
Goliyon Ki Raasleela Ram-Leela
PG-13 | 14 November 2013 (USA)
Goliyon Ki Raasleela Ram-Leela Trailers

Ran and Leela are passionately in love with each other. The only problem is that their respective clans have been enemies for 500 years.

Reviews
Karry

Best movie of this year hands down!

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Evengyny

Thanks for the memories!

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Aiden Melton

The storyline feels a little thin and moth-eaten in parts but this sequel is plenty of fun.

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Mathilde the Guild

Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.

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vilontetoyou

Storyline: 7/10 Quality (colors, dancing etc): 9/10I also enjoyed the funny/ dirty lines

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ajaybaliyan

Sanjay Leela Bhansali is back with a blast with a Desi touch of Gujarat & Rajasthan.Deepika gorgeous as ever and Ranveer is improvising with every movie and going to be perfectionist in future.Each shot of movie is masterpiece and you can hang it like paiting in home.The movie reminded of Mudghal-E-Azam when compared to sets and the style.....I hope same with Padmavati also

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Dr Deena Padayachee

Ram-LeelaA review by Deena PadayacheeThe world celebrates Gujarat as the land that spawned Gandhi, perhaps the greatest human being that ever breathed: the person who helped change some of the ways in which the world thinks, behaves and is governed; the Indian who helped the world become a little more civilised.However we know that inter-religious violence has plagued this Indian state for hundreds of years. And we know that while Gandhi was a lawyer, many lawyers are rather different in the way they approach life, other people's human rights and the way in which behave towards their clients. So it was with a sense of puzzlement that I watched two rather childish gangs in this Gujerati town shoot each other down like modern day murderous cowboys. The director, Sanjay Leela Bhansali is a genius. He depicts these rogues, bullies and blood-thirsty villains with a panache and an exuberance that lights up the screen with blood, fire and brutality that is completely at odds with Satyagraha and all the Gandhian concepts that have made Gujarat world famous. It was quite clever to set this modern romance between people from feuding clans in a land which has spawned modern peace movements and has helped free the oppressed across the planet by using non violent means. This film shows another side to Gujarat. I have noticed that some of the South African Gujerati can be as harsh, and as loud and short- tempered as any other South African group, so the violence that wracked this village of gun-runners, smugglers, brutes and vicious gangsters was not entirely out-of-character. There was nothing peaceful about the way in which they resolved their problems.The flamboyance, the garb, the dance and the anti-establishment practises of these villains reminded one of the Roma whose vagabond behaviour and root-less life-style had brought them into conflict with nations across Eurasia. One remembers that the Roma migrated from North West India, ie from an area which includes Gujarat. By a strange coincidence, the Jewish Holocaust centre is hosting an Austrian specialist who will be speaking about the fate of the Roma in World War II on 19 Nov 2013. Ranveer Singh and Deepika Padukone are incredibly brilliant young actors and are at an incandescent peak with the calibre of their performances. I was in complete awe with the way in which they portrayed the loves and the lives of their characters. I have not been impressed by many of the younger Indian actors and I used to wonder what would happen once sensitive and top actors like Shah Rukh Khan, Kareena Kapoor and Preity Zinta were no longer available to portray young people. That anxiety is no longer there. There must be others who come from this great school of acting.The Ram-Leela film is simply in a class of its own. As with West Side Story and Romeo and Juliet, the protagonists come from feuding clans but the flavour here is completely Indian. The passion and the romantic repartee is simply entrancing and mesmerising.Rama and Sita were the couple that were split apart by Ravana who captured Sita. This couple fall in love virtually immediately when they meet. She wants to marry. He is puzzled. So soon? 'I've waited for you all my life,' she says. 'I am not going to wait any longer.' He has the girls chasing him while she has to get away from a silly, forced arranged marriage. When they come together again after one of their many enforced splits, she asks him why he has come back? There is far too much working against their union. His reply is a reply that any person who has been fortunate enough to be or have been in love will know. 'How do I keep away?' he asks. When Ram is asked what is so special about Leela, he says, 'At Holi, she did not throw colours at me, she kissed me; she did not give me her heart, she gave me her life.' This film is going to break all box-office records.The passion between the pair comes across as utterly authentic. Indian cinema is justifiably world-famous for the way in which it depicts romance, emotions and feelings, but this film is way up there with Veer Zara and Bhagban; this is a movie which is among the very best that this humid and red-hot land has produced.Everything about the film is superlative - from the calibre of direction to the quality of the acting to the script to the editing to the cinematography. You want to savour the thoughts, the poetry, the dance, the music the scenes, again and again and again – I cannot wait to get the DVD and go through some scenes again, slowly.What a movie! India has certainly arrived as a nation capable of producing the very best cinema that the world can ever hope to see. It is unique, magical and stunning.This film is absolutely first-class, and world-class! I find that Indian cinema simply gets better and better. The film runs for two hours and forty minutes but I must say that the editing was so good and the film was so magnificent that I barely noticed the passage of time as we moved from one fascinating and superb scene to the next.This is easily one of the best films that I have been fortunate enough to see this year.

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Arup Ghose

Ram Leela - an Indian take on the classic Romeo and Juliet, but I wouldn't even consider this an Indian take, but a full on Gujarati take! Bhansali has a habit of making a film look over the top - Devdas and Saawariya are both good examples, but now you can add Ram Leela to the list. The film is good, but yet it some scenes really do confuse you and if you lose concentration at any point of the film, you get lost. You feel like there's way too many characters but then again, the story required it. Everything is just way too glamorous, when it's obvious that there's no requirement for. As I said - a typical over the top Bhansali film. The major plus point of the film is the chemistry between Deepika Padukone and Ranveer Singh. Deepika is electric and you can't imagine anyone else in this role after seeing her. Ranveer is magnificent and is certainly an actor that is here to stay. He looks very much the part, and his on screen presence is fantastic. Whether or not they both have real life chemistry (it's likely they do), their on screen chemistry was perfect. Surpiya Pathak Kapur is a revelation and will surely be snapped up in more films in the future. Richa Chadda is excellent. She catches your eye in every scene she's in and will certainly leave you wanting more.The songs are very good, with my favorites being Lal Ishq and Lahu Mau Lag. In summary, Ram Leela is good, but not spectacular. Watch it for the Deepika-Ranveer pairing. Nothing else.

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