submitted by @bhalomanush.
It must portray in postmodern fashion a bleak existential crisis. I am talking, not of the film itself, but the process of picking a film to watch in a Bengali household.
submitted by @bhalomanush.
It must portray in postmodern fashion a bleak existential crisis. I am talking, not of the film itself, but the process of picking a film to watch in a Bengali household.
Hopefully you still resemble yourself from your college days and the photo on the wall doesn’t look like a bearded Portuguese explorer.
Contributed by @bhalomanush
Shinni is the PSPO of the bong world. A Shottonarayon Pujo without shinni is like ‘4th of July with no apple-pie or Friday with no two pizzas’.
Submitted by @tantanoo
‘Burjoya’ is Bangla for bourgeois. Maybe everyone in Bengal is euphoric; maybe folks are just high on grass (Trinamool). Time will tell.
Posted by @bhalomanush.
Tipin: or as Bongs call it - Jack the Ripper for a bitch called Coolness! Contributed by @DibyojyotiPal

@froZENwell Based on a true story :P
Bongs: Driving the Monkey-Cap industry single-headedly since time immemorial.
Contributed by @tantanoo.
Rabindranath Tagore. An asset that Bengali’s have treasured for more than a century with sporadic attempts to spread across the country. Obviously with mixed and often frustrating results.
The “Tere mere milan ki yeh raina” song referred to here is set to the same tune as Tagore’s “jodi tarey nai chini go”
By: @subrataiam
For all phans of Rittik Roshon, Solomon Khan, Madhuri Dikkhit, and Akkhoy Kumar. Contributed by @bhalomanush