2 reviews
After watching the movie in IHC New Delhi it blow my brain with emotion and agony.It was really brave movie made after a long time which reflects the real pain and condition of those kids who were sold in the market as commodity and used like a trash.Very few directors can show these reality on the screen it looks so original and heart touching i amazed with the movie. But sad at the same time there is no support given to such a realistic movies at praise and award to sense less movies.
We must support Oass and such a realist cinema in India really brilliant.
We must support Oass and such a realist cinema in India really brilliant.
- sanjaytopwal-703-972167
- Jun 12, 2013
- Permalink
I came across OASS at the Cannes film festival,
I met one of the producers and he invited me to see the film in a small screening room. He said it was about the child sex trade in India, a tough topic but important.
I came in expecting a sad film but I was not prepared for what the film actually was like.
OASS grabs you from the very beginning and drags you through hell, it doesn't shy away from showing anything. Nothing is taboo for the film as it presents the true story of a girl growing up as a child prostitute in India.
A lot of inexperienced directors could have taken the story and made a very black and white film out of it with the heroes fighting the villains of the story, but the director Abhinav Shiv Tiwari knows that isn't the way life really is. The brothel owners are all horrifying to the girls and you feel real fear whenever they approach, but there are times amongst that where they show they are much more than that, and behave a lot like parents for the girls.
The best thing about the film is that it covers everything I could imagine would be relevant to the child sex trade in India, and for this it is a good film. However the reason I've given it 10 stars is because in the last fifteen minutes of the film there are two specific moments that knocked my breath away. I couldn't even breath in the cinema and I left the film with tears streaming down my face.
This is a film that needs to have been made, and a film that needs to be seen. It will be very controversial as it is screened around the world but it is talking about a very important topic that has never been discussed. It has to be the best film I have seen in the past 5 years.
When you experience this film and you'll understand what I mean.
I met one of the producers and he invited me to see the film in a small screening room. He said it was about the child sex trade in India, a tough topic but important.
I came in expecting a sad film but I was not prepared for what the film actually was like.
OASS grabs you from the very beginning and drags you through hell, it doesn't shy away from showing anything. Nothing is taboo for the film as it presents the true story of a girl growing up as a child prostitute in India.
A lot of inexperienced directors could have taken the story and made a very black and white film out of it with the heroes fighting the villains of the story, but the director Abhinav Shiv Tiwari knows that isn't the way life really is. The brothel owners are all horrifying to the girls and you feel real fear whenever they approach, but there are times amongst that where they show they are much more than that, and behave a lot like parents for the girls.
The best thing about the film is that it covers everything I could imagine would be relevant to the child sex trade in India, and for this it is a good film. However the reason I've given it 10 stars is because in the last fifteen minutes of the film there are two specific moments that knocked my breath away. I couldn't even breath in the cinema and I left the film with tears streaming down my face.
This is a film that needs to have been made, and a film that needs to be seen. It will be very controversial as it is screened around the world but it is talking about a very important topic that has never been discussed. It has to be the best film I have seen in the past 5 years.
When you experience this film and you'll understand what I mean.
- kasimirzierl
- May 27, 2013
- Permalink