Category: Hindi

  • Vivek Oberoi to help develop Robotics Centre at Nagpur University

    Vivek Oberoi to help develop Robotics Centre at Nagpur University

    NEW DELHI: Actor Vivek Oberoi will be sponsoring and helping the funding of the Advanced Centre of Robotics at the Rashtrasant Tukodoji Maharaj Nagpur University

     

    According to the proposed plan, the centre will be named after Oberoi’s family.

     

    Oberoi wants the robotics centre to be world class and for that he is in touch with the American-based ASEA Brown Boveri (ABB), a robotic tech major, which will be the private partner and provide technical inputs and help set up the research centre. 

     

    Vice Chancellor SP Kane had met Maharashtra chief minister Devendra Fadnavis in Mumbai last week to discuss the research centre and introducing diploma courses in the university.

     

    Oberoi is expected to visit Nagpur along with ABB officials in the first week of June.

     

    When asked about this, Oberoi said, “Our goal is to create a world class centre of excellence for the youth of India who want to be at par with global industry standards in Robotics. We all know that Indian students have genius in their DNA and we want to provide them with a global platform. With guidance and cooperation from the world’s leading robotics company, ABB and the committed faculty at Nagpur University and VNIT, we are hopeful that our students will make India proud! Our dream is that our students lead the technological revolution through robotics applications, transforming India’s manufacturing sector and making our country a true world leader. I was inspired to take this initiative by our dynamic CM Shri Devendra Fadnavis when I met him at the Hannover Messe (technology fair) in Germany.” 

  • Marketing coup: SRK, Aamir unveil Salman’s ‘Bajrangi Bhaijaan’ poster on Twitter

    Marketing coup: SRK, Aamir unveil Salman’s ‘Bajrangi Bhaijaan’ poster on Twitter

    MUMBAI: In a marketing and promotional coup of sorts, Salman Khan managed to pull off an unparalleled feat. The ‘Being Human’ star has managed to get his contemporaries Shah Rukh Khan and Aamir Khan to tweet the first look of his upcoming film Bajrangi Bhaijaan to their followers on Twitter.

     

    “I believe Being a brother is bigger than being a Hero. ‘Bhaijaan’ coming Eid 2015. How do u like the first look?” tweeted Shah Rukh Khan, the once arch nemesis of Salman.

     

    A few minutes later, Aamir Khan also took to the popular micro-blogging site Twitter to post the poster of Salman’s film with the caption ‘Coming soon…”

     

    While SRK has 13.2 million followers on Twitter, Aamir is close behind with 12.8 million followers. On the other hand, amongst the trio, Salman lags slightly behind with 12 million followers on Twitter. Between them, the Khan trinity has the capability to reach out to a fan base of a whopping 38 million followers. No doubt, this is a sure shot recipe for unmatched ‘low cost – maximum impact’ publicity. Now that’s called marketing!

  • Box Office: ‘Tanu Weds Manu Returns’ shines; ‘Piku’ marches forward

    Box Office: ‘Tanu Weds Manu Returns’ shines; ‘Piku’ marches forward

    MUMBAI: Tanu Weds Manu Returns has braved two vital IPL matches to put up decent weekend figures. The film, while not finding much favour as it went from A to B to C class screens, however, performed well at elite multiplexes improving over Saturday and Sunday over its comparatively weak opening of Friday. The film collected Rs 38.7 crore in its opening weekend and will need to continue the good run to break even.

     

    Anurag Kashyap’s Bombay Velvet met with total rejection from day one by moviegoers. The film ended its opening Friday with pathetically poor collections and failed to improve over the next two days. Monday onwards it was a free fall, collections deteriorating each day to put together a lowly Rs 21.65 crore for its first week. Earlier, when people in the trade cited a high-priced disaster, it was Razia Sultan. For this generation, it is Bombay Velvet. At least, Razia Sultan enjoyed some shelf value and curiosity, thanks to its music and popularity of stars.Bombay Velvet is utterly forgettable.

     

    Piku continued to maintain strong trends in its second week, too. Being a wholesome entertainer, it holds appeal to all which reflects on its box office collections. The film has added Rs 23.8 crore to its first week figure of Rs 41.42 crore and takes its two-week total to Rs 65.22crore. Adding another Rs 6.5 crore for its third weekend, the film’s 17-day tally stands at Rs 71.22 crore.

     

    Gabbar Is Back has managed to collect Rs 4.3 crore in its third week to take its three-week total to Rs 78.8 crore.

  • Eros to co-produce two Tamil movies with RV Films

    Eros to co-produce two Tamil movies with RV Films

    MUMBAI: In a move to expand its presence in the South via content driven cinema, Eros International has joined hands with RV Films to co-produce two Tamil movies namely – Perai Thedia Natkal and Enkitta Mothathe.

     

    Eros, which plans to release the movies by the end of the year, will also be looking at launching new talent in these ventures. 

     

    Having previously worked as a writer and creative associate of the critically acclaimed Vidiyum Munn and co-director of the forthcoming Yagavarayinum Naa Kakka, Abraham Prabhu will make his directorial debut with Perai Thedia Natkal, a romantic drama starring Ashok Selvan. The remaining cast of the film would be announced soon.

     

    On the other hand, Enkitta Mothanthe is an action drama starring Natarajan Subramaniyam Rajaji, Vijay Murugan and Radha Ravi and will be directed by Ramu Chellappa, who has previously worked as an assistant director on projects such as Kedi Billa Killadi Renga, Mayakkam Enna and Pasanga amongst others. 

     

    With Enkitta Mothanthe, Chellappa makes his debut as director amassing his nine years of experience as an AD. The film was flagged off on 22 May, 2015 in the presence of the entire cast at Velco theatre in Anakaputhur.

     

    Eros International SVP – business development Sagar Sadhwani said, “These films are in line with our strategy to promote rightly priced, strong content driven films. With plans to expand in the southern markets, apart from our marquee releases, we want to back projects with fresh concepts and scripts that help recognize promising talent in the industry. By supporting such cinema, we want to encourage emerging talent to align with our vision of presenting quality cinema.”

  • India’s ‘Masaan’ wins two awards at Cannes, including Un Certain Regard

    India’s ‘Masaan’ wins two awards at Cannes, including Un Certain Regard

    NEW DELHI: India’s Masaan by Neeraj Ghaywan became a big winner in the Un Certain Regard section of the 68th Cannes International Film Festival by bagging two awards, even as the top award in this category went to Rams, a drama set among farmers and their sheep in a remote Icelandic valley.

     

    Masaan also received the Promising Future Prize, apart from bagging the International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI) award.

     

    Actress Richa Chadha, who features in a key role in the film, said the team feels “blessed.”  “#MasaanAtCannes just got the FIPRESCI award. #blessed. Team, take a bow,” Chadha tweeted.

     

    The film won a five-minute standing ovation post its screening, leaving Chadha and Ghaywan in tears of joy.

     

    Ghaywan’s debut feature project, Masaan is set in Varanasi and follows the stories of four people from a small town and how they fit in to the moralities.

     

    It also features Shweta Tripathi, Sanjay Mishra and Vicky Kaushal.

     

    The film is an Indian-French co-production with names like Manish Mundra of Drishyam Films, Macassar Productions, Phantom Films, Sikhya Entertainment, Arte France Cinema and Pathe productions.

     

    “I’m ecstatic to win these two awards for India and the team of Masaan more than myself. This was long overdue. We had a truly global team that was purely driven by passion and utmost honesty, which has gotten us this far. I can’t wait to show this film in India,” Ghaywan said.

     

    Ghaywan also thanked filmmaker Anurag Kashyap with whom he had worked as assistant director on Gangs of Wasseypur and second unit director on Ugly.

     

    Jury president Isabella Rossellini said Grimur Hakonarson’s film Rams was honoured for “treating in a masterful, tragicomic way the undeniable bond that links all humans to animals.”

     

    Six of the 19 films in the Un Certain Regard competition, which honours new directors and more offbeat films than those up for Cannes’ main Palme d’Or prize, won prizes.

     

    The second-place Jury Prize went to Croatian director Dalibor Matanic for Zvizdan (The High Sun), which explores love and ethnic hatred in the Balkans.

     

    The jury bestowed the directing prize on Kiyoshi Kurosawa for Journey to the Shore, and gave the Talent award to Treasure, by Romania’s Corneliu Porumboiu, and the Special Jury award to Nahid by Iranian director Ida Panahandeh.

     

    Actress-director Rossellini said serving on the jury had been “like taking a flight over the planet and seeing all its inhabitants and their emotions. I think we are the envy of every anthropologist,” she said. 

  • ‘Tanu Weds Manu Returns’: Fair entertainer

    ‘Tanu Weds Manu Returns’: Fair entertainer

    MUMBAI: Most sequels are not even sequels; they are just another story taking advantage of the same title used by an earlier successful film. To that extent, Tanu Weds Manu Returns justifies its name, being a proper sequel to Tanu Weds Manu (2011).

     

    In the first film, Kangana Ranaut and R Madhavan were married after a long drama. Tanu (Ranaut) had two suitors, Madhavan and Jimmy Shergill, both of whom brought a baraat to her house. Shergill was the violent kind and even ready to shoot down Madhavan but later had a change of heart looking at Kangana’s preference.

     

    Of course, the writer and director have bent many rules, taken a lot of liberties wanting to live up to the original — but they have come up with a fairly entertaining fare.

     

    The first film ended on a happy note with Tanu marrying Manu. The sequel starts with realities of married life. It is four years since they married and the marriage has gone sour. The couple is in London. Madhavan, who is now a doctor(!), keeps busy while Kangana tries her hand at various activities including to run a cr?che but to no avail. Compared to her tomboyish life in her native Kanpur, she feels clamped and bored.

     

    The film opens with the couple landing up at a madhouse. And one thought visiting marriage counselors solved marital problems! Since they are at an asylum, a panel of experts sits with them as both exchange accusation. Finally, Madhavan becomes violent and the expert doctor admits him in the asylum.

     

    Kangana is on her way back to Kanpur, relieved she has got rid of Madhavan and can now be free again to get back to her old bold lifestyle. But, with a pang of guilt, she calls up Madhavan’s cousin, Deepak Dobriyal, to get Madhavan back from the asylum. Madhavan decides to return to India instead of staying back in London and carrying on with his practice. But he is morose. He still loves Kangana and expects that she will change her mind and come back to him.

     

    But, soon, Madhavan finds someone who can fill his void; Kangana 2, a Tanu lookalike in Kusum, a Haryanvi Kangana in dual role. Kangana 2 is an athlete who not only represents the University but the state too. Initially, he just thinks that she is Tanu and starts chasing her till he is almost beaten and lynched by a mob when Kangana 2 shouts foul. He saves himself in the nick of time showing her the picture of his wife and how both look alike.

     

    Soon a romance starts budding between the two. While Madhavan cultivates Kangana 2, Kangana 1 is busy catching up with her old flame, Shergill, and also uses a tricky paying guest law student in her house, Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub. Ayyub starts his friendship with Kangana 1 by addressing her as a sister but soon gets emotional about her. He even sends divorce papers to Madhavan on behalf of Kangana 1 without her knowledge. In due time, the divorce comes through.

     

    After crossing a lot of hurdles, Madhavan gets the approval of Kangana 2 and her family to agree to their marriage. That is when jealousy sets in and Kangana 1 reacts. After that, she sets out to win over Madhavan again.

     

    The comedy ends here and melodrama begins. While Kangana 1 tries to belittle everyone, when it comes to running down Kangana 2, she gets it back because the latter is much more qualified and endowed despite being from a village background. Their first encounter cuts Kangana 1 to size. The melodrama ends opting to re-establish the “so called” Indian values as love is rediscovered.

     

    Despite liberties taken, the script makes sure its entertainment quotient does not drop much. However, the end drama seems a little stretched. The director tries to stick to the basic idea of living up to being a worthy successor to the original; making Indian wedding films gives you a lot of stock content which is common to all films. The film manages to do so by about 75 per cent for after all, originals are always the best while in a sequel the surprise element is lost. Thankfully, the film does not go overboard by including songs and offers a couple of peppy numbers. The film is a few seconds over 120 minutes but can still do with a bit of trimming, especially towards the end. Photography is okay. Background score is effective at points.

     

    As for performances, it is a Kangana vehicle all along and offers her a rare opportunity to pit her against herself in two varied characters. While Kangana 1 is good as usual, Kangana 2 steals a definite march over her: she adapts to being a native Haryanvi villager totally in command of her situations. Madhavan, despite having limited scope, manages to hold his own. Shergill’s character of a perceived threat remains just that. He is a paper tiger with a soft heart. Dobriyal impresses. Swara Bhaskar, Eijaz Khan and Dipti Mishra are okay. Ayyub is good and so is Rajesh Sharma, as usual. The supporting cast contains of celebrated character artistes like Rajendra Gupta, K K Raina, Navni Parihar and Rajesh Sharma who all justify their roles.

     

    Tanu Weds Manu Returns is a fair entertainer. However, the opening response being weak, it faces further hurdles of IPL match today and the finals on Sunday, which will affect it. Also, the film caters mainly to the multiplex audience, factors, which may limit its prospects.

     

    Producers: Krishika Lulla, Anand L Rai

     

    Director: Anand L Rai

     

    Cast: R Madhavan, Kangana Ranaut, Jimmy Shergill, Ejaz Khan, Swara Bhaskar, Deepak Dobriyal, Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub, Rajendra Gupta, Navni Parihar, K K Raina, Dipti Mishra, Rajesh Sharma, Akash Dahiya 

  • Yash Raj Films partners Rentrak for worldwide box office collections

    Yash Raj Films partners Rentrak for worldwide box office collections

    MUMBAI: Yash Raj Films (YRF) has entered into an agreement with Rentrak, which offers real-time box office results.

     

    YRF has appointed Rentrak for e-grosses (real time collection of box office collections) from theatres worldwide. This association takes ahead the already relationship between the two companies, who have worked in the overseas market since 1998.

     

    Rentrak’s reporting includes data from clients in the USA, UK, UAE and GCC, China, Australia and New Zealand.

     

    This also paves the way for bringing the much needed transparency to the box office reporting system in the country. Earlier this year, Rentrak had also inked box office measurement deals with India multiplex chains Carnival Cinemas and Cinepolis.

  • Amitabh Bachchan & family invest $71 million in Ziddu.com

    Amitabh Bachchan & family invest $71 million in Ziddu.com

    MUMBAI: Amitabh Bachchan along with his family have made their first significant equity investment in an overseas company. The Bachchans have invested $71 million (approx Rs 450 crore) in acquiring a minority stake in Singapore’s Meridian Tech Pte Ltd, which owns Ziddu.com.

     

    Ziddu.com is a free cloud storage, global wallet, social commerce and social gaming platform startup. 

     

    The firm, which also offers a micro payment platform, was founded five years ago by Venkata Srinivas Meenavalli. 

     

    “Mr Amitabh Bachchan and his family have invested in Ziddu.com at a valuation of around $71 million,” said Meenavalli.

     

    “I’m very happy and excited that they have reposed confidence and trust in Ziddu.com,” he added. 

     

    According to Google Analytics, Ziddu is among the top five file-sharing sites across the world, generating 1.2 billion page views with visitors from more than 225 countries. The company logged revenues of $20 million in calendar year 2014. 

     

    The deal was executed on 18 May, 2015.

  • Eros International looks to back content driven cinema

    Eros International looks to back content driven cinema

    NEW DELHI: Eros International’s Krishika Lulla, who is the producer of Tanu Weds Manu Returns, has always had an eye for content driven cinema. Lulla is bullish on supporting strong scripts irrespective of the cast.

     

    At a press meet to promote Tanu Weds Manu Returns, Lulla said that Eros International has always backed projects with genres ranging from rom-com to a slice of life, romance drama, and dark thriller.

     

    Lulla is hopeful that the movie will entertain audiences across the country.

     

    The film, which releases on 22 May, stars Kangana Ranaut and R. Madhavan in the main lead. Directed by Aanand L Rai, the film also stars Jimmy Shergill.

     

    Lulla added, “Content is king and as a producer I strongly believe the audience is ready for a variety of cinema that caters to different sensibilities. Keeping that in mind, I’m confident Tanu Weds Manu Returns will do everything it has set out to and is a genuine film with a heart and a soul that will stay with audiences much after its release.”

  • ‘Bombay Velvet’ collects Rs 15.8 crore in opening weekend; ‘Piku’ picks up

    ‘Bombay Velvet’ collects Rs 15.8 crore in opening weekend; ‘Piku’ picks up

    MUMBAI: Bombay Velvet has turned out to be the disaster it was predicted to be. From casting Ranbir Kapoor as a Tommy gun totting criminal to the way the film’s promotion was handled, especially the publicity material, went against it. From the film’s posters to promos, nothing inspired viewer confidence or curiosity.

     

    The film’s opening weekend collections are a terribly poor at Rs 15.8 crore. Kapoor has his fan following and, to an extent, so does Anushka Sharma, yet the film failed to garner decent footfalls on its opening day. The emerging word of mouth publicity from those who caught the movie early happened to be so negative that the film failed to better its Friday figures even on Saturday, which is a normal trend howsoever bad a film may be. It is strange that thanks to social media discussions, those who still went to watch the film thereafter did so mainly out of curiosity as to what was so wrong with this film?

     

    On the other hand, Piku is going great guns. Having had a lukewarm response with the opening day reporting a mere Rs 5.32 crore, the film went to double its opening day figures with Rs 11.2 crore on its first Sunday and continued the good run through the rest of the week till Thursday to put together a first week tally of Rs 41.42 crore. The film added another Rs 14.6 crore for its second week to take its 10-day total to Rs 56.02 crore.

     

    Kuch Kuch Locha Hai saw poor collections of Rs 3.55 crore for its opening week.

     

    Gabbar Is Back held well in face of little opposition and managed to collect a handsome Rs 18.1 crore in its second week to settle at Rs 74.5 crore after its second week run.

     

    Margarita With A Straw added about Rs 15 lakh in its fourth week to take its four-week tally to Rs 5.95 crore.