First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"as Angela's dentist"
"Soderbergh drops us into that world with a casualness that's unnerving precisely because of how unnerving it is't; this is how we live now, he and screenwriter David Koepp suggest, with a pandemic outside our windows and the world at our fingertips. Most of "Kimi" unfolds in the spacious Seattle loft that Angela calls home, though we soon see that it has also become her gym, her workspace and her permanent refuge. Like the heroine of last year’s misbegotten "The Woman in the Window" and many a shut-in protagonist before her, Angela (played by Zoë Kravitz) is agoraphobic, an anxiety disorder she says she’d gotten a handle on until COVID-19 lockdown set in. Now she's content never to leave her almost entirely Kimi-run apartment, outsourcing menial tasks to an inanimate hub that records her every data point and keeps her under 24-7 digital surveillance."
"as Tall Thug"
"as Angela Childs"
"The nexus of tech and crime in "Kimi" packs a personal and a collective outrage at the ways in which tech companies have abandoned their civic responsibility and allowed, even fostered, propaganda—whether anti-vax or conspiracy-theorist or racist or misogynistic or anti-Semitic or xenophobic—that has got people killed. The depraved indifference in the name of stock prices finds its symbol in Kimi—not only in the way it's managed but also in its seemingly innocent domestic presence. The blatant but forceful metaphorical condensation of world-spanning power in a conical gizmo energizes Soderbergh's direction throughout; it appears inseparable from the physicality and the visual intensity that distinguish the movie from more routine storytelling."
"If you think you've seen this movie, you have and you haven't. "KIMI" self-consciously draws from an assortment of cinematic referents, including obvious touchstones like "Rear Window" and woman-in-peril-at-home thrillers like ".""
"And, trust me, I know bad. I used to moderate for Facebook."
"as Dr. Sarah Burns"
"At a time when Facebook guru Mark Zuckerberg's ambivalence about privacy issues and his ambitious Metaverse plans have cast him in a dubious light, it feels appropriate to make a villain out of a tech conglomerate CEO eyeing a squillion-dollar personal profit from an IPO. And it's a sly inside joke to cast neo-illusionist Derek DelGaudio in the role of Amygdala Corporation chief Bradley Hasling, taking his company public on the strength of a virtual assistant called Kimi."
"Alex Dobrenko as Darius Popescu"
"Kimis obvious inspirations include Rear Window (when it comes to the homebound Angela’s relationship to the wall of windows outside) and Blow Out (in its treatment of the audio evidence and the conspiratorial forces she stumbles onto). Its Hitchcockian aspirations are further signaled by the lush score from Cliff Martinez, which is deliberately out of step with the sleek, tech-centric setting."
"Ruthless and precise, Steven Soderbergh's "KIMI" is a timely commentary on isolation and intrusion. Anchored by a striking performance from Zoë Kravitz, it sees the expert craftsman working with genre again, like how he did in "Side Effects" and "Unsane," taking a classic concept right out of "Rear Window" or "Blow Out" and making it current to the era of Covid-19 and Alexa."
"Ah, this is Romania. MeToo is like 50 years away."
"as the voice of Kimi"
"as Christian Holloway"
"Crucially, Kravitz's performance isn't overly concerned with coming across as likeable. She's short with people. A little cold, sometimes. "Covid was a little bit of a setback," she admits, shrugging off her trauma as if it were just another daily toil. Without the exhausting mantle of self-prescribed importance, Kimi has successfully captured how the pandemic, for many, has felt like watching an invisible hand slowly chip away at their lives. Sitting all day on Zoom and yet feeling lonelier than ever is an exhausting experience."
"as Terry Hughes"
"as Glasses Thug"
"as Antonio Rivas"
"as Natalie Chowdhury"
"In a sleek 89 minutes, writer David Koepp (whose similarly contained thriller Panic Room was notably watched by Soderbergh twice last year) keeps things refreshingly simple and stringently devoid of any extraneous padding. It's no surprise, after an opening tease concerning the financial specifics of the company behind Kimi, that there's a conspiracy to unravel but it unravels with a quick ease, an age-old tale of the hero who saw too much and the villain who wants to keep them quiet. We know where films like this tend to go, and Kimi is light on genuine surprise, but Koepp and Soderbergh keep most of it grounded, avoiding the clumsy narrative leaps these films often resort to, making so much of it feel awfully credible."
"Only now, at a time of slow-motion crisis in the industry (will audiences come back to theaters?) and seriously over-inflated budgets, Soderbergh's latest little movie, the nimble and sinister cyber-age corporate thriller "Kimi," plays as an object lesson in showing us a way forward. It's a welcome reminder that less, in the movies, can sometimes be more. It's also an art-suspense pastiche that's clever enough to hook you. More than half the film is set in a spacious, second-floor renovated industrial loft condo in Seattle, where Angela Childs (Zoë Kravitz), a waifish millennial in a wavy bob of blue hair, stares out her window, taking in the late-morning sun as she checks out the neighbors in the apartment building across the street (a couple of them look back)."
"She's not the only one listening"
"as Angela's mother"
"as Samantha Gerrity"
"as Bradley Hasling"
"John Wayne - Det. Lt. Lon "McQ" McHugh"
"Diana Muldaur - Lois"
"Colleen Dewhurst - Myra"
"Eddie Albert - Capt. Edward Kosterman"
"Clu Gulager - Franklyn Toms"
"Richard Eastham - Walter Forrester"
"Julie Adams - Elaine"
"Roger E. Mosley - Rosey"
"Jim Watkins - J.C. Davis"
"Rosey, if this is a shine, I'm coming back and iron your face."
"Al Lettieri - Manny Santiago"
"The cop no one can stop. Even the cops."
"McQ-he's a busted cop, his gun is unlicensed, his methods are unlawful and his story is incredible!"
"David Huddleston - "Pinky" Farrell"
"William Bryant - Sgt. Stan Boyle"
"Richard Kelton - Radical"
"Michelle Pfeiffer - Susie Diamond"
"Ellie Raab - Nina"
"Xander Berkeley - Lloyd"
"Jeff Bridges - Jack Baker"
"Jennifer Tilly - Blanche "Monica" Moran"
"Beau Bridges - Frank Baker"
"Ken Lerner - Ray"
"Dakin Matthews - Charlie"
Young though he was, his radiant energy produced such an impression of absolute reliability that Hedgewar made him the first sarkaryavah, or general secretary, of the RSS.
- Gopal Mukund Huddar
Largely because of the influence of communists in London, Huddar's conversion into an enthusiastic supporter of the fight against fascism was quick and smooth. The ease with which he crossed from one worldview to another betrays the fact that he had not properly understood the world he had grown in.
Huddar would have been 101 now had he been alive. But then centenaries are not celebrated only to register how old so and so would have been and when. They are usually celebrated to explore how much poorer our lives are without them. Maharashtrian public life is poorer without him. It is poorer for not having made the effort to recall an extraordinary life.
I regret I was not there to listen to Balaji Huddar's speech [...] No matter how many times you listen to him, his speeches are so delightful that you feel like listening to them again and again.
By the time he came out of Franco's prison, Huddar had relinquished many of his old ideas. He displayed a worldview completely different from that of the RSS, even though he continued to remain deferential to Hedgewar and maintained a personal relationship with him.