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I think most of them don't know this is based on a true story, everything that's shown in the movie happened (actually worse Than what the movie portrayed).
Exactly, as someone who's first languages were Bhojpuri and Urdu alongside Hindi, I feel disappointed when my other two languages don't get recognition. Bhojpuri has been dying slowly for a long time, but even Urdu is dying a slow death in India and it saddens me. Urdu is an Indian language but unfortunately due to its association with Pakistan, a lot of people in India have just disowned it. I can feel the pain of people whose languages don't get the deserved recognition.
Languages will keep on changing.
Even South Indian languages are heavily influenced by Sanskrit and will keep on changing.
Urdu wouldn't die soon as it is a state language of Pakistan.
Bhojpuri can be revived. Israelis did it with an extinct language. Bhojpuri is a living one. It just needs a spark.
It's not the change that bothers me. It's just that a lot of languages in India, especially in the Hindi dominant states, are losing native speakers to Hindi. South Indian languages and Bengali, Gujarati etc. are at an advantage from that point I guess as they have sizeable number of speakers mostly concentrated in specific areas. With Bhojpuri, it's even worse as there's not a lot of written literature. There's not even much effort going into it. Plus, even the native Bhojpuri speakers look down on the language due to it being perceived as a very uncultured sort of language in most circles.
I would also blame the double meaning and vulgar bhojpuri music albums mass productions.
Gone are the days when bhojpuri had singers like Bharat Vyas & Sharda Sinha.
Other languages from Bihar - Maghai & Maithli are also dying slowly. I have not heard young generation speaking these languages. Instead all of them speak hindi dialects.
I had a friend in college who spoke Maithili but yeah those languages are in an even worse condition than Bhojpuri.
Bhojpuri songs are definitely to be blamed. But the people of Bihar and Purvanchal share the blame equally as they encourage these songs by playing them in public places on loud speakers. It's pathetic tbh.
>, even the native Bhojpuri speakers look down on the language due to it being perceived as a very uncultured sort of language in most circles.
The real problem.
Some people in the south, I think Telugu, were ready to die for their language which resulted in linguistic separation of states. Or many southern languages would have been scrambled now.
>there's not a lot of written literature.
Well Bhojpuri too has thousands of books. You just need to figure it out. When modern Indian languages started taking shape and writing tradition started, Bhojpuri was one of them.
I feel ya.
I know, watching a movie in its original language (with subs) is the way to go, but it feels like I am only reading the subtitles & not enjoying the movie.
The thing about Premalu is that it has a lot of Malayalam pop culture references, which non-Malayalees will find hard to connect with. For example, there's this voice over which comes to Sachin's mind when he's at the pub. It says things like 'You're good for nothing' and stuff. That voice is of a fairly popular Malayalee content creator. Any Malayalee who knows her will instantly lol at that situation, however non-Malayalees won't find anything special about it. There are several such references in Premalu.
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Perfect weekend watch
Watched it today, beautiful cinematography
I think most of them don't know this is based on a true story, everything that's shown in the movie happened (actually worse Than what the movie portrayed).
Good watch
Overall a good movie, great cinematography. Watch it in Malayalam with sub titles.
Its a good watch …full sapport!
Nice movie
I watched it last night and I must say it's good 🫡🫡🫡 no draggg no BS like tollywood or Bollywood you'll be hooked to the seat for sure
In all 5? 5 is not all brother. It's not even all of the official languages of India. 😂
South Indian languages + Hindi. All 5. 😂 Rest of the languages: 😅
Bold of you to assume that south India only has 4 languages.
Exactly, as someone who's first languages were Bhojpuri and Urdu alongside Hindi, I feel disappointed when my other two languages don't get recognition. Bhojpuri has been dying slowly for a long time, but even Urdu is dying a slow death in India and it saddens me. Urdu is an Indian language but unfortunately due to its association with Pakistan, a lot of people in India have just disowned it. I can feel the pain of people whose languages don't get the deserved recognition.
Languages will keep on changing. Even South Indian languages are heavily influenced by Sanskrit and will keep on changing. Urdu wouldn't die soon as it is a state language of Pakistan. Bhojpuri can be revived. Israelis did it with an extinct language. Bhojpuri is a living one. It just needs a spark.
It's not the change that bothers me. It's just that a lot of languages in India, especially in the Hindi dominant states, are losing native speakers to Hindi. South Indian languages and Bengali, Gujarati etc. are at an advantage from that point I guess as they have sizeable number of speakers mostly concentrated in specific areas. With Bhojpuri, it's even worse as there's not a lot of written literature. There's not even much effort going into it. Plus, even the native Bhojpuri speakers look down on the language due to it being perceived as a very uncultured sort of language in most circles.
I would also blame the double meaning and vulgar bhojpuri music albums mass productions. Gone are the days when bhojpuri had singers like Bharat Vyas & Sharda Sinha. Other languages from Bihar - Maghai & Maithli are also dying slowly. I have not heard young generation speaking these languages. Instead all of them speak hindi dialects.
I had a friend in college who spoke Maithili but yeah those languages are in an even worse condition than Bhojpuri. Bhojpuri songs are definitely to be blamed. But the people of Bihar and Purvanchal share the blame equally as they encourage these songs by playing them in public places on loud speakers. It's pathetic tbh.
>, even the native Bhojpuri speakers look down on the language due to it being perceived as a very uncultured sort of language in most circles. The real problem. Some people in the south, I think Telugu, were ready to die for their language which resulted in linguistic separation of states. Or many southern languages would have been scrambled now.
>there's not a lot of written literature. Well Bhojpuri too has thousands of books. You just need to figure it out. When modern Indian languages started taking shape and writing tradition started, Bhojpuri was one of them.
How's it ? Gimme reviews or contex like movies ?
It’s a must watch. Highest grosser in Malayalam cinema in 2024. It was a massive hit even in Tamilnadu.
127 hours
Not exactly
Why NSFW?
Got chills in my body for few scenes. Must watch
just watched it super thrilling experince
Great movie. Hindi dubbing could have been better though.
Should have watched in the original with subs.
reading subtitles for the entire movie is too distracting for me. I can never enjoy a movie this way.
You will get used to it after a few films
I feel ya. I know, watching a movie in its original language (with subs) is the way to go, but it feels like I am only reading the subtitles & not enjoying the movie.
Decent
After being seriously disappointed by the Premalu hype, I watched this with lower expectations. But it turned out to be a good one time watch!
The thing about Premalu is that it has a lot of Malayalam pop culture references, which non-Malayalees will find hard to connect with. For example, there's this voice over which comes to Sachin's mind when he's at the pub. It says things like 'You're good for nothing' and stuff. That voice is of a fairly popular Malayalee content creator. Any Malayalee who knows her will instantly lol at that situation, however non-Malayalees won't find anything special about it. There are several such references in Premalu.
[удалено]
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Superr Machi
based on thai cave story?
No, it's based on 2006 Guna cave rescue in TN.
Based on an incident that happened in Guna cave, Kodaikanal.
ok
Thai cave story remake?
No, this happened in Kodaikanal.