Category: Hindi

  • Saif Ali Khan and Sonakshi Sinha’s impromptu dance for Tamanche Pe Disco

    Saif Ali Khan and Sonakshi Sinha’s impromptu dance for Tamanche Pe Disco

    MUMBAI: The much awaited song Tamanche Pe Disco with our very own nawab of Bollywood Saif Ali Khan and Sonakshi Sinha is finally here!

     

    This track is sung and composed by the UK based band RDB, making the rhythm very catchy and peppy.

     

    In fact we hear that when ace choreographer Ganesh Acharya, who has choreographed the song, made the actors listen to the song, both started grooving spontaneously to its fast and peppy tune.

     

    A source close to the team said, “The song has a very perky tune to it making a person stand up and dance. The same happened with Saif and Sonakshi, making them groove on the spot. Ganesh was very impressed with this unrehearsed and unplanned dancing so he decided to include that impromptu chemistry between Saif and Sonakshi in the song.”

     

    We feel that the definite USP of the song is its rusty look along with the impromptu and spontaneous dancing done by the leading stars of the movie.

     

    Looks like the Bullett Raja is not only good with his shooting skills but also with his dancing skills!

     

    Releasing 29 November, Bullett Raja is premised on fictional mafia based in Uttar Pradesh starring Saif Ali Khan, Sonakshi Sinha, Jimmy Shergill, Vidyut Jamwal, Gulshan Grover, Raj Babbar and Chunky Pandey.

     

    Fox Star Studios presents Bullett Raja produced by Tigmanshu Dhulia, Nitin Tej Ahuja, Rahul Mitra and is a Moving Pictures & BrandSmith Motion Pictures Production.

  • Sonakshi Sinha requests for a special dance number in ‘R…Rajkumar’

    Sonakshi Sinha requests for a special dance number in ‘R…Rajkumar’

    Mumbai: Sonakshi Sinha, who will next be seen alongside Shahid Kapoor in Eros International & NextGen Films  R…Rajkumar is extremely excited about working with her co-star and director Prabhu Deva, both of whom are among the country’s greatest dancers.

    The actress has requested the makers of the action entertainer to include a special dance number with the three of them, which will act as a promotional song for the film.
    Confirming the news, producer Viki Rajani said, “Sonakshi was keen on dancing with Prabhu Sir and Shahid in a special number. We think it’s a great idea and will take a final call on it in the next few days.”

    Talking about her special request, Sonakshi Sinha, said, “I have been asking Prabhu sir to shoot for a music video featuring Shahid, him and me for a while now. I think the three of us in a dance number would be an explosive combination. I hope it works out”.

    Eros International and NextGen Films’ R…Rajkumar starring Shahid Kapoor and Sonakshi Sinha, directed by Prabhu Deva is scheduled to release on 6 December, 2013.

  • Mumbai film fest comes to a close

    Mumbai film fest comes to a close

    MUMBAI: After a week of celebrating movies, the final day of the 15th Mumbai Film Festival presented by Reliance Entertainment and organised by the Mumbai Academy of Moving Images (MAMI) unfolded.

    As the curtains came down, some of the best films screened at the festival were awarded. The International Competition Jury of the 15th Mumbai Film Festival, headed by Bruce Beresford awarded the Golden Gateway of India for the Best Film in the International Competition section to La Juala De Oro directed by Diego Quemada-Diez and produced by Inna Payan, Luis Salinas and Edher Campos.

    The Jury Grand Prize was given with The Silver Gateway of India trophy to the Indian film, Fandry directed by Nagraj Manjule and produced by Vivek Kajaria and Nilesh Navlakha. Anthony Chen was awarded to Best Director for the film Ilo Ilo and Yann Yann Yeo won the Best Actress award for her role in the same movie. The Silver Gateway of India Trophy for Best Actor was awarded to Vincent Macaigne for his role in Tonnerre.

    The final few films screened at the festival included Red Wedding directed by Guillaume Suon and Lida Chan, Short Term 12 by Destin Cretton, Saving General Yang directed by Ronny Yu, Hiroshi Toda’s Seventh Cat, Five Years by Stefan Schaller, Costa Gavras’s Amen and the much acclaimed Z, A Few Days More by Om Prakash Srivastava among others.

    Legendary director Bruce Beresford conducted the last master class of the festival on Preparation by the Director. “I thought I would talk about the necessity of story boarding. These days, with tight budgets and short schedules, if you don’t plan them, you’ll make all sorts of horrible mistakes,” he said.

    The master class later turned into a panel discussion moderated by Variety Asia’s bureau chief, Patrick Rafter. The panelists included Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences member and Digital Motion Picture Archive project lead Milton Shefter and Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ Science and Technology Council director Andy Maltz.

    Andrew Commis for his cinematography in the movie The Rocket was conferred with the final award in the International Competition category.

    The HT Cafe Mumbai Young Critics Jury Award for the Best Film presented by Kavita Awasthi was given to the Voice of the Voiceless directed by Maximon Monihan. The HT Best Young Mumbai Critic Award presented by Daniel Kotenschulte was given to Yavar Ahmed of SCM Sophia College.

    Gloria directed by Sebastian Lelio was presented with Best Film award by the Harmony Celebrate Age Jury, headed by Hansal Mehta. Along with the Silver Gateway of India trophy, director Sebastian Lelio was awarded a cash prize too. Additionally, a cash prize was also awarded to director Matevz Luzar as his film Srecen Za Umret won the Silver Gateway of India trophy for Second Best Film.
    Oh, How I Long directed by Riyad Deis and Arefi, Der Hirte (Arefi, The Shepherd) directed by Daniel Asad Faezi elicited Special Mentions from the Jury.

    The Indian feature fiction films screened in the India Gold 2013 category brought to the fore many talented directors. However, Jury member Jill Bilcock in consultation with the members of the Jury announced Deepti Kakkar and Farhad Mustafa’s Katiyabaaz (Powerless) as the Best Film in the category. Qissa: The Tale of a Lonely Ghost directed by Anup Singh won Second Best Film while Manju Borah’s Ko:yad (A Silent Way) received the Special Jury Award.

    Directors below the age of 25 pit their skill in a short film competition “Dimensions Mumbai”. The brainchild of Jaya Bachchan, the competition is a fantastic launch pad for young and aspiring filmmakers. Headed by Shoojit Sircar, the Jury awarded director Keyur Kajavadra S’ In This City the silver gateway of India trophy for Best Film. Mumbaicha Vada Pav directed by Akshay Dhanavale won Second Best Film. Director Sameer Nerkar’s The Handicapped Colony and Abhiraj Rajadyaksha’s Share were given Special Mentions by the Jury.

    Festival Director Srinivasan Narayanan delivered the vote of thanks concluding this year’s festival, which was followed by the closing film of the festival. The Fifth Estate directed by Bill Condon was screened as the finale film of the festival.

    With over 200 films from 65 countries around the world screened and master classes that inspired, the 15th Mumbai Film Festival presented by Reliance Entertainment and organised by MAMI was truly a grand success.

  • Sonakshi Sinha requests for a special dance number in R Rajkumar

    Sonakshi Sinha requests for a special dance number in R Rajkumar

    Mumbai: Sonakshi Sinha, who will next be seen alongside Shahid Kapoor in Eros International & NextGen Films  R…Rajkumar is extremely excited about working with her co-star and director Prabhu Deva, both of whom are among the country’s greatest dancers.

     

    The actress has requested the makers of the action entertainer to include a special dance number with the three of them, which will act as a promotional song for the film.
    Confirming the news, producer Viki Rajani said, “Sonakshi was keen on dancing with Prabhu Sir and Shahid in a special number. We think it’s a great idea and will take a final call on it in the next few days.”

     

    Talking about her special request, Sonakshi Sinha, said, “I have been asking Prabhu sir to shoot for a music video featuring Shahid, him and me for a while now. I think the three of us in a dance number would be an explosive combination. I hope it works out”.

    Eros International and NextGen Films’ R…Rajkumar starring Shahid Kapoor and Sonakshi Sinha, directed by Prabhu Deva is scheduled to release on 6 December, 2013.

  • Micky Virus: There is a virus in my cinema ticket!

    Micky Virus: There is a virus in my cinema ticket!

    MUMBAI: Micky Virus attempts a contemporary theme of computers and hackers, weaving it around a murder mystery and bank fraud. The approach is kept on a lighter note for the most part, at least until the interval.

    Manish Paul (Micky) belongs to a group of computer geeks in Delhi, with each member specialising in some sort of computer trick. They are led by the Harvard educated Nitesh Pandey, referred to as professor. The other members of the group are Puja Gupta, Raghav Kakkar and Vikesh Kumar. However, Paul has mastered the art of hacking and can get into any computer anywhere in the world however safe and secure.

    Now, the ACP Manish Chaudhary and Inspector Varun Badola are looking for Paul not because hacking is a crime but because they need his expertise to crack a very tricky case. Two hackers of repute, both foreign citizens, have been found murdered in broad daylight and in a public place in the city with no obvious marks of harm. On investigation, Chaudhary learns that they were killed with a cyanide-tipped needle, both are non-Indians. Concluding that they were called to India to break into some computer, the cops want to enrol Paul to hack a site belonging to a gang of hackers.

    Paul is allergic to any kind of job; the idea of working for someone is not his thing. But, with a little arm-twisting by the cops and a sudden need to make a living, as he has fallen in love in the meanwhile, make him accept the assignment. Paul’s romantic interest is Eli Avram, an executive at an investment firm. By the time the romance is a month old, Eli makes her move and asks Paul to correct a computer error she made with a client’s account. So far neither the film nor its story has moved anywhere except the hero falling in love with a very willing heroine.

    Producer: Arun Rangachari, Vivek Rangachari.
    Director: Saurabh Varma.
    Cast: Manish Paul, Eli Avram, Manish Chaudhary, Varun Badola, Puja Gupta, Nitesh Pandey, Raghav Kakkar, Vikesh Kumar.

    By the end of the interval, the director finally feels the need to introduce some story in the film. Paul has been used by Eli to transfer rupees 100 crore from a government middleman’s account to another account. He has been framed. What is more, Eli is not around to tell him what happened because she has been killed the same way two hackers were killed earlier, with a poisoned needle. Paul finds out whose account the money is transferred to but that story ends as soon as it started as the man is killed in a very predictable road accident while being chased by Paul!

    All the key punching in computers of all kinds continues until Paul suspects the identity of at least one of the people behind the plot. And after 2 hour and 10 minutes of running around, dropping hints, punching computers and displaying lot of geekeryon screen, it is not the script that tells you the story but through verbal outpouring by the culprits that all the plots are revealed. Some hacker story!

    Micky Virus tries to fit in too much of effects without relevance or to any positive results. The film should have had an ideal length of 90 to 100 minutes. But it stretches by almost 30 minutes. The one time that the film generates some interest is when Eli is killed. Direction falls victim to a weak script. Paul acts the typical loud Delhi lad with set expressions throughout. Eli Avram is a misfit. Puja Gupta is good while Chaudhary and Badola are impressive.

  • Mumbai film fest comes to a close

    Mumbai film fest comes to a close

    MUMBAI: After a week of celebrating movies, the final day of the 15th Mumbai Film Festival presented by Reliance Entertainment and organised by the Mumbai Academy of Moving Images (MAMI) unfolded.

     

    As the curtains came down, some of the best films screened at the festival were awarded. The International Competition Jury of the 15th Mumbai Film Festival, headed by Bruce Beresford awarded the Golden Gateway of India for the Best Film in the International Competition section to La Juala De Oro directed by Diego Quemada-Diez and produced by Inna Payan, Luis Salinas and Edher Campos.

     

    The Jury Grand Prize was given with The Silver Gateway of India trophy to the Indian film, Fandry directed by Nagraj Manjule and produced by Vivek Kajaria and Nilesh Navlakha. Anthony Chen was awarded to Best Director for the film Ilo Ilo and Yann Yann Yeo won the Best Actress award for her role in the same movie. The Silver Gateway of India Trophy for Best Actor was awarded to Vincent Macaigne for his role in Tonnerre.

     

    The final few films screened at the festival included Red Wedding directed by Guillaume Suon and Lida Chan, Short Term 12 by Destin Cretton, Saving General Yang directed by Ronny Yu, Hiroshi Toda’s Seventh Cat, Five Years by Stefan Schaller, Costa Gavras’s Amen and the much acclaimed Z, A Few Days More by Om Prakash Srivastava among others.

     

    Legendary director Bruce Beresford conducted the last master class of the festival on Preparation by the Director. “I thought I would talk about the necessity of story boarding. These days, with tight budgets and short schedules, if you don’t plan them, you’ll make all sorts of horrible mistakes,” he said.

     

    The master class later turned into a panel discussion moderated by Variety Asia’s bureau chief, Patrick Rafter. The panelists included Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences member and Digital Motion Picture Archive project lead Milton Shefter and Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ Science and Technology Council director Andy Maltz.

     

    Andrew Commis for his cinematography in the movie The Rocket was conferred with the final award in the International Competition category.

     

    The HT Cafe Mumbai Young Critics Jury Award for the Best Film presented by Kavita Awasthi was given to the Voice of the Voiceless directed by Maximon Monihan. The HT Best Young Mumbai Critic Award presented by Daniel Kotenschulte was given to Yavar Ahmed of SCM Sophia College.

     

    Gloria directed by Sebastian Lelio was presented with Best Film award by the Harmony Celebrate Age Jury, headed by Hansal Mehta. Along with the Silver Gateway of India trophy, director Sebastian Lelio was awarded a cash prize too. Additionally, a cash prize was also awarded to director Matevz Luzar as his film Srecen Za Umret won the Silver Gateway of India trophy for Second Best Film.

    Oh, How I Long directed by Riyad Deis and Arefi, Der Hirte (Arefi, The Shepherd) directed by Daniel Asad Faezi elicited Special Mentions from the Jury.

     

    The Indian feature fiction films screened in the India Gold 2013 category brought to the fore many talented directors. However, Jury member Jill Bilcock in consultation with the members of the Jury announced Deepti Kakkar and Farhad Mustafa’s Katiyabaaz (Powerless) as the Best Film in the category. Qissa: The Tale of a Lonely Ghost directed by Anup Singh won Second Best Film while Manju Borah’s Ko:yad (A Silent Way) received the Special Jury Award.

     

    Directors below the age of 25 pit their skill in a short film competition “Dimensions Mumbai”. The brainchild of Jaya Bachchan, the competition is a fantastic launch pad for young and aspiring filmmakers. Headed by Shoojit Sircar, the Jury awarded director Keyur Kajavadra S’ In This City the silver gateway of India trophy for Best Film. Mumbaicha Vada Pav directed by Akshay Dhanavale won Second Best Film. Director Sameer Nerkar’s The Handicapped Colony and Abhiraj Rajadyaksha’s Share were given Special Mentions by the Jury.

     

    Festival Director Srinivasan Narayanan delivered the vote of thanks concluding this year’s festival, which was followed by the closing film of the festival. The Fifth Estate directed by Bill Condon was screened as the finale film of the festival.

     

    With over 200 films from 65 countries around the world screened and master classes that inspired, the 15th Mumbai Film Festival presented by Reliance Entertainment and organised by MAMI was truly a grand success.

  • RIP Manna Dey

    RIP Manna Dey

    MUMBAI: Manna Dey is no more.

    The legendary singer, whose golden voice mesmerised audiences for decades, breathed his last early this morning at a Bengaluru hospital, where he had been admitted for respiratory problems for the past few months. He was 94 years old.
    Having started his career as a playback singer in the 1943 film Tamanna, Dey has nearly 3,500 songs in languages including Hindi, Marathi, Gujarati, Bengali, Malayali, Kannada and Assamese to his credit. The more memorable among these being Pucho Na Kaise, Pyaar Hua Ikraar Hua, Ae Maalik Tere Bande Hum, Kasme Vaade Pyaar Wafa, Ae Meri Johra Jabi, Laaga Chunari Mein Daag and Yaari Hai Imaan to name a few.

    For Kailash Kher, Dey was nothing less than an ‘institution’, whose inimitable style of singing influenced many like him to do better in their career

    The distinctive timbre and classical bent of Dey’s voice made him a hot favourite among the heroes of the time, not to mention generations of music composers. Not surprisingly, he went on to receive the country’s highest honours – the Padma Shree and Padma Bhushan, among a slew of awards and accolades.

    As news spread of his sad demise, the entire film industry was plunged into a state of shock and grief.

    One of the first ones to tweet was Amitabh Bachchan, who wrote: “Manna Dey, stalwart of the music world, passes away. Flooded with memories and his songs. In particular his rendition of Madhushala.”

    Shabana Azmi too tweeted: “Manna Dey had a unique voice. He will live on through his songs Ai Meri Zohra Jabeen/ dil ka haal suney dilwala/ poocho na kaise maine RIP.”

    Not just the industry veterans, even younger artistes and composers fondly remembered the iconic singer.

    Speaking to indiantelevision.com, National Award-winning singer Rekha Bharadwaj said Dey had been an inspiration for almost all those interested in music.

    “He had a completely distinctive style. No one can match that. Whether it was Ae Mere Pyaare Watan…, Koi Sagar Dil Ko Behlata Hai…, or Ek Chaturnaar…, he made each of these songs unique in itself with a certain pathos and melody,” said Bharadwaj, who remains a fan of all the songs from the film Anand, still humming them whenever she is in a mood.

    Ae Mere Pyaare Watan has been a favourite among almost everybody across all generations,” she said, regretting the fact that she never got a chance to meet Dey in person. “But people like Kavita Krishnamoorthy and Suresh Wadekar kept me abreast about him and also shared many anecdotes. It’s nice to know all that,” she said.

    For Kailash Kher, Dey was nothing less than an ‘institution’, whose inimitable style of singing influenced many like him to do better in their career.

    “He is an inspiration. He has left so much behind him for generations to come,” Kher said, recalling how as a teenager, he never knew who had sung his favourite song, Zindagi Kaisi Hai Paheli…, till he discovered through a magazine interview that it was none other than Dey, and became an ardent fan since.

    “I had read this interview sometime in the 90s and was in awe of the singer after reading everything about him. He sung a comic song or a peppy number with as much ease as he sung an emotional song,” said Kher, also referring to the fact that Dey lent his voice not only to the Hindi film industry but also to many other languages and genres.

    Shibani Kashyap thinks Dey had the ‘most unusual voice’. “I cry when I listen to the songs from Anand. Very few singers have the power to move you to tears. He is iconic. And though he is not around us any more, his songs will always keep him alive. The songs that he has sung are out of the world and they will continue to enthuse younger generations of aspiring singers and musicians,” said Kashyap, ruing the fact that he wasn’t celebrated as much as he should have been. “He hasn’t got the due that he should have. We let him leave the industry too soon. I just wish his songs stay with us forever,” she concluded.

  • Extravagant India awards in Paris was nothing short of extravagant

    Extravagant India awards in Paris was nothing short of extravagant

    NEW DELHI: Lunch Box by Ritesh Batra, which missed the Indian selection to the Oscars by a whisker, was voted the best film at the Extravagant India awards in Paris.

    Path-breaking filmmaker Anurag Kashyap received the best director award for his film Ugly, which is also being featured in a retrospective of his films in Europe as part of the Europalia.India Festival.

    The late Rituparno Ghosh, who passed away earlier this year, was named best actor for his own film Chitrangada.

    Actress Vidya Balan received the best actress award for The Dirty Picture by Milan Luthria and Kahaani by Sujoy Ghosh.

    The Festival was held from 16 to 22 October in Paris. The jury for the feature films comprised Coline Serreau (director and President of the jury), Armand Amar (composer), Joël Farges (producer).

     The best documentary award went to Children of the Pyre by Rajesh S Jala while the renowned Pan Nalin’s film Faith Connection got a special jury mention.  

    The Jury for documentaries comprised Euzhan Palcy (director and President of the jury), Charlotte Uzu (Les Fims d’ici), and Claude Gilaizeau (Productions de la Lanterne).

    The film Allah is Great by Andrea Iannetta, which was produced by the Film and Television Institute of India, Pune, won the Best Short film award.

    The Jury for short films was Jean-Charles Mille (distribution Premium Films – President of the jury), Abel Jafry (actor), and Benoit Blanchard (producer).

    The Feature Jury president Coline Serreau said: “The selection was fascinating, rich and diverse. We plunged into the movies with delight, and with the feeling to approach and to discover this boiling continent, in which all the contradictions of the world in future are at work.”

    He added: “I hope that the Indian cinema will take from now on its just place in the French public. Long life to this festival, whose 2014 edition, I would love to already know.”

    Euzhan Palcy said: “This first edition of the Festival offered us an Indian cinema of a high quality and which participates of the cultural diversity which the world needs. By supporting this festival, France will continue to play its leader’s role for the cultural diversity.”

    Happiness Distribution is distributing Batra’s film in France on 13 December, while Kashyap’s film will be released in France in March 2014.

    Sophie Dulac Distribution will distribute Faith Connection by Pal Nalin under the title Kumbh Mela, Les chemins de la Foi.

    The Indian Delegation comprised Irrfan Khan (actor in Lunchbox), Prakash Jha (director of Raajneeti), Sujoy Gosh (director of Kahaani), Rajesh S. Jala (director of Children of the Pyre, Andrea Ianneta (director of Allah is Great), Film Federation of India President Bijay Khemka and Secretary General Supran Sen, Manoj Srivastava who is Head of Bollywood the film City project Marwan, Ranvir Nayar who is Director of Media India, Sutapa Sikdar (scriptwriter), and  Ramesh Tekwani, President of  “Docs & Shorts”.

  • RIP Manna Dey

    RIP Manna Dey

    MUMBAI: Manna Dey is no more.

    The legendary singer, whose golden voice mesmerised audiences for decades, breathed his last early this morning at a Bengaluru hospital, where he had been admitted for respiratory problems for the past few months. He was 94 years old.

    Having started his career as a playback singer in the 1943 film Tamanna, Dey has nearly 3,500 songs in languages including Hindi, Marathi, Gujarati, Bengali, Malayali, Kannada and Assamese to his credit. The more memorable among these being Pucho Na Kaise, Pyaar Hua Ikraar Hua, Ae Maalik Tere Bande Hum, Kasme Vaade Pyaar Wafa, Ae Meri Johra Jabi, Laaga Chunari Mein Daag and Yaari Hai Imaan to name a few.

    For Kailash Kher, Dey was nothing less than an institution, whose inimitable style of singing influenced many like him to do better in their career

     

    The distinctive timbre and classical bent of Dey’s voice made him a hot favourite among the heroes of the time, not to mention generations of music composers. Not surprisingly, he went on to receive the country’s highest honours – the Padma Shree and Padma Bhushan, among a slew of awards and accolades.

     

    As news spread of his sad demise, the entire film industry was plunged into a state of shock and grief.

     

    One of the first ones to tweet was Amitabh Bachchan, who wrote: “Manna Dey, stalwart of the music world, passes away. Flooded with memories and his songs. In particular his rendition of Madhushala.”

     

    Shabana Azmi too tweeted: “Manna Dey had a unique voice. He will live on through his songs Ai Meri Zohra Jabeen/ dil ka haal suney dilwala/ poocho na kaise maine RIP.”

     

    Not just the industry veterans, even younger artistes and composers fondly remembered the iconic singer.

     

    Speaking to indiantelevision.com, National Award-winning singer Rekha Bharadwaj said Dey had been an inspiration for almost all those interested in music.

     

    “He had a completely distinctive style. No one can match that. Whether it was Ae Mere Pyaare Watan…, Koi Sagar Dil Ko Behlata Hai…, or Ek Chaturnaar…, he made each of these songs unique in itself with a certain pathos and melody,” said Bharadwaj, who remains a fan of all the songs from the film Anand, still humming them whenever she is in a mood.

     

    “Ae Mere Pyaare Watan has been a favourite among almost everybody across all generations,” she said, regretting the fact that she never got a chance to meet Dey in person. “But people like Kavita Krishnamoorthy and Suresh Wadekar kept me abreast about him and also shared many anecdotes. It’s nice to know all that,” she said.

     

    For Kailash Kher, Dey was nothing less than an ‘institution’, whose inimitable style of singing influenced many like him to do better in their career.

     

    “He is an inspiration. He has left so much behind him for generations to come,” Kher said, recalling how as a teenager, he never knew who had sung his favourite song, Zindagi Kaisi Hai Paheli…, till he discovered through a magazine interview that it was none other than Dey, and became an ardent fan since.

     

    “I had read this interview sometime in the 90s and was in awe of the singer after reading everything about him. He sung a comic song or a peppy number with as much ease as he sung an emotional song,” said Kher, also referring to the fact that Dey lent his voice not only to the Hindi film industry but also to many other languages and genres.

     

    Shibani Kashyap thinks Dey had the ‘most unusual voice’. “I cry when I listen to the songs from Anand. Very few singers have the power to move you to tears. He is iconic. And though he is not around us any more, his songs will always keep him alive. The songs that he has sung are out of the world and they will continue to enthuse younger generations of aspiring singers and musicians,” said Kashyap, ruing the fact that he wasn’t celebrated as much as he should have been. “He hasn’t got the due that he should have. We let him leave the industry too soon. I just wish his songs stay with us forever,” she concluded.

  • Extravagant India awards in Paris was nothing short of extravagant

    Extravagant India awards in Paris was nothing short of extravagant

    NEW DELHI: Lunch Box by Ritesh Batra, which missed the Indian selection to the Oscars by a whisker, was voted the best film at the Extravagant India awards in Paris.

     

    Path-breaking filmmaker Anurag Kashyap received the best director award for his film Ugly, which is also being featured in a retrospective of his films in Europe as part of the Europalia.India Festival.

     

    The late Rituparno Ghosh, who passed away earlier this year, was named best actor for his own film Chitrangada.

     

    Actress Vidya Balan received the best actress award for The Dirty Picture by Milan Luthria and Kahaani by Sujoy Ghosh.

     

    The Festival was held from 16 to 22 October in Paris. The jury for the feature films comprised Coline Serreau (director and President of the jury), Armand Amar (composer), Joël Farges (producer).

     

     The best documentary award went to Children of the Pyre by Rajesh S Jala while the renowned Pan Nalin’s film Faith Connection got a special jury mention.  

     

    The Jury for documentaries comprised Euzhan Palcy (director and President of the jury), Charlotte Uzu (Les Fims d’ici), and Claude Gilaizeau (Productions de la Lanterne).

     

    The film Allah is Great by Andrea Iannetta, which was produced by the Film and Television Institute of India, Pune, won the Best Short film award.

     

    The Jury for short films was Jean-Charles Mille (distribution Premium Films – President of the jury), Abel Jafry (actor), and Benoit Blanchard (producer).

     

    The Feature Jury president Coline Serreau said: “The selection was fascinating, rich and diverse. We plunged into the movies with delight, and with the feeling to approach and to discover this boiling continent, in which all the contradictions of the world in future are at work.”

     

    He added: “I hope that the Indian cinema will take from now on its just place in the French public. Long life to this festival, whose 2014 edition, I would love to already know.”

     

    Euzhan Palcy said: “This first edition of the Festival offered us an Indian cinema of a high quality and which participates of the cultural diversity which the world needs. By supporting this festival, France will continue to play its leader’s role for the cultural diversity.”

     

    Happiness Distribution is distributing Batra’s film in France on 13 December, while Kashyap’s film will be released in France in March 2014.

     

    Sophie Dulac Distribution will distribute Faith Connection by Pal Nalin under the title Kumbh Mela, Les chemins de la Foi.

    The Indian Delegation comprised Irrfan Khan (actor in Lunchbox), Prakash Jha (director of Raajneeti), Sujoy Gosh (director of Kahaani), Rajesh S. Jala (director of Children of the Pyre, Andrea Ianneta (director of Allah is Great), Film Federation of India President Bijay Khemka and Secretary General Supran Sen, Manoj Srivastava who is Head of Bollywood the film City project Marwan, Ranvir Nayar who is Director of Media India, Sutapa Sikdar (scriptwriter), and  Ramesh Tekwani, President of  “Docs & Shorts”.