Monday, June 29, 2009

New York


New York
Cast
John Abraham, Katrina Kaif, Neil Nitin Mukesh and Irrfan Khan
Director: Kabir Khan
Producer : Aditya Chopra , Yash Chopra
Written by: Sandeep Shrivastava
Music Director: Pritam Chakraborty

Links to download Free "New York"

Rapidshare

How to Download & Play "New York" ?

1. Download all files from Rapidshare.com or Easy Share , check step by step details at http://www.coolindianguy.com/forums/How-to...rede-t4442.html
2. Save all files e.g., 001, 002, 003 etc in one folder then join files using HJSplit . Download HJSplit from http://www.freebyte.com/hjsplit/
3. You will see a file called Mrbi_N_Out_PDR_CoolIndianGuy.com.avi (size approx 700MB) in the same folder where you saved the file after joining, At last play that AVI file using VLC Player. VLC Player: http://www.videolan.org/vlc/
IF YOU DON'T WANT TO DO ALL THIS STEPS, JOIN VIP MEMBERSHIP JUST FOR JUST US$ 5/- ONLY AND ENJOY ONE CLICK DOWNLOAD OF THIS MOVIE. FOLLOW BELOW LINK TO JOIN NOW: http://www.coolindianguy.com/forums/index....&CODE=index
Enjoy!
:)

Review

1. Economic Times by Gaurav Malani, ET Bureau

New York opens around 7 years after the 9/11 attacks with Omar (Neil Mukesh) being wrongly held captive by the FBI. Investigating officer Roshan (Irrfan Khan) offers to go easy on Omar if he agrees to spy on old-time friend Sameer (John Abraham) who the FBI suspects to be a terrorist. With a maneuvered reunion, Omar gets entry into Sameer's house and tries hard to unveil his activist identity but fails every time, much to his relief.

In contrast, Sameer himself narrates his distressing past to Omar of how he was illegally detained and brutally tortured by the FBI for 9 months, immediately after 9/11 and victimized for being a Muslim suspect in New York.New York opens on an intriguing note with Omar's attempts to infiltrate into Sameer's life. The ensuing chemistry between the characters keeps you riveted till the movie takes an interesting (though palpable) twist at the interval point. The terrorism theme comes into picture predominantly in the second half. The physical and mental abuse on innocent Muslims, imprisoned merely on suspicion and their consequent repercussions are effectively portrayed. ..read fulll review ....

2. Express india by Shubhra Gupta

The new smart catch-phrase in post-Obama America is post-racial. Which, to those who’ve suffered slurs in the name of race, is pure bunkum. On the same lines, Prez O’s talk of closing down of Guantanamo Bay is a great gesture, but it will take years before the world forgets why that penitentiary was stuffed with suspected terrorists.
Kabir Khan’s ‘New York’ is about three friends impacted by the fallout of 9/11: it was not just the twin towers which were destroyed; a whole way of life died too. Americans began looking at people not of their nationality and religion with hatred and deep suspicion: if they are brown and worshipped Allah, they were terrorists.

Sam aka Samir (John), Omar (Mukesh), and Maya (Katrina) meet as students at New York State U. They hang out on campus, in pubs, but never seem to go to class: just shows that even New Gen directors are reluctant to show heroes getting an education.

In the best Bollywood tradition, this is a triangle: Omar loves Maya who loves Sam. They watch the planes crash into the towers in shock and horror—Omar goes his way, the other two get hitched. Years later, the FBI in the shape of Roshan (Irrfan) surfaces in the threesome’s lives, with a shocking revelation: one of them is the kingpin of a sleeper terrorist organization, and the other has to turn into an FBI informer. Khan’s subject feels a little old (there’s been a ton of 9/11 related stuff in the last eight years, including Naseerudin’s debut 2006 feature ‘Yun Hota Toh Kya Hota’ ), but it is still relevant. read full review...

3. IBN LIVE by Rajeev Masand

Director Kabir Khan's New York, based on extensive research conducted by the filmmaker himself, brazenly accuses the FBI of illegally detaining hundreds of Muslims suspected to have terrorist links post 9/11 and of putting them through extreme forms of torture, only to release months later when no evidence against them could be gathered that many of them were innocent.

Surprising then, that the same film's basic premise involves the FBI itself waiting and watching and monitoring – but never arresting or even probing – a very serious terror suspect who they have ample dope on. It's not until he's planted bombs all across the FBI headquarters that they swing into action.

In another instance, a lady who works as a human rights activist, merrily goes about her life knowing full well her husband's involved in terrorist activities, but doesn't confront him, hoping he'll have a change of heart eventually.

It's holes like these that make New York a tiresome watch. read full review...

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