The Forgotten Army (Season 1) Complete [Hindi DD5.1] WEB-DL 480p 720p 1080p [ALL Episodes] | Prime Series


The Forgotten Army (Season 1) Complete [Hindi DD5.1] WEB-DL 480p 720p 1080p [ALL Episodes] | Prime Series | Download | Watch Online


The Forgotten Army

iMDb Rating: 8.4/10
Genres: WAR-Drama, History, Thriller
Network: Amazon Prime
Creator: Kabir Khan
Stars: Rohit Chaudhary, Sunny Kaushal
No. of Episodes: 05
Language: Hindi DD5.1 / ESubs
Quality:  480p | 720p | 1080p (WEBRip)


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The Forgotten Army (Season 1) Complete [Hindi DD5.1] WEB-DL 480p 720p 1080p [ALL Episodes] | Prime Series | Download | Watch OnlineThe Forgotten Army (Season 1) Complete [Hindi DD5.1] WEB-DL 480p 720p 1080p [ALL Episodes] | Prime Series | Download | Watch OnlineThe Forgotten Army (Season 1) Complete [Hindi DD5.1] WEB-DL 480p 720p 1080p [ALL Episodes] | Prime Series | Download | Watch Online


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The Forgotten Army: (Season 1) Info:-

Director Kabir Khan said in a recent interview that while he can forgive poor filmmaking, he can never forgive poor politics. The politics of his first show as a creator,Amazon Prime’s The Forgotten Army, may be above reproach, but the filmmaking certainly isn’t.

There were many ways in which the five-episode war drama could have gone wrong, especially in today’s volatile climate, when history can be reshaped to suit popular sentiments. But before you can heave a sigh of relief at the show not falling into the same torrent of nationalistic pride that consumed recent ‘historicals’ such as Manikarnika and Tanhaji, it drowns in its own good intentions.

Among its many faults is a narrative that merely grazes its subject without ever penetrating its depths, like a poorly aimed bullet against an enemy’s skin. It honours the bravery of real heroes by reducing them to composite characters, effectively diluting their achievements by chucking in multiple storylines into the mix, in a manner that doesn’t do a single one of them any favours.

The Forgotten Army aims for the poignancy of HBO’s Band of Brothers, but displays none of the patience.

For instance, a character who mocks another in episode one for being ‘the black sheep of the family’ gushes that it would be an honour for him if they’d travel to a protest together in episode three. This would be a fine progression for either of them had the show taken its time in fleshing them out. But all we’re told, essentially, is that one of them is a ‘student of journalism’ with some vague idea about making a difference, and the other is a PTSD-ridden war veteran. One chill-out session and proximately 15 minutes of screen-time can’t transform their equation.