The Right Yaaa Wrong 2 Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Mp4

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Jul 8, 2024, 10:44:05 PM7/8/24
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Right Yaaa Wrong is the surprise shocker of the year. If you've forgotten that jump-out-of-the-seat feeling then it's time to nudge it awake again. Debutant director Neerraj Pathak deserves a welcoming salute. He puts together a thriller that's as much homage to Alfred Hitchcock and Brian da Palma as our own Abbas-Mustan and Right Yaaa Wrong still emerges original and strong.

An intricate jigsaw that always stays a step ahead of the audience, Right Yaaa Wrong makes a penetrating comment on how the country's legal system can be subverted in a clever hand. More importantly the taut and briskly-paced script suggests that the yin and yang concepts of right and wrong are not only ambivalent but also interchangeable when the context is right.

The Right Yaaa Wrong 2 Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Mp4


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Sunny Deol, back in shape in every which way, plays a cop who in the first two reels loses the power to walk. But the narration simply sprints along through a series of unpredictable twists and turns that take the striking characters across a maze of intrigue and conspiracy.

The characters and their motivations address themselves to adventure-thriller-suspense would of James Hadley Chase and Sidney Sheldon. The men are brave and heroic, clever and fearless. Even when cuckolded Deol is dignified in the embrace of betrayal.

The cop's wife played by Esha Koppikhar is unabashedly wanton. Outwardly she's the duty-bound cop's home-bound wife with a perfect home and cute son (Ali Haji). Scratch the surface and there emerges a woman who's sleeping with the cop's kid-brother. Ouch. Where's the couch???

Shades of Bipasha from Abbas-Mustan's Race? Yes? But don't let this hectic whodunit's antecedents bother you. The storytelling takes wings from the word go. And we are swept ahead. As the characters go from 'bed' to worse. However the people in Pathak's pacy plot are so hurriedly propelled to their nemesis that we never get close enough to any of them to understand their inner world.

The depths are discarded for the dips and curves. The performances are even and well-informed. Sunny Deol in a role that requires him to sublimate his pain in a status of stoicism gets it just right. Irrfan creates ample space for himself in a role that's sketchy for starters but gathers substance as the yarn progresses. Konkona Sen Sharma as the stereotypical Sympathetic Shoulder gets rid of her set-expressions and comes up with a performance of restrained bravura in the courtroom.

Here's a film that extends the borders of morality. It does so in the commercial language without resorting to crass situations and dialogues. For fans of Sunny Deol's fist-friendly image here's the actor telling us that strength is sometimes a matter of holding back rather than letting it all hang out.

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LLYR HELLER: Speakers today from NASA JPL. And our first question will be your name, your title, and the path you took to get here. Oh, and we can share a mic, yeah [crosstalk 00:00:13].

TRACY DRAIN: I will try not to make this be a half an hour. So hello everybody. My name is Tracy Drain, it's lovely to see you all here. I am a systems engineer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and my path was kind of straight. I'll tell you the very short one and then if you guys ask questions later you can hear more details. So I started off as a little curious kid interested in a bunch of things. My mom loved Star Trek, Star Wars, all that science fiction stuff and so I really wanted to grow up and have a career that had something to do with space. And way back then, because I am [inaudible 00:00:43] years old, we did not have the internet and so I wanted to study astronomy, but I was a little bit scared because I didn't know what an astronomer would actually do or who would pay me to go look at stars all day, so I decided to study engineering because I also liked math, science and problem solving. And then I decided to go to college and study mechanical engineering and I interned at NASA Langley while I was in college and then I got hired at the Jet Propulsion Lab right out of school. So I've been working there doing systems engineering my whole career and I can tell you more about that later. On to Morgan.

MORGAN CABLE: Awesome. Thank you Tracy. So my name is Morgan Cable. I'm a scientist at JPL and I grew up right next to Kennedy Space Center in Florida and so I thought it was just like a regular thing the rockets went off in people's backyards. I actually remember it like when I was in elementary school, the fire drills would be scheduled right before a launch, so we'd have to evacuate outside and we get to go see a rocket, that was a thing we did. So space was always a part of my life. But I didn't really start thinking seriously about a career until I started getting into like science fairs in middle school and high school and trying to think of what I wanted to major in in college and I always loved chemistry. Chemistry to me was like the ultimate way to understand the universe because physics, when you're starting to blow up atoms things get very complicated and getting close to the speed of light and all that stuff because really...that's a bit too much for me.

MORGAN CABLE: But in chemistry, I can understand how bonds can be broken and made and how molecules form and I can design experiments in the lab to study something, I can totally wrap my brain around that. And so I started studying chemistry in college and I did an internship at the NASA Jet Propulsion Lab when I was a junior that summer and it totally changed my life. You stay in the dorms at Caltech, which is just a few miles down the road and I just totally fell in love with Caltech, with JPL, I was like, I want to come here, how do I make that happen? And it turns out that Caltech has a really great graduate program in chemistry so I studied there and got my PhD, but I was able to do my research in a lab at JPL. I had two advisors, which was really cool. So and one of them was busy, usually the other one was free, so it was great. And after I got my PhD, I stayed on first there is something called a postdoc and we can talk a little bit about that later. And then I got hired as a real person with a retirement plan and dental insurance and all of that.

MORGAN CABLE: Yeah, and so now I get to work on all sorts of missions, mostly focusing on our search for life in our solar system and beyond and I really love it. I'm having a great time.

DAVID DELGADO: That was great. Hi, my name is David Delgado and I'm a designer and an artist. And I get to do the easy job here because I get to talk about basically why it's fun and interesting to explore space. And at JPL it's a really special place because I get to work with really amazing people like these two who are just pushing the limits of what's possible like how to make a spacecraft in a really difficult situation or it has to have this really strange functionality to do something really special or just the notion of trying to find life in other places outside of earth. It's just so exciting and the details of how that happened is just really, really exciting and fascinating. And so what I try to do is think about those things and talk to Morgan and Tracy and we get to create products like posters or sometimes like art exhibits or things that just take those ideas of why it's special and turn it into something that people can appreciate in a different way and it's just a lot of fun. The way I got here was, let's see here, so I grew up in high school I didn't know what I wanted to do in college-

DAVID DELGADO: Yeah, which is great because I was one of those kids where I kind of liked a whole bunch of different things and I didn't really know what I was going to do and I even went to college and I changed majors four times because-

MORGAN CABLE: So I started out in biology and then, well it's actually kind of funny too because I went to UCLA for undergrad and the whole campus is set up on a hill, right? So you have Northern campus and Southern campus and Southern campus is like the hard science and farther you go up farthest north is fine arts, right? So I started out, biology was kind of in the middle and then I went to psycho biology or biological psychology of how the brain works neuro-transmitters and all that and then I'm like, well, I'm going to go to psychology. And I started to realize I was moving closer and closer towards all my friends in the dorms, which were all in the arts area and so then I finally ended up in something that I really loved, anthropology, so sort of a systems level look at how culture develops, which was a lot of fun. And long story short is I ended up loving that but I traveled a whole bunch and then ended up going back to school for design at art center, which is in Pasadena.

MORGAN CABLE: And then had no idea what JPL was, but a good friend of mine had been working there and he said, "Come on over and check it out." And I was determined to go work in an ad agency or something and I went there and I was talking to just somebody, I don't even know who she was, but within like the first 30 seconds she started talking about exploring Venus and things that I'd never heard about before and I said, "Well, I mean this is just a... I want to be around people like this." That's the way... my ambition was to be around just these big ideas and people who are trying to do things that have never been done before and it's just been a lot of fun and there're so many different things you can do there at JPL, engineering, science, arts, design and so, so many, many more things.

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