Ghost Stories (2020) Hindi WEB-HD 1080p 720p 480p x264 AAC | DD5.1 | NF Film


Ghost Stories (2020) Hindi WEB-HD 1080p 720p 480p x264 AAC | DD5.1 | Full Movie | Download | Watch OnlineGhost Stories (2020) Hindi WEB-HD 1080p 720p 480p x264 AAC | DD5.1 | Full Movie | Download | Watch Online


Ghost Stories

2020 / 2h 24m
Genre: Drama/Horror/Thriller
Release Date: January 1, 2020
Director: Anurag Kashyap
Language: Hindi DD5.1
Quality: WEB-HD 1080p | 720p |  480p
Size: 2.5GB | 1.1GB | 400MB

::ScreenShots::

Ghost Stories (2020) Hindi WEB-HD 1080p 720p 480p x264 AAC | DD5.1 | Full Movie | Download | Watch OnlineGhost Stories (2020) Hindi WEB-HD 1080p 720p 480p x264 AAC | DD5.1 | Full Movie | Download | Watch OnlineGhost Stories (2020) Hindi WEB-HD 1080p 720p 480p x264 AAC | DD5.1 | Full Movie | Download | Watch Online


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Like your neighbourhood aunty, Hindi cinema doesn’t do horror. So it’s rather interesting to see four filmmakers who represent the broad spectrum of Hindi moviemaking, come together to experiment with a genre that the industry believes is best avoided.

But unlike 2018’s Lust Stories, and indeed, the filmmakers’ first anthology film together, 2013’s Bombay Talkies, Netflix’s Ghost Stories is an uneven and ultimately impotent affair. There are occasional moments of magic, especially in a couple of segments, but they’re inconsistent. It should be noted that none of the four filmmakers — Anurag Kashyap, Zoya Akhtar, Dibakar Banerjee and Karan Johar — has made a horror movie before. God knows Johar has scared audiences, but this time, he’s expected to.

Ghost Stories begins rather promisingly, though, with Akhtar’s technically impeccable short. Janhvi Kapoor plays Sameera, a nurse who’s assigned to look after a senile old woman, played by Surekha Sikri. For a filmmaker who’s expressed her apathy for horror, Akhtar does a splendid job of appropriating some of the genre’s most recognisable tropes — visually and tonally. Think of her film as an elaborate Halloween costume; you can’t deny the effort and skill that must have gone into making it, but in the end, it can’t help but feel slightly superficial.

The film is wonderful to look at — the creaky old Mumbai apartment, set against the backdrop of incessant rains, is intricately designed — and Akhtar does an excellent job of laying out the geography of the place. So when a noise wakes Sameera up in the middle of the night, we’re subconsciously aware of where it might have come from. Akhtar puts us in her protagonist’s shoes, allowing us to feel what she’s feeling, successfully sustaining dread in this age of jump-scare filmmaking.

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