Maa
- 2025
- 2 Std. 13 Min.
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA mother transforms into the goddess Kali to battle a demon's curse involving fear, blood, and betrayal.A mother transforms into the goddess Kali to battle a demon's curse involving fear, blood, and betrayal.A mother transforms into the goddess Kali to battle a demon's curse involving fear, blood, and betrayal.
- Auszeichnungen
- 2 Nominierungen insgesamt
Empfohlene Bewertungen
"Maa" (2025) is a film that struggles to deliver a compelling experience, despite a good performance from its lead, Kajol. While Kajol brings her talent and presence to the role, the movie is let down by a weak plot and poor visual effects that fail to engage the audience.
Kajol is a definite highlight of the film. Her acting is strong, and she does her best to bring depth to her character. However, her efforts are not enough to overcome the film's significant shortcomings.
The main issue with "Maa" lies in its plot, which is not good and feels largely unengaging. The story lacks a compelling hook and fails to build a consistent sense of tension or intrigue. The narrative feels disjointed and predictable, leaving the audience with little reason to invest in the events unfolding on screen.
Furthermore, the visual effects are not good and detract from the overall viewing experience. Poorly executed VFX can break the immersion, and in this case, they hinder the film's ability to create a believable world.
Overall, "Maa" is a film with a good lead performance but is ultimately a disappointing watch due to its weak plot and technical flaws. It's a movie that had potential but failed to execute it well.
Kajol is a definite highlight of the film. Her acting is strong, and she does her best to bring depth to her character. However, her efforts are not enough to overcome the film's significant shortcomings.
The main issue with "Maa" lies in its plot, which is not good and feels largely unengaging. The story lacks a compelling hook and fails to build a consistent sense of tension or intrigue. The narrative feels disjointed and predictable, leaving the audience with little reason to invest in the events unfolding on screen.
Furthermore, the visual effects are not good and detract from the overall viewing experience. Poorly executed VFX can break the immersion, and in this case, they hinder the film's ability to create a believable world.
Overall, "Maa" is a film with a good lead performance but is ultimately a disappointing watch due to its weak plot and technical flaws. It's a movie that had potential but failed to execute it well.
Honestly Kajol should retire, she is destroying her legacy. Surely she would've read the script and must've thought what is this no scares all about promoting a cult and not concentrating on the film itself. The movie is all about a religious promotion and the story has so many holes in it. The ghost is a tree yes a tree the director must be drunk when he came up with this concept. The movie is an absolute disgrace and seriously one of the worst films I have ever seen if it had minus then I would give it a minus 10. People actually walked out i Should've done so the film is all to do with promoting kajols beliefs which am sorry lost the film.
I watched Maa yesterday, but honestly, I didn't really enjoy the film. The storyline was weak right from the beginning. They tried to hold suspense until the end, but it didn't work-because the audience could already predict what was going on.
Also, the main issue was the terrible VFX and absolutely zero acting. It looked rushed and unpolished. And let's talk about that random "Shaitan" song at the end - it didn't fit at all. It felt like two completely different movies stitched together for no reason.
On top of that, they portrayed "Kali Mata" in a way that doesn't align with how Hindu deities are respectfully shown. It felt forced and culturally off. The last scene was way too exaggerated.
This film was messy, over-the-top, and tried too hard to be something it's not. Watch it yourself and let me know what you think - but for me, it's a definite miss.
Also, the main issue was the terrible VFX and absolutely zero acting. It looked rushed and unpolished. And let's talk about that random "Shaitan" song at the end - it didn't fit at all. It felt like two completely different movies stitched together for no reason.
On top of that, they portrayed "Kali Mata" in a way that doesn't align with how Hindu deities are respectfully shown. It felt forced and culturally off. The last scene was way too exaggerated.
This film was messy, over-the-top, and tried too hard to be something it's not. Watch it yourself and let me know what you think - but for me, it's a definite miss.
I recently watched Maa, expecting a touching story about motherhood, emotions, and sacrifice. What I got instead was a confused, melodramatic mess that felt more like a punishment than a film.
From the very first scene, the film struggles to find direction. It tries to be emotional, but ends up being over-the-top, unrealistic, and painfully stretched. What should have been a heartfelt tribute to mothers turns into a shallow and forced tear-jerker.
Storyline - Overdone and Underwritten
The plot is simple but handled poorly. A mother goes through challenges for her child - something we've seen in countless movies.
Instead of offering a fresh take or deeper meaning, the movie uses every emotional cliché in the book.
Characters cry, shout, sacrifice, and suffer - but none of it feels genuine.
There's no depth or connection. The story keeps jumping from one dramatic scene to another with zero build-up.
Acting - Too Much or Too Little
The lead actress clearly tries hard, but most of her performance ends up looking exaggerated.
Supporting actors either overact or feel like they're sleepwalking through their scenes.
Emotional moments don't land because the reactions are either too loud or too fake.
A good emotional film depends on subtlety, but here everything is so loud and dramatic, you feel drained rather than moved.
Direction - Lost and Lazy
The director doesn't seem to trust the audience. Every emotion is spoon-fed.
The camera lingers too long on crying faces, dramatic music plays every 2 minutes, and every situation is pushed to the extreme.
Instead of telling the story naturally, the movie feels like a forced collection of "emotional scenes" stitched together without purpose.
Music - Manipulative, Not Meaningful
Background music is loud, repetitive, and used like a hammer to force emotion out of you.
Instead of enhancing scenes, the music distracts and irritates. Every sad scene is followed by the same type of violin or slow tune.
Editing and Pacing - A Drag
The film feels much longer than it is. There are too many unnecessary scenes and dialogues.
Some scenes could've been 10 seconds but are stretched to 2 minutes just to "look emotional."
By the second half, I was checking the time and hoping it would end soon.
Overall Experience - Emotionally Exhausting for the Wrong Reasons
Maa had potential. A movie about mothers always has room for deep storytelling, soft moments, and inspiring character growth.
But this film chose the loudest, messiest, and most unrealistic path possible.
It's not moving. It's not heartwarming. It's just tiring.
From the very first scene, the film struggles to find direction. It tries to be emotional, but ends up being over-the-top, unrealistic, and painfully stretched. What should have been a heartfelt tribute to mothers turns into a shallow and forced tear-jerker.
Storyline - Overdone and Underwritten
The plot is simple but handled poorly. A mother goes through challenges for her child - something we've seen in countless movies.
Instead of offering a fresh take or deeper meaning, the movie uses every emotional cliché in the book.
Characters cry, shout, sacrifice, and suffer - but none of it feels genuine.
There's no depth or connection. The story keeps jumping from one dramatic scene to another with zero build-up.
Acting - Too Much or Too Little
The lead actress clearly tries hard, but most of her performance ends up looking exaggerated.
Supporting actors either overact or feel like they're sleepwalking through their scenes.
Emotional moments don't land because the reactions are either too loud or too fake.
A good emotional film depends on subtlety, but here everything is so loud and dramatic, you feel drained rather than moved.
Direction - Lost and Lazy
The director doesn't seem to trust the audience. Every emotion is spoon-fed.
The camera lingers too long on crying faces, dramatic music plays every 2 minutes, and every situation is pushed to the extreme.
Instead of telling the story naturally, the movie feels like a forced collection of "emotional scenes" stitched together without purpose.
Music - Manipulative, Not Meaningful
Background music is loud, repetitive, and used like a hammer to force emotion out of you.
Instead of enhancing scenes, the music distracts and irritates. Every sad scene is followed by the same type of violin or slow tune.
Editing and Pacing - A Drag
The film feels much longer than it is. There are too many unnecessary scenes and dialogues.
Some scenes could've been 10 seconds but are stretched to 2 minutes just to "look emotional."
By the second half, I was checking the time and hoping it would end soon.
Overall Experience - Emotionally Exhausting for the Wrong Reasons
Maa had potential. A movie about mothers always has room for deep storytelling, soft moments, and inspiring character growth.
But this film chose the loudest, messiest, and most unrealistic path possible.
It's not moving. It's not heartwarming. It's just tiring.
This movie is dull and slow. The story is very basic and doesn't have anything new or exciting. It feels like it was just put together without much thought. The main cast seems to have been picked based on popularity, not actual acting talent.
Kajol, in particular, looks outdated and shows very little range in her acting. In the past, her weak performances were easy to overlook because stronger male actors carried the films. But in this movie, her limitations are very clear.
Surprisingly, the extras and background actors do a much better job. They feel more real and help move the story along more than the leads do. There are also some truly talented actors in the film, but their roles are so small that their skills go to waste.
The pace of the movie is another big issue-it drags on and on. It takes forever for anything meaningful to happen. Overall, this movie is a missed opportunity and a disappointment.
Kajol, in particular, looks outdated and shows very little range in her acting. In the past, her weak performances were easy to overlook because stronger male actors carried the films. But in this movie, her limitations are very clear.
Surprisingly, the extras and background actors do a much better job. They feel more real and help move the story along more than the leads do. There are also some truly talented actors in the film, but their roles are so small that their skills go to waste.
The pace of the movie is another big issue-it drags on and on. It takes forever for anything meaningful to happen. Overall, this movie is a missed opportunity and a disappointment.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesKajol and Ronit Roy worked 30 years after Hulchul together.
- VerbindungenSpin-off from Shaitaan (2024)
Top-Auswahl
Melde dich zum Bewerten an und greife auf die Watchlist für personalisierte Empfehlungen zu.
Details
Box Office
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 282.403 $
- Laufzeit
- 2 Std. 13 Min.(133 min)
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.39 : 1
Zu dieser Seite beitragen
Bearbeitung vorschlagen oder fehlenden Inhalt hinzufügen