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Selling the City arrives at a moment when cities are battlegrounds for capital, culture, and community. Director [Name] frames this conflict through Arjun, a real-estate broker whose climb to the top requires papering over neighborhoods’ messy histories. The film’s camera lingers on newly minted high-rises reflected against crumbling facades, a visual shorthand for prosperity built on erasure. Performances are quietly devastating: the lead’s small moral concessions escalate into full-scale complicity, while supporting characters—longtime residents, activists, and a weary clerk—anchor the story in lived consequence. The score oscillates between propulsive electronic beats during negotiation scenes and sparse piano during moments of personal reckoning, giving the city a rhythm that’s both seductive and forbidding. Beyond its craftsmanship, Selling the City sparks urgent questions about who benefits from urban “revival” and who pays the cost—a conversation worth having in theaters and community spaces alike. CineDoze.Com-Selling the City -2025- MLSBD.Shop...