The beauty of movies

and how can we find ourselves in them.

For the past century movies have played a significant role within our lives. Whether you’re looking for some easy entertainment to pass the time, see the next ‘biggest film of the year’ or taking your partner on a date. People often imply that a movies whole purpose is to just entertain, but is that entirely true? Movies allow us to explore our minds -- to experience and feel things we wouldn’t normally feel within the real world, to escape reality. It’s not every day you’re going to be caught up in a car chase down a military runway (Fast & Furious 6), getting hunted in the woods by a psychopath wielding a machete (Friday 13th), or be enlightened by romance (When Harry met Sally). But cinema is not always escapism: One can hardly accept the fact that cinema can be so remote from escapism. Cinema is real. Cinema is a reality. An art form can only survive if it grazes the reality, the real life of people and society.

Cinema is our life’s reflection: Cinema breathes life into lonely and desolated people. It picks them up. It can arouse feelings in dead people who are real in disguise. It sometimes awakens the “inner you”, thus making people confident of themselves by self-inspection, exploration, and realization. With human emotions, cinema can be sensitive, touching, daunting, haunting, arousing, and horrifying with the imagery. It can evoke fear, anger, joy, sadness, envy, shame and sometimes disgust! But in the truest way. It’s all as true as our very existence. Cinema can make people realize life because it coheres with our conscience. Human emotions are too complex to be understood in other ways except experiencing them oneself. It has the power to touch the deep dark corner of one’s, sometimes in ways, they didn’t imagine. It has the ability to shake and check one’s resistance to the core.

Must see

black swan aftersun poalof lost in translation little miss sunshine
Upcoming releases
mission impossible barbie oppenheimer

Where to watch

prime video hulu mubi netflix