Category: Hindi

  • Sony Music releases ‘Making of the Legend’ from Bhaag Milkha Bhaag

    Sony Music releases ‘Making of the Legend’ from Bhaag Milkha Bhaag

    MUMBAI: Sony Music in an effort to give its fans more has released the Making of the Legend – a film showcasing the journey of Farhan Akhtar to achieve an athletic body similar to what Milkha Singh had during his championship days.

    Says FarhanAkhtar, “Six months of training, four-five hours over two sessions, six days a week got me to be like this.”

    Composed by the musical trio Shankar, Ehsaan and Loy with Prasoon Joshi‘s lyrics, Sony Music released the music of the film in May 2013 and received instant success with each song. Zinda has become a youth anthem; MeraYaar exudes a romantic feel while the title track Bhaag Milkha Bhaag is motivation for one and all.

    This is the brands‘ second project with Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra, after Rang De Basanti, which adds another feather to Sony Music‘s repertoire. Co-produced by Viacom 18 Motion Pictures and Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra, Bhaag Milkha Bhaag is based on the biography of India‘s most prominent athlete, Milkha Singh which is played by the multi-faceted actor Farhan Akhtar in a pivotal role.

  • Monsoon Shootout, Bombay Talkies to bookend 4th London IFF

    Monsoon Shootout, Bombay Talkies to bookend 4th London IFF

    MUMBAI: Amit Kumar‘s trigger happy Monsoon Shootout will be the red carpet UK premiere opening night film of the 4th annual London Indian Film Festival (IFF) to be held between 18-25 July, Together with O2. This film is a version of Sliding Doors meets a hyper-real cop thriller, which will have you on the edge of your seats. Closing the festival will be a special UK premiere of Bombay Talkies with four stories by acclaimed directors Karan Johar, Zoya Akhtar, Dibakar Banerjee and Anurag Kashyap exploring 100 years of Indian cinema, studded with top independent and Bollywood stars. Both films had a triumphant reception at the recent Cannes Film Festival and special guests are expected for both screenings.

    Now Europe‘s largest platform for Indian cinema, the London IFF returns to the Capital, celebrating the movement of Indian independent cinema and bringing to UK audiences a rare selection of cutting-edge films from some of India‘s hottest independent talents. Going way beyond Bollywood, the festival presents a kaleidoscope of new films that challenge, shock, generate debate and present a more realistic view of India and the subcontinent, in all its diversity. For the first time, the festival is going on tour to Bradford and Glasgow.

    The centerpiece In conversation on Saturday 20 July at the BFI Southbank, will be with actor Irrfan Khan, one of the very few Indians to straddle Hollywood, British and Indian cinema, talking to award winning director of Senna, Asif Kapadia. Khan‘s memorable film roles include BAFTA winner, The Warrior and Oscar winners, Slumdog Millionaire and Life of Pi and Hollywood biggies like The Amazing Spider-Man, The Darjeeling Limited and The Namesake, and Bollywood hits Life In A Metro, Mumbai Meri JaanNew York and Paan Singh Tomar.

    London IFF also has films and events for a wide range of audiences and includes industry events at BAFTA, exploring UK and Indian subcontinent co-productions. The winner of the annual Satyajit Ray short film competition will be announced at the end of the festival at The Nehru Centre in Mayfair.

    The Major sponsors this year will include O2 International Sim, and the festival is also grant funded for the first time, by the BFI Film Festival Fund.

    Festival director Cary Rajinder Sawhney comments, “We are delighted that the festival is growing from strength to strength. If you want to find out more about south Asian cinema come and soak yourself in a week of magnificent films in London, or catch the festival tour in Bradford and Glasgow.”

  • Lootera does fairly well, even as Policegiri struggles

    Lootera does fairly well, even as Policegiri struggles

    MUMBAI: The Ranveer Singh and Sonakshi Sinha love story Lootera has had a fair weekend thanks to Mumbai and Delhi multiplex collections. The film has collected Rs 15.55 crore for the opening weekend. This is Vikramaditya Motwane‘s second directorial venture, following the critically acclaimed Udaan (2010).

    Policegiri which stars Sanjay Dutt hasn‘t found much favour either at single screens, where it was expected to do better, or at multiplexes. The film has managed to collect about Rs 8.5 crore for its first weekend. Dutt‘s next release this year would be the Zanjeer remake where he would be reprising the memorable role of Sher Khan previously essayed by Pran in the 1973 original.

    The Emraan Hashmi and Vidya Balan starrer Ghanchakkar has crashed further after its average opening weekend, with a poor script and execution, the film has not added much over its next four days and ended its first week with figures of Rs 27.3 crore.

    Raanjhanaa, which marked the debut of the south superstar Dhanush of Kolavari Di fame, and met with mixed response due to its second half remained steady in its second week and has collected Rs 17.1 crore, thereby taking its two week total to Rs 49.3 crore. The distributors‘ smaller circuits were the first to earn profits on the film.

    Fukrey has managed to add another Rs 4.5 crore in its third week taking its three week tally to Rs 32.7 crore.

    Yeh Jawani Hai Deewani has collected Rs 1.8 crore in its fifth week. The film‘s five week total now stands at Rs 182.05 crore. The Ranbir Kapoor and Deepika Padukone starrer has done exceedingly well and now entering its sixth week will slowly phase out with some big releases lined up in the coming weeks.

  • Pakistani actress Meesha makes her Bollywood debut

    Pakistani actress Meesha makes her Bollywood debut

    MUMBAI: Pakistani model, singer and actress Meesha Shafi, who made her movie debut in Mira Nair‘s The Reluctant Fundamentalist, will now be seen in her first Bollywood venture.

    The actress is playing a character named Perizaad, best friend to Farhan Akhtar‘s Milkha Singh in Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra‘s Bhaag Milkha Bhaag.

    Excited about her upcoming movie, Meesha says, “Our cultural heritage and stories are so deeply rooted that it is only natural to relate to the cinema being made here. Art is definitely a universal language and just as Bollywood has a huge audience in Pakistan, Pakistani music has a vast listenership in India.”

    Further, she adds, “Both countries are doing an immense service by bridging gaps and reaching out to the people. In fact I would say that Bollywood and Pakistan have an age-old relationship.”

    Bhaag Milkha Bhaag produced by Viacom18 Motion Pictures and ROMP Pictures releases on 12 July.

  • IIFA travels to the States in 2014

    IIFA travels to the States in 2014

    MUMBAI: The International Indian Film Academy (IIFA) Awards has announced the event will travel to the US for the first time next year (2014), settling in Tampa, Florida in June. The move is one that‘s likely to up the contour of Indian cinema Stateside where Bollywood isn‘t typically top of mind among moviegoers.

    But Indian cinema and talent is definitely growing with movies like Yeh Jawaani Hai Dawaani, and actors like Ranbir Kapoor and multi-hyphenates like Anurag Kashyap making waves. A question remains, however, on how closely the biggies of Hollywood and Bollywood can ever meet.

    India celebrated the 100th centenary of Hindi cinema in Cannes in May, turning a spotlight on the industry. Last month the romcom Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani (YJHD) broke into the US top ten upon release. The film‘s success at home and abroad was partly because of the mushy romance seen in the movie. Ranbir Kapoor is one of Bollywood‘s hottest actors at this point of time, also a key factor inYeh Jawaani‘s success.

    Fanning the flames, Kapoor just won the best actor prize for 2012?s Barfi! At IIFA which was held this weekend in Macau. The romantic comedy was India‘s 2012 Oscar entry. It also won several prizes at January‘s Filmfare Awards including top picture and actor; Kapoor played a deaf-mute man involved with two women.

    Kapoor‘s YJHD co-star Deepika Padukone is next up in Chennai Express. Padukone is an established actress who broke out in 2007?s Om Shanti OmChennai Express has the distinction of going out on August 8, the eve of India‘s Eid al Fitr holiday. Beginning in 2008, films toplined by Indian superstar Salman Khan staked a claim on the Eid holiday which celebrates the end of Ramadan. With Khan‘s next big production, Mental, not releasing until the January Republic Day weekend, the Eid spot is ripe for another comer with big box office potential.

    Conventional wisdom says it will be Chennai Express. The love story cum road movie is directed by Rohit Shetty (the Golmaal franchise, Bol Bachchan) and, with Padukone, stars the iconic Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan, making it one to watch. If Chennai followsYeh Jawaani‘s path, Khan should be happy. He has said that his dedication is to getting Indian films seen by the world rather than having his own career in Hollywood.

  • Film on Sunil-Nargis love story to be screened at Belize Filmfest

    Film on Sunil-Nargis love story to be screened at Belize Filmfest

    NEW DELHI: A film based on the book Together Forever by renowned America-based Indian filmmaker Mickey Nivelli and produced and directed by Nitin S Adsul is to be screened on the closing day of the Eighth Belize International Film Festival being held from 11 to 14 July.

    Nivelli, who had commenced his career as an assistant with the late producer-director-actor Sunil Dutt was inspired by the true love between Dutt and actress Nargis who had later died of cancer, and its similarities to other events that happened in his life.

    Mickey Harbance Kumar had left India and begun a film career in the Caribbean Islands, but later moved to New York. Here he met an ageing lady Lotte Nivelli, a Jew who had escaped Hitler‘s atrocities in Germany where she lost her husband and son to make a new life for herself in America. Mickey thereafter changed his name to Mickey Nivelli.

    Inspired by the similarities of the love stories of Lotte and Felix and Dutt and Nargis, he wrote a book attempting to show that pure soul mates do meet in heaven.

    The 42-minute film by Adsul is only a teaser to a full-length feature planned on the subject.

    The story is about a seminar organised in New York to discuss the love Sunil Dutt had for his wife Nargi. The debate elaborates on how their love story gets intertwined with that of a German born couple, Lotte and Felix Joseph who were victims of Hitler‘s Nazism. India‘s movie star Sita Devi is ruthlessly dumped by her lover Kumar because he has fallen in love with someone else. She is devastated and goes to the US to attend the seminar. This story reflects the aspirations and dreams of lovers belonging to all religions, race, or color.

    Mickey‘s films include Rainbow Rani, Girl from India, Heaven becomes Hell, Caribbean Fox and The Right and the Wrong.

  • DAR Motion Pictures to have Yash Raj Films distribute “D-Day” overseas

    DAR Motion Pictures to have Yash Raj Films distribute “D-Day” overseas

    MUMBAI: DAR Motion Pictures has announced that their upcoming film “D-Day” would be distributed internationally by Yash Raj Films.

    DAR Motion Pictures has long-term creative and business partnerships with Anurag Kashyap Films and phantom. Having previously made India‘s first stereoscopic film Haunted 3D, we have progressed to be a proud part of the cannes film festival‘s award winning film ‘The Lunchbox‘ directed by Ritesh Batra , as well as ‘Ugly‘ directed by Kashyap. Having teamed up with some of the best in the business and distributing some landmark films like ‘The Dark Knight Rises‘ and ‘Fast and Furious 6‘ through its distribution network, DAR continues to strive towards content driven cinema. This time they have chosen to team up with Yash Raj Films to distribute their latest and much awaited production D-Day overseas.

    D-Day releases in theatres worldwide on 19 July 2013. It is directed by Nikhil Advani.

    Operation Goldman Begins… the skilled team of four is getting ready to take on India‘s most wanted!

    Commenting on the collaboration DAR Media director Vivek Rangachari says, “We are extremely excited about the collaboration between DAR and Yash Raj for this film. D-Day is probably one of the most daring films made recently in Indian cinema. We hope that the additional efforts from Yash Raj overseas will only augment the success of the film.”

    DAR head of distribution Murli Chattwani, at says, “D-Day is a film worth a collaborative effort between DAR and Yash Raj Films. It is a film that every Indian must watch and we hope to receive a tremendous response from the audiences worldwide for this film.”

    YRF international operations VP Avtar Panesar says, “We at YRF have tremendous respect for DAR Media and their endeavours to produce content that truly stands out and we feel that D-Day is yet another step in that direction. We are delighted to be entrusted with this project and are confident of its appeal to all sections of the audiences.”

  • Lootera: May just manage to steal your heart

    Lootera: May just manage to steal your heart

    MUMBAI: The title, Lootera, is pure mass. That is how it has been used before. But the title is deceptive when used for a pure, period love story. In fact, our man, Ranveer Singh, is not even a lootera, he is simply a conman, an impersonator, whose strings are pulled by someone else, someone nondescript. There is nothing happening through the film‘s first half where Singh romances and seduces Sonakshi Sinha, or is it the other way round? The maker seems to think that the second half is the stroke of genius and the first half is merely wasted to arrive there; the second half is based on The Last Leaf, a story by O. Henry, the celebrated short story writer of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

    Producers: Anurag Kashyap, Ekta Kapoor and Shobha Kapoor.
    Director: Vikramaditya Motwane.
    Cast: Ranveer Singh and Sonakshi Sinha.

    Sinha is the only daughter of a Zamindar in Bengal in the post-independence era of early 1950s. She is the Zamindar‘s life. The Zamindar‘s land is limitless and on the land stands a temple with an idol of pure gold, over 200 years old. This is besides a cache of century-old antiques along with British and East India Company era souvenirs stored in the Zamindar‘s private museum.

    In walks a government appointed archaeologist, Singh, who thinks there is history buried around the Zamindar‘s temple in the form of ancient artefacts. He and his team need to dig up the area. But the purpose of digging around the temple is to gain access to the temple and steal the original idol and replace it with a fake, gold painted one. Singh‘s fellow gang members also bring a seizure order to take away the Zamindar‘s antique collection from his museum, claiming it belongs to the Indian state. The Zamindar is shown reading newspapers and listening to radio news but it must be Singh‘s charm that he is conned so easily to part with his collection, some of which is even given against fake currency.

    Singh has truly fallen in love with Sinha and asks for her hand from the Zamindar, who has no problem with the match. But, on D-day, the groom vanishes and so do all the antiques and the gold idol from the temple.

    Shattered, Sinha has moved to the family‘s holiday home at Dalhousie. The Zamindar has passed away due to the betrayal by Singh. Sinha, who gets periodic bouts of asthma, has added tuberculosis as another ailment and is dying a slow death each day. Her father had told her a story about a Bhil warrior who concealed his life in one of the parrots which no one could trace from millions of parrots and hence, how it was impossible to kill him. Her father said his life was Sinha and he would never want anything to happen to her. Peering out of her room in Dalhousie, Sinha has tied her life to a leaf on a tree outside; every fall the tree sheds leaves but one leaf always stays stubbornly on the tree; she would die the day that last leaf fell!

    Singh‘s gang is much in news for stealing precious antiques from many Zamindars and kings. Now he is in Dalhousie to steal an over 500-year-old statue from an ex-ruler. He rents a room in Sinha‘s villa. An investigating officer is on the tracks of Singh and his partners and expecting him in Dalhousie. Sinha informs the officer of his arrival. Dalhousie is miles ahead, boasting of operator-free telephones in the 1950s! A chase follows in the by-lanes of the town. Singh is hit by a bullet.The exchange also causes the death of a constable as well as Singh‘s partner. The only place Singh can hide in is Sinha‘s chambers.

    The love-hate-love relationship swings once more. Singh has to die for he is a criminal but not before he does something about that last leaf. It should never fall and that is the promise he has made Sinha.

    Lootera seems like the maker‘s obsession with O. Henry‘s short story. The first half, which needed the writer-director‘s contribution, has nothing happening.These 65 minutes or so feel like 130.Besides, the film rests on the shoulders of only Singh and Sinha, and one pines for some relief, some variation in this 142-minute-long fare. Singh and Sinha both have given their best. For Sinha, the de-glam look in the second part does half the job. While the background score is very well thought out, Sawaar lun has an old world charm having been tuned in a mid 1950s fashion. Manmarziyan…. Is okay. Photography is pleasing.

    Lootera has an old-fashioned love story as its ambience and the era it is based in and needs much patience to watch through. It caters to a discerning few at elite multiplexes.

     
     

    Producers: T P Aggarwal, Rahul Aggarwal.
    Director: K S Ravikumar.
    Cast: Sanjay Dutt, Prachi Desai, Prakash Raj, Om Puri, RajpalYadav, Manoj Joshi, Mukesh Tiwari.

    Policegiri is a remake of the Tamil film Saamy (2003), made by the same director, K S Ravikumar. Well, remaking a South film is fine, but why is the Hindi version also shot in the South with a horde of local side actors, goons and junior artistes? If you hadn‘t seen Sanjay Dutt and a couple of other faces from the Hindi industry, it could easily have passed off as a dubbed fare. Policegiri follows the South formula in vogue: namely a lot of crowd scenes, a fleet of matching cars, vehicles being blown up sky high and unlimited action.

    Dutt is the new DCP in a town ruled by the politician cum local mafia, Prakash Raj, who claims to control innumerable MLAs, MPs and so on. He is into everything illegal that is happening in the vicinity. The only thing that Dutt has earned for his honesty and sincerity is a number of transfers. A showdown between Dutt and Raj is inevitable. But Dutt decides to settle down in his new job first and strike only at the opportune moment.

    He is free meanwhile to romance Prachi Desai whose parents are at loggerheads about finding a suitable boy for her. The father being a Muslim wants her to marry a Muslim boy while the mother, a Hindu, will settle only for a Hindu. It seems like Desai has chosen the perfect man for her in Dutt because, as it turns out, his is born of mixed parentage: a Hindu father and a Muslim mother. Talk of twist in the tale. Not that Dutt has much competition, for the other suitor trying to woo her is Rajpal Yadav.

    A few fights and few cars blown up carries on in the mean time to keep the pace going as Dutt and Raj mouth claptrap dialogues in the process of playing a game of one-upmanship. What matters is action on some pretext or the other and both sides keep finding reasons for the next fight. If Raj has his gang of goons, Dutt prepares the local people to take on the goons.

    In the step towards the final showdown, Dutt destroys all the business places of Raj, eliminates his cronies and proceeds to arrest Raj when the lawmakers as well as his higher-ups try to prevent him. He outwits all of them by spinning an instant fib and goes after the chief villain. But the evil man is nowhere to be found. That is when Dutt remembers Raj‘s status before his rise. He knows where to find him: on the steps of a temple disguised as a beggar from where he started.

    If it can be called a story, the film is about the age-old theme of an honest cop vs mafia-politician combine, with a mandatory romance thrown in. With a couple of dances and numerous fight and action sequences, there is little left for the director to do which he does as routine. Action is typical South brand. Dutt looks tired and juxtaposed with Prachi, his age becomes more telling. The music is a mishmash of regional tunes.

    Policegiri is an old-fashioned front bench mass fare, okay for smaller centres and Hindi hinterland but not enough to earn back the money spent.

  • Luv U Soniyo team looks for the best college band across Mumbai

    Luv U Soniyo team looks for the best college band across Mumbai

    NEW DELHI: The Luv U Soniyo team has kick started a unique and innovative campaign to find the best college bands across Mumbai.

    Spearheading a special plan is Remo, who has sung the melodious title track in Luv U Soniyo. The team has visited 50 colleges across Mumbai where Remo has auditioned various college bands.

    While the final round of audition is being held today, the bands that make it to the top two will get an opportunity to perform with other celebrity singers on the Music Launch of Luv U Soniyo tomorrow in a suburban mall.

    Distributed by Viacom 18 Media Private Limited, directed by Joe Rajan and produced by Harvey India Productions & Odyssey Corporation India Limited, Luv U Soniyo is all set to hit the screens on 26 July. The film features Aseem Tanuj Virwani and Neha Hinge as main characters.

  • Bollywood films inspired actual happenings in the underworld: Coincidence?

    Bollywood films inspired actual happenings in the underworld: Coincidence?

    NEW DELHI: The underworld has been one of the favorite themes of Bollywood in the last decade and several films and characters have been directly or indirectly inspired by the dons – whether it is Dawood Ibrahim, Maya Bhai, or Abu Salem.

    Recently there were reports that Abu Salem was shot at and injured inside the Tajola jail in Navi Mumbai, and coincidentally Dinesh P. Bhosle‘s film ‘Calapor‘ revolves around similar happenings in a jail. It is a modern day setting of a prison and deals with various intricate details of conspiracies behind the bars. Priyanshu Chatterjee would be seen in a never before seen avatar of a gangster who conspires to kill a sharp shooter in the jail.

    Speaking about the film, the director said “Well, it is a pure coincidence that Abu Salem was shot, and my film Calapor will provide a clear view to the audience about the happenings of a jail. It will provide the audience a keyhole view inside prison”

    Slated for release on 2 August, the plot of the movie is about reformation in a prison through the medium of dance and drama.

    Produced by Prasad Creations and directed by Dinesh P Bhonsle, it stars Ritupana Sengupta, Priyanshu Chatterjee, Raghubir Yadav, Harsh Chhaya, Binny Sharma, P. Subbaraju, Aziz Naseer and introducing Aakash Sharma.

    Meanwhile in another film – Apoorva Lakhia‘s Zanjeer 2.0 – for which the online trailer is to be launched today, Atul Kulkarni‘s character is inspired by none other than the slain ace journalist J-Dey. 

    Slated for release in 6 September, it stars an elite ensemble cast of Ram Charan, Sanjay Dutt, Priyanka Chopra, Prakash Raj, Mahie Gill and Atul Kalkarni amongst others.

    Keeping the trademarks of Indian cinema intact but with a contemporary twist, Zanjeer 2.0is apparently premised on the subject of ‘Oil Mafia‘ and will see the rugged and ripped Ram Charan battle his way to eliminate the deadly cartels.