Tag: Bollywood

  • movie review – Gabbar Is Back

    movie review – Gabbar Is Back

    [quote_right]

    CAST: Akshay Kumar, Shruti Haasan, Suman Talwar, Sunil Grover, Kareena Kapoor Khan

    DIRECTION: Krish

    GENRE: Drama

    DURATION: 2 hours 10 minutes

    [/quote_right]

    STORY: ‘Gabbar’ targets corrupt officials – will this bad guy get good results?

    [quote_center]REVIEW: [/quote_center]

    Gabbar is back – and so is Akshay Kumar, with a big-screen bang. Professor Aditya (Akshay) has a secret life as vigilante Gabbar who terrorizes government officials. Gabbar and his gang kidnap tehsildars, collectors and cops, hanging the most corrupt in public. As the police search frantically for this rebel with a cause, Gabbar decides corrupt builder Patil (Suman) ko bhi sazaa milegi, barabar milegi – does Gabbar succeed?

    Legend says Amjad Khan as Sholay’s dreaded iconic villain Gabbar Singh was so explosive, cassettes featuring just Gabbar’s dialogues sold for years. Gabbar Is Back picks up that high-voltage pulse, remixing it cleverly with the biggest concern of contemporary times – corruption. This Gabbar also terrorizes – but only targets the corrupt. For aam citizens, Gabbar’s an inspiring figure – one who makes you cheer for the ‘bad’ guy.

    Akshay Kumar has a blast playing Gabbar who, with dark, wavy hair and bristly beard, has never looked hotter. With twinkling eyes and deadpan face, Akshay delivers dynamite dialogues – ‘Naam se villain, kaam se hero’, flawless bone-breaking action, redefining PWD (‘power-wala danda’), switching from loose-limbed vulnerability to jaw-clenched intensity in a flash.

    The story powers him with its novel concept (a moral universe where Gabbar is hero and Thakur, a smug cop, snapping at bright constable Sadhuram, played by straight-faced Sunil Grover) and contrasts. Doctors pretending to treat a dead man, nervous officials returning bribes via money orders, tickle you with dark comedy. But you wince as Aditya hears mocking ‘apologies’ by babus, bribed to pass a faulty building that collapses – with many lives.

    With gritty reality, Gabbar has glamour too – Shruti charms with her soft, pretty appeal while a cameo by Kareena adds sheen but doesn’t divert. The second half’s blood pressure doesn’t fully match the first (Patil’s insistent ‘I am a brand!’ gets repetitive while CBI officer Pahwa looks clueless without Sadhuram’s ‘axellent’ work) -but the climax pushes up the adrenaline again.

    While the music’s pleasantly seamless, the editing is razor-sharp, evoking Manmohan Desai, rushing you from one entertaining scene to the next, without time to figure things out – but just enough to feel.

    Now, Gabbar Is Back – and you’ll feel his return rocks.

  • Actress Katrina Kaif joins Twitter for Cannes debut

    Actress Katrina Kaif joins Twitter for Cannes debut

    Bollywood star Katrina Kaif has joined micro-blogging site Twitter to promote her upcoming maiden appearance at the Cannes International Film Festival. Katrina Kaif’s fans have a reason to rejoice as they can now get a peek into her life from her Twitter account. Yes, the actress has finally joined Twitter on April 25, 2015. Her Twitter handle reads @KatrinaAtCannes, although it is not a verified one. The credit goes to the upcoming Cannes International Film Festival and the brand which she endorses.

    Her first tweet read, “Exciting day today! On my way to the @LOrealParisIn press conference. Have you heard the big news?” Sonam Kapoor is among the first few followers of Katrina Kaif on Twitter. Going by the handle, it seems Katrina will be promoting the brand and posting all her activities during the film festival. But whether she will be hooked to this account beyond that or she will quit immediately after the event, we will have to wait and watch.

  • ZARINE KHAN: Comfortable doing bold or intimate scenes

    ZARINE KHAN: Comfortable doing bold or intimate scenes

    Actress Zarine Khan, who will soon be seen in the third film of the erotic thriller franchise Hate Story, says she has no inhibitions about either intimacy or exposing on screen.

    “You guys just tell me a film that does not have any intimate scene and is not glamorous? I don’t know why this film is being tagged as ‘having a lot of exposure’,” the actress said here on being asked if she is ready to expose in the new film of the franchise.

    “Honestly speaking, if I see any of the films being made today, there is an exposure quotient. Anyways, this is something that I will be doing for the first time. As of now, we are working on the story and the character,” she added.

    Hate Story 3 will reportedly see actors Sharman Joshi and Daisy Shah along with Zarine, and the film is likely to be at par with the previous two films in bold and erotic content. The Veer actress says enacting such scenes is part of an actor’s life.

    “There is no point of being ready or not for the exposing scenes, because we are actors. It would be cliche if I say so, but if a character demands such stuff, then as actors we are supposed to give our best. I haven’t done this before. This will be the first time for me, so I myself don’t know how it is going to be,” she added.

  • No contest: Kazakh prez wins polls with 97.7% votes

    No contest: Kazakh prez wins polls with 97.7% votes

    ASTANA (TIP): Nursultan Nazarbayev, the only president Kazakhstan has ever seen since its birth some 24 years ago, won another mandate on April 26 by a margin that’d make words like ‘landslide’ and
    ‘overwhelming’ sound listless and feeble. He won 97.7% of the vote. That too in an election where 97% of those on the voter rolls turned out.

    Two others gave Nazarbayev company in this rather stately electoral no-contest — a communist and a trade unionist. Trade unionist Kusainov Abylgazy went home with 0.7% of the vote. Communist Turgyn Syzkykov had his bag slightly fuller with 1.7% of the vote. Both later acknowledged only Nazarbayev had the stature to be president.

    Kazakhstan’s “light” Nazarbayev rose from very humble beginnings to first become a steel plant worker, then the Soviet-ruled region’s top communist leader and the country’s first president after independence. He has always been at the helm. On April 27, he walked into a stadium raining confetti and bursting with roars of ‘Nursultan-Kazakhstan’. Wrapped in sea-blue and gold, this Nur Otan Party victory show was a full house. Amid much singing and dancing, Nursultan proclaimed his determination to take his country to the next level of development. For him it was a proud moment, for his people had backed him to the hilt.

    In the crowd, head covered in a blue party cap and waving a flag was young Imran. He loves Nazarbayev. “What style,” he gasped. Broad-shouldered Nazarbayev, natty in a smart suit, stepped on to the blue carpet. A golden scarf wrapped around his shoulders, the man of the moment was all about success and command. He waved, reached out, waded into crowds, did a quick jig and shook a leg as the music played. He was then on stage exhorting the nation to forge ahead — a show of showmanship.

    Imran also said he loved Bollywood stars. Malika, his course mate at the Eurasian University chipped in: “I love Shah Rukh Khan.” Even then the big Bollywood sultan isn’t a patch on their sultan — Nursultan. Once again, the roar went up: “Nursultan-Kazakhstan”, more confetti showers, more blaring music.

    The previous day, April 26, booth 81 in a central Astana neighbourhood had opened early for voting. On ordinary days, this glitzy structure, also called a palace, is home to children. They come here to learn music, take part in sports, learn other skills. That day, it was all agog. Nazarbayev would vote here. A day before the vote, a campaign ban —called day of silence in these parts —had kicked in. TV wasn’t beaming anything on elections.

    At booth 81, on the courtyard two big boxes made of transparent plastic stood on lovely expensive carpets. Husbands, wives, lithe women, athletic men, toddlers covered head to foot in woolens, elders, security men and women milled around. Unlike back home, where even in non-VIP booths, an air of grimness hangs over polling stations, this place was a breeze. Policemen weren’t making a clumsy display of guns.

    Past a metal detector and the mandatory frisking, it’s a short walk to the arena. Rolls are checked, voters given the ballot, they walk into an enclosure, stamp it and slip it into the big plastic box on the carpet through a narrow slit. Voting here closes at 8 pm. It’s unhurried. Children scamper around unafraid, walk up to securitymen and tug at their uniforms, slip into enclosures.

    Gulnar and her husband had brought their two children along. “I vote communist,” she said pointing to a miniscule photograph of Syzdykov, the communist in the race. Really? That’d make Gulnar a rare specimen of dissent — one of the barely-there 3%that voted against the great leader.

    In no time she drowned in a circle of TV booms and microphones as reporters quizzed her on her choice.

    Across the corridor, booth 81 was readying for Nursultan to show up. That’s the biggest photo-op for journalists here, the must-capture moment. Minutes later, smart securitymen — they look the same everywhere, clones of Obama’s secret service guards — burst into the hall. Nazarbayev’s here. All of 74, trim and straight, a slight smile flashes on his face. He is fit, has a tight jaw but somehow has an old soviet air about him — of being a cut above the rest, dripping dignity, in total control, creator of a nation, a man sitting on a mountain of success.

    He acknowledges the crowds, waves at them, walks into the arena, follows the process, poses for shutterbugs and showtime’s over. He’s then escorted into an enclosure where he addresses reporters. His voice deep and throaty, Nazarbayev speaks haltingly, carefully picking his words. He addresses reporters first in Kazakh, then Russian.

    Translators tell me he spoke of progress, the next level of consolidation and development. He takes no questions, waves again and walks out.

  • Bombay Velvet  Movie Review – Trailer

    Bombay Velvet Movie Review – Trailer

    Actor Ranbir Kapoor rises to be an influential name in Bombay of the Sixties in the second trailer of Bombay Velvet.

    Watch Ranbir Kapoor’s journey from being a cage-fighter to becoming ‘bigshot’ Johnny Balraj with the help of Karan Johar, who plays a Parsi businessman named Kaizad Khambatta in the film.

    Kaizad, the antagonist of Bombay Velvet, helps Johnny rise to power by devising money minting techniques, even if they are unlawful in nature. But their eventual fallout is chronicled in the second trailer of the film.

    Film’s leads Ranbir Kapoor, Anushka Sharma and Karan Johar were candidly caught with Kay Kay Menon, Anurag Kashyap and other crew members at the event. The BV team knows how to have fun and we witnessed them, taking digs at each other in a fun way, every now and then.

    “My character, Khambatta is humorous and intrigued in the movie. Ranbir co-directed the movie. I used to get one direction from Anurag & three others from him”, said Karan Johar and also added, “I’ve done Bombay Velvet for Rs.11. I’m not only inspired but also cheap. *laughs*”

    Our bigshot Ranbir Kapoor is quite a hugger and revealed that “Anurag was like a teddy bear on the set.” “After a long time I took a role only based on the amazing script of the movie”, said RK. The film’s leading lady, Anushka had Geeta Dutt as her point of reference for her role in the film.

    Bombay Velvet is based on Prof Gyan Prakash’s book Bombay Fables. Actress Anushka Sharma plays a jazz singer and Ranbir’s love interest in the film. The second trailer shows how Johnny and Kaizad’s partnership turns bitter towards the end, paving way for rivalry among the former allies.

  • Awareness Film by indiefilmschannel – Raise Your Voice

    Awareness Film by indiefilmschannel – Raise Your Voice

    There are some who are born blind, and then there are the rest of us who prefer to be blind.

     When a girl is being molested or assaulted, we all notice it, but everybody gives a ‘blind eye’ to it.

    This video by indiefilmschannel shows a woman being molested, and one guy coming to her rescue, but with an plot twist at the end.

     

  • Phones in Bollywood – Who uses what

    Phones in Bollywood – Who uses what

    In the smartphone battlefield there have been many losers, but no outright winner yet. While Android and iPhone both fight it out for the top spot in smartphone sales, Bollywood is one big iPhone monopoly.

    While we have been chronicling the tech tales of the stars, we also took a deeper look at the Twitter habits of the who’s who of Bollywood to find out which platforms do they tweet from the most. 

    We did expect to find a lot of them sending out tweets from iPhones and all of them appear to do so, but there are a few very notable exceptions.

    The Big B of Bollywood is also a big tweeterer with over 14 million followers or over 40 thousand tweets. But much of Amitabh Bachchan’s tweets are not sent from an iPhone or an Android device but they are posted via the good ol’ Twitter Web client. Bachchan stands out from the rest of Bollywood also because no one else appears to tweet as much from a desktop device.

    The Android versus iPhone fight from supremacy gives rise to intense debates and fanatic following quite like the battle of the three Khans of Bollywood. The difference in their films and personalities also extends to their choice of devices. While Shah Rukh Khan, in tune with the greater Bollywood, appears to be an iPhone user. Salman Khan stands out from the fraternity (and also much of the world) with a BlackBerry device. A majority of the @beingsalmankhan’s tweets that we analysed were sent from a BlackBerry device. 

    Android, the choice of the aam aadmi, hasn’t found much currency with the khasam khas of filmdom. But then Aamir Khan, even in this, is different. But at the same time, a few stray tweets from @aamir_khan indicate that they have been sent from an iOS device.

    The only other non-iPhone user we could find amongst the prominent Bollywood twitterati is Vishal Dadlani and the music director also appears to be an Android loyalist as all the tweets from @VishalDadlani in our sample were sent via Twitter’s Android app.

  • 21000 auditions and counting for Aamir Khan’s Dangal!

    21000 auditions and counting for Aamir Khan’s Dangal!

    Aamir Khan will be seen playing a father in his next film Dangal. While he has been prepping for the role, the casting team is having a tough time auditioning girls who can essay the role of his daughters.

    The team has been scouting and has auditioned more than 21,000 girls till now. However, they have not been able to sign anyone.

    It is a tough role. The girls need to be slightly athletic and willing to undergo strenuous training.

    The director of the film, Nitesh Tiwari is certain he does not want to cast someone from the industry. The casting has been going on since a couple of months.

    They are looking for fresh faces who have little or no former training in acting. So even when the team selects someone for auditioning, they have to give them time to prepare for the screen test, making the process even more challenging.

    After breaking all box office records with P.K, Aamir does not have a release this year.

    However he seems to be gearing up for Dangal which will release in 2016.

    It is a very different role he will be seen playing and the casting team needs to ensure they get the casting right.

    Spokesperson confirms and shares, “We have been auditioning but have not been able to zero in on the casting yet.” reports Bollywood.com

  • Ranbir doesn’t talk about Katrina with dad..

    Ranbir doesn’t talk about Katrina with dad..

    New Delhi, April 21 — Bollywood actor Rishi Kapoor, who is often asked about son, actor Ranbir Kapoor and Katrina Kaif’s relationship, says that he doesn’t know much about the duo’s private life.

    The 62-year-old says that the couple that is now living together, likes to keep things between them. “Ever since I have been on social media, more and more people have been asking me about them. I don’t know much myself,” he says, adding, “They have said they want to keep things private and they like the way things are. They hardly talk about their relationship with anyone, and he (Ranbir) doesn’t talk much about it with us. So I am sorry, but I myself don’t know much about them. What can I say them? And honestly, I am fine with it. I mean, it’s their decision and I respect that,” he tells us.

    The Agneepath actor, who recently shared an adorable childhood picture of Ranbir reading comics online, further tells us that all he can share is fun stories about Ranbir and the time the two spent together.

    “I can share many such stories. A lot of people retweeted that photo and thanked me for sharing a photo from his childhood. I can share many such stories from his childhood. I just chanced upon this one, while going through one of my photo albums,” he says.

  • ‘2 States’ ‘Haider’ leading IIFA 2015 nominations

    ‘2 States’ ‘Haider’ leading IIFA 2015 nominations

    Romantic comedy “2 States” and Vishal Bhardwaj’s Shakespearean adaptation “Haider” are leading at with nine and eight nominations at IIFA awards 2015 while superstars Aamir and Shah Rukh Khan are pitted against each other in the best actor category.

    Rajkumar Hirani’s inspiring “PK” earned six nominations and Kangana Ranaut’s “Queen” received 5 nominations for the 16th edition of International Indian Film Academy (IIFA), which will take place in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia from June 5-7.

    The best picture category is dominated by female-centric films like “Queen”, “Highway” and Priyanka Chopra-fronted biopic “Mary Kom”. “2 States” and “Haider” and “PK” will also compete in the category.

    Aamir and SRK are nominated in the best actor category for their roles in “PK” and ‘Happy New Year” respectively. They will face competition from Hrithik Roshan (‘Bang Bang’), Shahid Kapoor (‘Haider’), Arjun Kapoor (‘2 States’) and Randeep Hooda (‘Highway’).

    “Queen” and “Mary Kom” stars Kangana and Priyanka will compete in the best actress category alongside Rani Mukerji (‘Mardaani’), Deepika Padukone (‘Happy New Year’), Alia Bhatt (‘2 States’) and Anushka Sharma (‘PK’).

    The best director category has Vikas Bahl (‘Queen’), Vishal Bhardwaj (‘Haider’), Rajkumar Hirani (‘PK’), Abhishek Varman (‘2 States’) and Imtiaz Ali (‘Highway’).

    The best supporting actor list features Ronit Roy (‘2 States’), Riteish Deshmukh (‘Ek Villain’), Kay Kay Menon (‘Haider’), Randeep Hooda (‘Kick’), Inaamul Haq (‘Filmistaan’) and veteran actor Naseeruddin Shah for ‘Finding Fanny’.

    In the best supporting actress category Tabu is the strongest contender for her powerful role in ‘Haider’ as Shahid’s mother. Other nominees include Amrita Singh in ‘2 States’, Lisa Haydon in ‘Queen’, Juhi Chawla in ‘Gulaab Gang’ and Huma Qureshi in ‘Dedh ishqiya’.

    Govinda (‘Happy Ending’), Sharib Hashmi (‘Filmistaan’), Sanjay Dutt (‘PK’) and Varun Dhawan (‘Main Tera Hero’) are nominated in the best comic actor category.

    Riteish and Menon earned their second nomination in the best negative actor category along with Nawazuddin Siddiqui (‘Kick’)

  • Pooja Chandrashekar: Indian-American Teen Whiz cracks All 8 Ivy League Schools

    Pooja Chandrashekar: Indian-American Teen Whiz cracks All 8 Ivy League Schools

    Indian-origin student and entrepreneur Pooja Chandrashekar created history by securing admission at all eight Ivy League schools and six other top US universities.

    “They are all fantastic schools, so I couldn’t discount any of them… I wanted to make sure I could get into a really good school and have more choices,” Chandrashekar told The Washington Post.

    However, she cleared all of them and scored 2390 out of 2400 in her SAT, getting an average grade point of 4.57. She even excelled in all 13 Advanced Placement Exam and gained admission to all the Ivy League Universities: Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Cornell, Dartmouth, Columbia, Brown, and Pennsylvania.

    Besides Ivy League schools, she got through Stanford, MIT, Duke, the University of Virginia, the University of Michigan, and Georgia Tech. But, Chandrashekar is keen on joining only three of the 14, Harvard, Stanford and Brown, as they have offered her admission into medical school. She now wants to explore the field of medicine and bio-engineering.

    The Indian-origin teenager was born to an engineer couple, who stayed in Bangalore before moving to Virginia in US – where she was born and brought up. Like other teens, even Chandrashekar cherishes Bollywood songs and television shows like ‘Shark Tank’. However, she is not like every other teen as she is already an entrepreneur.

    Chandrashekar studied in Nysmith School in Herndon before she joined Thomas JeffersonHigh School for Science and Technology, where she studied computing, artificial intelligence and DNA science.

    Besides being a genius student, Chandrashekar is the founder and CEO of ProjectCSGIRLS, which is “a national youth-driven nonprofit working to close the tech gender gap by running a national computer science competition for middle school girls and workshops around the country,” according to her website poojachandrashekar.com.

    She has even developed a mobile application that helps in “diagnosing concussions and a speech-based diagnostic test for Parkinson’s disease”. This app is believed to give 96% accurate diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease.

    Chandrashekar loves speaking about her work and she has attended several conferences and summits around the country. She was part of the IEEE Women in Engineering International Leadership Conference, the Global Tech Women Voices Conference, the O’Reilly Velocity New York Conference, and the STEM Symposium for the National Capital Region, the website reads.

    She has received altogether 30 honours and recognitions since 2010, including CIA Outstanding Student Scientist Award, and 1st Place Individual American Regions Mathematics League Local.

  • Ek Paheli Leela Movie Review

    Ek Paheli Leela Movie Review

    STORY: London-based model Mira (Sunny Leone) comes to India on an assignment. She falls in love with a prince in Jaisalmer and gets married to him. Meanwhile, a budding musician Karan (Jay Bhanushali) is getting persistent nightmares after hearing an old Rajasthani folk tune and keeps muttering the name Leela in sleep. How is Mira related to Leela? This one is more than just a reincarnation tale.

    REVIEW: The tendency of not taking a Sunny Leone film seriously is going to change.  Ek Paheli Leela might not be a cinematic treat but its tricky climax Emakes it watchable. With a solid story in place, this vivaciously shot reincarnation drama is plotted carefully with its loose-ends knotting up into a thrilling end.

    Unlike the usual fare that compliment the actress’ bold persona, the forte of this film sprawls beyond its scintillating bits. It starts on a droopy note and meanders initially but once the parallel stories merge, it advances smoothly towards the jolt of its unexpected climax.

    What dampens the strength of the plot are its sexual innuendos and the needless songs that keep popping in frequently without adding much. There are nine songs forced into the package which water down the film’s punch. The story shifts briskly between the present and the past without seeming too disparate. With its runtime of over two hours, the film gets tedious, something that could have been easily rectified by sharper editing.

    Director Bobby Khan amps up the oomph quotient, helping Sunny pull a character than demands a steady performance. And to be fair, she has delivered her most earnest act so far. She has worked on her linguistic skills seriously and can emote a lot better than before. The men are good but Rajneesh Duggal has the most palpable chemistry with Sunny. Mohit Ahlawat and Jay Bhanushali are good and Jas Arora’s vamp act was wicked.

    You might guffaw at a few scenes because the film isn’t exactly an epitome of logical thinking. But as an entertainer, it’s colourful, crisp and convivial.

  • Detective Byomkesh Bakshy! Movie Review

    Detective Byomkesh Bakshy! Movie Review

    BYOMKESH LOOKS STUNNING – BUT COULD BE SHARPER!

    STORY: Byomkesh Bakshy wants to find Bhuvan babu – but what happens when Byomkesh unearths a highly sinister plot?

    REVIEW: Straight up,  Detective Byomkesh Bakshy! is possibly India’s best-looking sleuth flick till now. Based on Saradindu Bandhopadhyay’s vintage stories, DBB! is set in 1942 Calcutta where clever Byomkesh (Sushant) is asked by Ajit Banerjee (Anand) to help find his father, Bhuvan babu, mysteriously missing for months

    At Bhuvan’s lodgings, Byomkesh is befriended by doctor Anukul Guha (Neeraj Kabi) and Kanai Dao (Meiyang Chang) who sells opium – in a Calcutta that’s all about intoxicants, smugglers and smoke. Byomkesh finds a trail to Gajanand Sikdar’s chemical factory where sensuous film star Angoori (Swastika) intrigues him, imperious Satyawati (Divya) annoys him and rebellious Sukumar (Shivam) puzzles him – discovering blackmail, drugs, bodies and bombs, can Byomkesh solve not one but two dangerous plots?

    Byomkesh Bakshy is an iconic Bengali character brought to life by Sushant Singh Rajput with great elan – Sushant pulls off a role full of wry liveliness (a Sardarji cabbie nervously noting, ‘Ye babu ka nut dheela hai,’), fitting the character, from flowery dhoti folds to furrowed-forehead frowns, beautifully. He’s matched by dramatic Neeraj Kabi and calm Anand Tiwari who, after a Chinese gang leaves a courtyard strewn with corpses, tells caretaker Putiram (shakily precise Pradipto Kumar Chakrabarty), ‘Khoon rehne de…bas chai bana de.’

    Alongside, the look is remarkable – noir cinematography unfurls a Calcutta of jostling shadows and splendid squalour, trams like filigree running across the city, costume balls, dentists’ halls where murders are committed with violent slash. Dibakar Banerjee adds cheeky global touches too (Byomkesh’s painting resembles Edvard Munch’s Scream), tracking shots evoking Fellini’s moving camera, action punching between Guy Ritchie and Quentin Tarantino.

    But the film stretches, scenes between Byomkesh a nd a slow-talking, slow-smoking, slow-pouting Angoori losing pace. Superfluous characters (wailing wife, dumbstruck ex) make growing tension pop away like the bubbles on Angoori’s bath foam. A chilling climax masterfully ties up the tale – but 30 minutes less would’ve given this detective a much tighter grip.

    Still, DBB! is a fun watch, presenting another mysterious case – how Sushant looks good, despite a uni-brow?

  • SUNNY LEONE SPORTS VARIOUS AVATARS IN ‘EK PAHELI LEELA’

    SUNNY LEONE SPORTS VARIOUS AVATARS IN ‘EK PAHELI LEELA’

    In her forthcoming film ‘Ek Paheli Leela,’ Sunny Leone will be seen in not one, but three different looks, which she hasn’t attempted before. Apart from the sex siren herself, credit for the outfits also goes to her personal stylist Hitesh Kapopara, who created her looks for her previous films.

    From traditional to modern, Sunny plays a village girl, a model and also a princess in this reincarnation drama directed by Bobby Khan. Along with her designer and producer Shaira Khan, the actress was involved in all aspects of her look, from the material of her costumes to other accessories.

    Apart from sporting cholis with heavy jewellery as a village belle, she will also be seen in branded designer wear for her role as a model from London. To add authenticity to her different looks, the actress and her producer went shopping in the local markets of Rajasthan and London. Kapopara, who sourced bandhani material, mojaris and accessories from Ahmedabad, says, “Producer Ahmed Khan was particular that every look of Sunny in the film was new and something she hasn’t done before. Sunny understands the script and what kind of outfits are required and suitable for each scene.” 

    The designer adds that having worked with the actress from the start of her career in Bollywood has helped in building an understanding between the two. “While Sunny knows she has to look sexy, her costumes are according to her scenes and shouldn’t look out of place/context. She’s hardworking and has a very good sense of fashion, so she gives valuable inputs,” says Hitesh.

  • ALIA BHATT HAS NO PLANS TO WORK WITH FATHER MAHESH BHATT

    ALIA BHATT HAS NO PLANS TO WORK WITH FATHER MAHESH BHATT

    Alia Bhatt has said that she does not want to become too exhausting for the audience by having too many releases in a year. The actress who was recently awarded with the Filmfare Award for Best Actor Female (Critics) said that three of her films released within six months of each other in the year gone by but she had not planned for that to happen. The Highway girl who wants her releases to be a little more spaced out, said that she had no plans yet about doing films with father Mahesh Bhatt’s production company.

  • RICHA CHADHA TURNS BELLY DANCER

    RICHA CHADHA TURNS BELLY DANCER

    Not many know that actress Richa Chadha is a trained Kathak and Street Jazz dancer. Interestingly, she will soon be adding ‘Belly dance’ to her resume.

    Since Richa will be playing a professional cabaret dancer in her next, she thought these skills could come handy and thus decided to try it.

    She said, “I went for a 5-day workshop of Belly dancing. There are various styles of doing it… Turkish, Egyptian. It’s a great form of workout. Also, since I am playing a dancer in my next, I must look convincing and this will help.”

  • PAISA HO PAISA – MOVIE REVIEW

    PAISA HO PAISA – MOVIE REVIEW

    STORY: While conducting an experiment in a lab, a college student accidentally invents a chemical which can turn things invisible. Taking undue advantage of the discovery, a few classmates decide to loot a wealthy woman. Can their plan succeed?

    REVIEW: While they do execute their plan and manage to flee with the money, they find themselves being chased by gangsters, cops and a CBI officer. This running around forms the story. The youngsters use their ‘spray’ quite often while on the run to misguide those chasing them and these scenes are supposed to look funny but they don’t. Low production value, poor dubbing (apparently this is not a remake but a dubbed version of the maker’s Tamil film), shoddy effects, atrocious songs, inconsequential concept and an irrelevant love story makes this journey a tiresome experience. The film is no Mr. India. Nor is it a sci-fi. It’s a badly made dramedy, which makes you want to magically disappear from the movie hall. Spray that thing on us, I say!

  • Vidhu Vinod Chopra’s ‘Broken Horses’ treks from Bollywood to Hollywood

    Fresh out of film school, Vidhu Vinod Chopra was at the Academy Awards in 1979 when his documentary short about child slum dwellers in Mumbai, India, “An Encounter With Faces,” was nominated for an Oscar.

    “I was too poor to rent a tuxedo,” recalled Chopra in Los Angeles. “They said I could wear national dress. All I had was kurta pajamas [Indian sleepwear]. I sat next to Jane Fonda in my pajamas. I was brash enough to think I’d win, that I’d made the best movie ever.”

    He didn’t win, but Chopra was hoping that the nomination and recognition would pave the way for him in Hollywood. That didn’t happen. So he took a different route.

    They said I could wear national dress … I sat next to Jane Fonda in my pajamas. I was brash enough to think I’d win, that I’d made the best movie ever.- Vidhu Vinod Chopra, filmmaker

    Chopra returned to India and made a string of highly popular Bollywood movies. Two of these, “3 Idiots” from 2009 and last year’s “PK,” broke box office records in India — “PK” with its global haul of more than $100 million stands as the highest-grossing Bollywood film of all time.

    Still there was the enduring lure of Hollywood. Studios here started courting Chopra a few years ago. But he resisted, waiting for something that would “inspire and challenge” him.

    Chopra finally landed on the right opportunity. His English-language debut, “Broken Horses,” a $20-million action thriller from Reliance Entertainment starring Vincent D’Onofrio and Anton Yelchin, opens April 10. It was four years in the making and vastly different in tone and sensibility from his Indian films — so much so, that Chopra says it’s like “Steven Spielberg going to Mars.”

    But it was a story that Chopra couldn’t shake after a conversation he had several years ago with his longtime collaborator, Abhijat Joshi, who shares screenwriting credit on “Broken Horses.”

    “We were on a train from New York to Boston, comparing Martin Scorsese’s ‘The Departed,’ which we had just seen, to the original Korean version,” said Chopra. Joshi had the idea to take “Parinda,” Chopra’s 1989 movie set in the Indian underworld, and make a version for American audiences.

    “We wanted to make an English film of our own movie,” said the 62-year-old director, who still lives in Mumbai. “We were reasonably drunk and started writing on the train.”

    As in “Parinda,” “Broken Horses” revolves around the lives of two brothers who end up on drastically divergent paths. Jacob Heckum (Yelchin) goes to New York to pursue a career as a classical violinist while big brother Buddy (Chris Marquette) stays behind in their dreary, dusty home town near the U.S.-Mexican border, where he aligns himself with local gangster Julius Hench (D’Onofrio). When Jacob returns home, he gets pulled in to his brother’s nefarious dealings, imperiling his own life as well as Buddy’s.

    While Bollywood remains a prolific producer of movies, the industry there has a notoriously chaotic working style. Subhash Dhar, a producer on “Broken Horses,” said that working within the Hollywood system was a refreshing change for Chopra.

    “As good as Vinod is, his environment in India is often tough,” said Dhar. “Now, he was able to operate in an environment where everything works like clockwork. If the call time is 6 a.m., the crew is there at 6. You need one horse, you have three. But the new environment didn’t change his sensibility. Instead, his crew adapted to his sensibility. And what you see on-screen is an absolutely pure Hollywood movie.”

    A new direction

    Chopra is known for exuberant, sentimental, warm-hearted films. His “3 Idiots” is a comedy-drama about two college friends who go off in search of a member of their previously close-knit trio, “PK” is a naive alien who lands on Earth and loses his way home, and “1942 A Love Story” is a lush and poignant tale of two lovers with opposing loyalties during the time of the partition of India.

    So the gritty and tense tone of “Broken Horses” marks a startling departure for the filmmaker. Or at least that’s certainly how it appears at the outset. But then Chopra’s cultural proclivities come through: the love and loyalty that the siblings share, the notions of sacrifice, of honoring promises made long ago, of redemption. These are hallmarks of many Bollywood films, and the moving and finely wrought “Broken Horses” is infused with them.

    “It’s where I come from,” said Chopra. “It’s a film about brotherhood and family. It’s a film that will bring you closer to your own family. I have honestly portrayed my own emotions into this movie. I come from that culture, and I don’t become somebody else because now I’m speaking English.”

    When Chopra showed early drafts of the script to Hollywood luminaries, he left his name off. “I knew that if they were reading a film about an American border town, and they see Vidhu Vinod Chopra and Abhijat Joshi on the opening page, they will be checking my spelling on Page 3 and by Page 10 will be saying, ‘What do these Bollywood guys know about Hollywood?’

    “It’s not just about me. I’m representing a huge community of people. The last thing I want is for somebody to say, ‘Bollywood comes to Hollywood and makes a fool of himself.’”

    Amitabh Jhunjhunwala, vice chairman of Reliance, the Mumbai-based distributor of “Broken Horses,” is optimistic that the film will be embraced by U.S. audiences. “The film has been shot in the mold of a classic western with the theme of brotherly love underpinning it,” said Jhunjhunwala. “And it is based entirely on Hollywood sensibilities.”

    Chopra noted that Bollywood films take narrative and stylistic leaps that are not part of the Hollywood filmmaking vocabulary.

    “Bollywood is a unique storytelling style that incorporates song, dance, emotions and rarely sticks to a genre, so a Hindi film would typically include romance, drama, comedy, violence,” said Chopra. “When the narrative stops and shifts to Switzerland for a song, the audience isn’t fazed — that’s part of the deal. It’s the suspension of disbelief. That’s not how Hollywood works.”

    “Broken Horses” was shot in Death Valley, Victorville and Jacumba, close to Mexico. Chopra spent a year traveling around California, Texas and Arizona to scout sets. But America remained an enigma to him, so he decided to focus on landscape rather than location.

    “I didn’t know America well at all,” he said. “So I took the universal elements — wind, water, earth, sun — and made a movie in those elements. Water and mountains and earth are the same everywhere. If you have a house on a lake, it can be in California or Rajasthan.”

    And while predicated on border gang rivalries, the violence in the film is neither gratuitous nor gory. Indeed, it is almost poetic: When someone is shot early on in the film, a target practice sheet flutters gently on the victim, caressing him with only the vaguest hint of blood.

    “It’s all suggested,” said Chopra. “You don’t see blood oozing out. The woman I love and live with hates blood. So it boils down to me trying to please my wife, because I want her to see this movie.”

    It also boils down, said Chopra, to the memory of that young film school graduate who was suddenly at the Oscars, in his pajamas.

    “It’s still the child in me who had this crazy dream,” said Chopra, who’s sifting through scripts looking for his next project. “I let my childhood fantasy overrule my rational senses. That’s the only reason this film exists.”

     

  • Mallika Sherawat to be the ONLY Bollywood celebrity attending PM Narendra Modi’s speech at UNESCO

    Mallika Sherawat to be the ONLY Bollywood celebrity attending PM Narendra Modi’s speech at UNESCO

    Mallika Sherawat may not be reaching in news due to the choices made by her in her career but the actress has won herself a seat at PM Narendra Modi’s speech at UNESCO,which will be held today. Now that’s a first. The B-town star tweeted about the same writing,” ”Feel honored to be invited, looking forward to hearing our Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi’s speech.” Check out the picture of the invitation below:

    We hear that the actress is the only Bollywood celebrity who has been invited for Modi sahab’s speech. Her political thriller Dirty Politics may not have impressed at the box office but has surely left an impression on politicians? We wonder why no one else from the fraternity has been invited for the speech.

    A source close to the actress revealed,”Mallika thinks highly of Narendra Modi. She is excited that she was invited and is waiting to hear his speech.”

    We hope the actress enjoys the speech. After all, when Modi speaks, the nation is bound to get hooked! 

  • I rest my case- Prosecution demanding Culpable Homicide in Salman Khan’s hit and run case

    I rest my case- Prosecution demanding Culpable Homicide in Salman Khan’s hit and run case

    The prosecution in the Salman Khan trial on Thursday rested its case against the Bollywood actor, demanding he be convicted for culpable homicide not amounting to murder, which attracts a 10-year jail term.Public prosecutor Pradeep Gharat who concluded his final arguments before Additional Sessions Judge D.W. Deshpande, forcefully argued that evidence shows that Salman was under the influence of liquor, rashly driving the vehicle without a licence with prior knowledge of the place and also that it could harm others.

    He cited several cases, including another high-profile hit-and-run case of industrialist Alistair Pereira and the Sanjeev Nanda hit-and-run case of 1999 in New Delhi.

    “The Alistair Pereira (of 2006) and Salman Khan case are identical and from the same locality (Bandra). This is a fit case for conviction under IPC’s section 304 (2),” Gharat said.

    “It’s very clear. Section 304 (2) is attracted when it is proved that even if the accused had no intention to cause such bodily injury as was likely to cause death, but had the knowledge that the injury could cause death,” argued Gharat.

    In the present case, the emphasis was on knowledge that there was a 90-degree sharp turn where work was in progress and he should have been more cautious, he noted.

    With the prosecution arguments concluded, defence lawyer Shrikant Shivade would start his final arguments from Friday.

    Salman, 49, was exempted from personal appearance but his sister Alvira was present in court to the witness the proceedings.

    Shivade is expected to further his case that the actor was neither drunk nor driving the vehicle on the night of September 28, 2002, when it ran over sleeping pavement dwellers, leaving one dead and four others injured.

    Besides the serious charge of section 304 (2), Salman is facing charges under various other sections of the indian Penal Code, the Motor Vehicles Act and the Bombay Prohibition Act.

     

  • AbRam  makes his debut at the first cricket match of IPL-8 with daddy Shah Rukh Khan

    AbRam makes his debut at the first cricket match of IPL-8 with daddy Shah Rukh Khan

    Shah Rukh Khan took time from the shooting of his upcoming film, Fan and flew down to Kolkata to support his team Kolkata Knight Riders as they took on Mumbai Indians. And accompanying the Chennai Express abram-700304actor were his kids.

    “Taking so many kids for the KKR match… it’s like I am a class teacher Incharge of Nursery to Higher Secondary,” Shah Rukh posted on Twitter.

    SRK’s elder son Aryan and daughter Suhana, as we all know have often accompanied their father to matches, but the latest addition to Kolkata Knight Riders’ fan base is the superstar’s youngest son, AbRam. The little toddler was dressed in the Knight Riders’ jersey, AbRam looked nothing but super cute. And clearly, the two-year-old proved to be a lucky charm for KKR who beat MI by 7 pp-sharukh-03wickets.

    AbRam has already made his official debut on Twitter last year when his father tweeted a photo of them together as an Eid gift to fans. He’s also made a Bollywood debut and was spotted in Farah Khan’s Happy New Year. And now by accompanying his father to a cricket match, AbRam has also made his cheer leading debut.

     

     

     

  • I wish I could Listen To Ghulam Ali: Modi

    I wish I could Listen To Ghulam Ali: Modi

    India’s elected Prime Minister Narendra Modi was invited to participate in the Music Festival at  India’s ghulam Alihistorical sankat Mochan temple, but he apologized because of engagements.

    Modi said on Twitter on Tuesday ‘I wish I could get a chance to go to the fair, where many famous artists who delight audiences sometime in the future’

    I have listened to Ghulam Ali in the past and now have learned from the newspapers that Ghulam Ali expressed desires that I should come to the event. Unfortunately, I will not be able to.

    Modi said in another tweet that the festival is no less than a treat for music lovers.

  • Kangana Ranaut: “Image Means a Lot “

    Kangana Ranaut: “Image Means a Lot “

    Actress Kangana Ranaut, the National Award winner and who has played variety of roles on the silver screen, says the image of an actor drives a celebrity’s career in the world of showbiz.

    The actress expressed her views at the launch of film critic Anupama Chopra’s book The Front Row: Conversations Of Cinema here on Tuesday.

    “Overall the business is completely based on the kind of image that you have,” she added.

    Kangana made her Bollywood debut with 2006’s Gangster and since then she has made a special place by delivering exceptional performances in films like Fashion and Queen.

    The actress is nowready to hit the theaters with her upcoming movies Tanu Weds Manu Returns and Katti Batti.

     

  • Salman Khan hit-and-run case: The actor was drunk at the time of the accident, says prosecution

    Salman Khan hit-and-run case: The actor was drunk at the time of the accident, says prosecution

    Mumbai: Attempting to further nail Salman Khan in the 2002 hit-and-run case, the prosecution on Wednesday cited evidence to prove that the Bollywood star was indeed under the influence of alcohol and his Toyota Land Cruiser vehicle did not have any mechanical defects.

    Public prosecutor Pradeep Gharat had on Tuesday forcefully argued that Salman and his friend Kamaal Khan had fled from the accident site without helping the victims on the night of September 28, 2002.

    Continuing his arguments on Wednesday, Gharat told Additional Sessions Judge D.W. Deshpande that there was no tampering with the actor’s blood samples.

    He connected the evidence of four prosecution witnesses — medico Shashikant Pawar of Sir J.J. Hospital who took the blood sample, Bandra policemen Vijay Salunkhe who accompanied Salman to the hospital, and Sharad Gorade who carried the sample to the Forensics Science Laboratory and chemical analyst D. Balachander who analysed the blood sample.

    “Balachander has proved that the accused (Salman) has consumed alcohol. The analysis revealed the presence of 62 mg alcohol in 100 ml blood. There is no reason to doubt the witness,” Gharat said, explaining the procedure the chemical analyst had adopted for checking the blood sample.

    Gharat said that after Pawar took the blood sample, he sealed it properly so there was no possibility of tampering, the police constable delivered it to the Bandra police station’s then in-charge, Senior Inspector Kishan Shengal, and then it was taken by Gorade to chemical analyst Balachander who received it intact.

    On the question of defence arguments pointing at mechanical defects in the vehicle leading to the accident, Gharat cited the evidence of investigation officer Rajendra Kadam who had not touched the vehicle or started the ignition and it was taken to the police station, where a region transport office inspector Rajendra Keskar inspected it.

    “The evidence on record shows that the person driving the car was under the influence of alcohol and could not control it,” Gharat argued, referring to the defence claims that stones and rubble on the road could have made the vehicle wheel off the road.

    However, Gharat made a strong plea seeking re-examination of Keskar, who he said answered all questions during examination, but did not answer properly during cross-examination.

    “The witness said during cross-examination that he inspected the vehicle for two-three seconds. Is it possible? He is a mechanical engineer and had been examining vehicles for four years, and then during cross-examination said he has experience of inspecting only one Indica car during his training session. He is an unreliable witness,” Gharat argued, seeking Keskar’s re-examination.

    The arguments will continue before Judge Deshpande on Thursday

  • Dilip Kumar awarded with Padma Vibhushan!

    Dilip Kumar awarded with Padma Vibhushan!

    Cinema icon Dilip Kumar and was awarded with Padma Vibhushan – India’s second highest civilian honour – by President Pranab Mukherjee on Wednesday (April 8).

    Dilip Kumar, whose real name is Yusuf Khan, became a name to reckon with in the 1950s and 1960s, thanks to his performance in Aan, Daag, Devdas, Madhumati, Paigham, Mughal-E-Azam, Ganga Jamuna, Leader and Ram Aur Shyam.

    After working for about six decades, he bid adieu to arclights in 1998. His last movie was Qila.

    Dilip Kumar couldn’t make it to the ceremony to receive the honour in person.

    Amitabh shared the news over Dilip Kumar’s absence through micro-blogging website Twitter on Tuesday. He wrote: “@Amirmurt @TheDilipKumar he is unwell and shall not be there to receive his award…sad (sic)”.

    Well, what can we say, We just hope that our favourite star gets well soon and is between us for a much longer time