Saturday, March 27, 2010

Watch Online Julie Latest Tamil Romantic Movie 2010 Trailer Download Free Review Cast and Crew Photos MP3


Julie Tamil Romantic Movie 2010

Cast And Crew
Cast: Sanjay Kapoor,Neha Dhupia,
Priyanshu Chatterjee ,Yash Tonk,
Achint Kaur,Anil Nagrath,
Kiran Kumar,Dinesh Hingoo
Director: Deepak Shivdasani
Producer: N R Pachisia
Music Director: Himesh Reshammiya
Release Date: 19 Mar 2010
Genre: Romance
Language: Tamil
Certification: A

Plot :
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The Story : Julie movie is based on the character Julie(Neha Dhupia). After being badly let-down by boyfriends both at home in Goa and in Mumbai, Julie decides to use her natural assets and becomes a successful call-girl.free Julie Tamil Kollywood Film.India Film The film Directed by Deepak Shivdasani.
A chance encounter with well-to-do Mihir away from her work leads to a deepening relationship, a proposal of marriage, and meetings with his family. Julie realizes she now has the problem of how best to tell him about her secret profession.

Julie Tamil Movie Review :
Here's a tale of a hooker that hooks you. Go with open eyes and mind and you will come away an enriched person from this elevating film about a fallen woman.
Catch her if you can. She's Julie. A nice wholesome impish girl from Goa who ends up in five-star hotels of Mumbai peddling, in the words of the film's excellent dialogue writer, "a woman's most effective weapon" - her body.
There have been many films on an unsullied woman's journey into the arms of corruption - some outstanding, others mediocre, and then the rest plainly exploitative.
Deepak Shivdasani's film falls in a different, refreshing and often startling niche.
The segmented plot - tautly written and worded - takes the protagonist through three phases in her life, all qualified by a male presence.
In the way the men in her life define her odyssey from purity to damnation, "Julie" is structurally akin to Shyam Benegal's "Bhumika". The cerebral serenity that was affordable to Benegal is, alas, denied to Shivdasani.
His cinema addresses itself to an audience that's neither intellectually equipped nor inclined to be patient with the polemics of a grossly unequal social order where a woman's right to her body and mind is constantly reliant on the male order.
For all its extraneous and intrinsic limitations, "Julie" succeeds in packing in a rousing punch.
The expertly plotted narrative manages to include cutting comments on the commodification of a woman's body and soul, and on the media exposure of private emotions - Achint Kaur excellently portrays the dilemma of a TV anchor.
Director Shivdasani, so far not renowned for any extraordinary skills of sensitivity, keeps his narrative miraculously free of verbal and visual sleaze.
There are long lovemaking sequences replete with wet smooches. These appear more aesthetic and mature than the clumsy love scenes filmed on the call girl (played by Rekha) in Basu Bhattacharya's "Astha".
Far from being offensive in its attitude to sex, "Julie" actually turns around to become a scathing women's picture. The suffering of the protagonist in a masculine, predatory world echoes the greatest films on female resilience - from Nargis in "Mother India" to Shabana Azmi in "Bhavna".
Shivdasani, openly enamoured of our great women's pictures, even squeezes in a tribute to Raj Kapoor's "Bobby" when Neha Dhipua opens her door to love with besan in her hair, a la Dimple Kapadia.
Dhupia lacks the experience and emotional range to furnish her fertile role of feminine power with that extra edge of the screen greats. Nevertheless, she manages well, delivering moving monologues in key places, for instance after her go-getting lover Rohan's (Sanjay Kapoor) betrayal, or in her final plea for a sex worker's right to dignity when on live television Julie says: "Your mothers and sisters are at home. Why can't I be with them?"

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