1 = hated it, 2 = did not like it, 3 = liked it, 4 = really liked it, 5 = loved it AND it had some quality, some "it" factor hard to put a finger on, and/or was near-perfect / flawless to justify a rating in such rarified air
Because time does not allow me to write a review that could be published on Rotten Tomatoes or Metacritic, I will simply use a star rating system. It was for this reason - that I could not devote time to even a short essay - that I kept from participating on this good thread. I am extraordinarily picky. Out of approx. 2,500 films rated on Netflix, less than 400 have received a 4 or 5 star rating. So if I give such a rating, that means I really liked it / loved it, and I'll give you a blurb (not my own but one I agree gives an idea of the plot, setting, atmosphere, etc. in a nutshell - most likely lifted from Metacritic, IMDB, or Rotten Tomatoes) and you can make a determination if it's something you want to watch. Here goes:
The Lunchbox - 4 stars
A mistaken delivery in Mumbai's (Bombay's) famously efficient lunchbox delivery system connects a young housewife to an old man in the dusk of his life as they build a fantasy world together through notes in the lunchbox. Gradually, this fantasy threatens to overwhelm their reality. (In English & Hindi with subtitles)