Red

RedGenre: Action/Thriller | Year: 2010 | Duration: 112 mins | Director: Robert Schwentke| Medium: VCD (SONY Music) | Trailer: HERE | My rating: 4*/5*

Fav dialogue: “Marvin: Can I kill her now?”

A powerhouse thriller with Bruce Willis and Morgan Freeman, Red has good action sequences, comedy and is fast paced. I liked its postcard scene transitions with its humorous landscape portrayal. The story is gripping with twists and turns.

Red (Retired and Extremely Danngerous) is a story of former black-ops agent, Frank Moses (Bruce Willis) and Sarah (Mary-Louise Parker) a call centre operator dreaming of thrills. Their on-screen chemistry is sparkling. Morgan Freeman as Joe is total kick-ass in the movie, and so is John Malkovich as Marvin. Helen Mirren as Victoria is interesting. Together they wage a war against CIA and its operatives.

Red, my ‘Movie of the Day’ is worth watching if you enjoy good action flicks.

Snow

“How much can we ever know about the love and pain in another heart? How much can we hope to   understand those who have suffered deeper anguish, greater deprivation, and more crushing disappointments than we ourselves have known?”
― Orhan Pamuk, Snow

Snow is a powerful, unsettling novel set in the snow covered isolation of Kars, a remote Turkish town and uses this landscape as a crucible for deep cultural, political, and emotional conflict.

At the heart of the novel is Ka, a poet and returned political exile, who arrives in Kars hoping for poetic inspiration and solace, and possible reconnection with an old love, Ipek. As the town becomes caught in a tense standoff between secularists, Islamists, and political opportunists, Ka’s personal longings become entangled in tragic social realities.

Pamuk’s strength lies in his subtle, unsentimental portrayal of clashing worldviews. He reveals how secularism, religious fundamentalism, political ambition, all contribute to heartbreak, betrayal, and disillusionment. The snow itself becomes a metaphor for erasure, silence, and the fragility of truth.

Through Ka’s inner turmoil and bursts of poetic inspiration, Pamuk reflects a universal search for identity, belonging, and meaning in a world fractured by ideology. The result is a novel that is both timely and timeless, a stark meditation on faith, freedom, and the cost of dividing lines.

 This political thriller set in Turkey is my “Read of the Week”