Category: Hindi

  • Special 26, ABCD hit the right notes at the BO

    Special 26, ABCD hit the right notes at the BO

    MUMBAI: Akhsay Kumar-starrer Special 26 opened slow on Friday but as the word of mouth spread, the film started picking up from Friday evening itself and went on to consolidate over the weekend. The film‘s performance is at its best at premium multiplexes.

    The film‘s cost for Indian theatrical rights is about Rs 320 to 340 million and should face no problems making it. The film has been appreciated for all round performances by the artistes as well as for its climax. The film collected Rs 265 million for its first weekend. Some extra benefit is expected on Valentine‘s Day.

    Remo D‘souza‘s ABCD: Any Body Can Dance with no stars on the billboards had an excellent opening, in fact better opening response than the star cast film Special 26. ABCD has greatly drawn the youth and its choreography has been much liked by the youth. The film had a wonderful weekend and collected Rs 184 million for its first three days. The film should get a major boost on the Valentine‘s Day.

    David with Neil Nitin Mukesh in the lead continued to do poor collecting a mere Rs 35 million for its first week with as much as Rs 15.8 million coming from the Bombay Circuit.

    Mira Nair‘s much talked about Midnight‘s Children has been rejected by moviegoers. No amount of controversies and staying in the news has helped the film which collected just Rs 12.5 million to show for its first seven days.

    Vishal Bharadwaj‘s Matru Ki BIjlee Ka has added Rs 1.2 million to its collections in its fourth week taking its tally to Rs 393.7 million.

  • International Uranium Film Festival to conclude its Indian journey in Mumbai

    International Uranium Film Festival to conclude its Indian journey in Mumbai

    NEW DELHI: The International Uranium Film Festival is opening in Mumbai on 11 February after having traveled to several other parts of the country.

    Many Indian and foreign critically acclaimed, international award-winning documentaries films will be screened at the two-day festival.

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    The festival is dedicated to films about Uranium and the possible dangers it poses to the environment and the survival of humanity from both its military and peaceful uses. The festival includes documentary and fiction films on issues like Uranium mining, nuclear power plants, atomic bombs, nuclear waste, radioactive risks, nuclear medicine, Hiroshima, Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and Fukushima. Waste from nuclear power plants remains radioactive for more than 100,000 years.

    The films screened raise questions about how coming generations will protect themselves from this deathly waste. The festival will stimulate discussions and encourage the production of new documentaries, movies and animated films about the nuclear or radioactive issue.

    The international festival was inaugurated in New Delhi on 4 January and has made its way to Mumbai from cities like Shillong, Ranchi, Manipal, Hyderabad, Pune, Bangalore, Chennai and Thrissur.

    The Mumbai edition of the festival is being presented by the 7 Islands Film Festival, sponsored by Yusuf Meherally Centre, Shrividya Sansthan and Bhawan’s Cultural Centre, and supported by NGOs Janhit Seva Samiti, Konkan Bachao Samiti, Konkan Vinashkari Prakalp Virodhi Samiti, Muktiyaan Loksanskritik Sanghatana and other anti-nuclear activists in the city.

    The International Uranium Film Festival was first held in Rio de Janeiro in May 2011 and then travelled to Portugal, Germany and would move to New York after the Indian edition.

    “The festival stimulates discussions about the nuclear question and stimulates the production of new documentaries, movies and animated films about any nuclear or radioactive issue. In addition, the Uranium Film Festival creates a neutral space to throw light on all nuclear issues. Societies and peoples have the right of choice if they want to follow the nuclear road or not,” said Norbert G. Suchanek, International festival director.

  • Balaji signs Siddharth Malhotra as male lead for its action flick ‘The Villain’

    Balaji signs Siddharth Malhotra as male lead for its action flick ‘The Villain’

    MUMBAI: Ekta Kapoor and Mohit Suri have cast ‘Student of the Year‘ actor Siddhath Malhotra as the male lead for their action extravaganza ‘The Villain‘.

    Siddharth made his debut with Student of the Year and was noticed by the industry and audiences instantly. He was undoubtedly the hottest debutant of the year.

    This fact is underlined by the varied projects he has been offered there-on. Even for ‘The Villain‘ Siddharth was the first choice for the filmmakers. They were looking for a rugged, good looking action star, and Siddharth fit the bill effortlessly.

    The film will also have a strong villainous character, one which will be remembered for their evil humor.

    Over selecting Siddharth Malhotra for the movie, Balaji Motion Pictures CEO Tanuj Garg said, “We have confirmed Siddharth Malhotra for our film with Mohit Suri. Siddharth has become a hugely popular commodity with the youth after Student of the Year and has the appeal, looks and intensity to carry a commercial action-romantic thriller on his shoulders. He is tomorrow‘s angry young man, and believes that he is the right choice for this film.”

    This is the first time Ekta and Mohit Suri will be coming together. The story will have many elements, however action will be precedent. It will be Siddharth‘s first out and out masala film and will portray him in the young angry mode.

    Mohit Suri has worked with the Bhatt‘s previously and made blockbuster hits under their banner. However, this film will be marked as his break out film.

    The makers are yet on the lookout for a female cast opposite Siddharth. The film will go on floor once Siddharth Malhotra finishes the shooting of Hansi to Phansi where he is casted opposite Parineeti Chopra.

  • Paranthe Wali Gali to highlight unexplored areas of Delhi

    Paranthe Wali Gali to highlight unexplored areas of Delhi

    MUMBAI: In his film Paranthe Wali Gali, debutant director Sachin Gupta promises to highlight some of Delhi‘s unexplored areas through his film.

    As the name suggests, old Delhi‘s famous bylane known for its variety of paranthas will feature as a backdrop of the film.

    Paranthe Wali Gali will start from the famous and popular paranthe wali gali and then move into the lives of the characters. “Through the film, we are trying to touch that part of Delhi that has not been explored till now. That is the USP of the film,” Gupta said.

    A qualified software engineer, Gupta is the founder and CEO of Chilsag Chillies Theatre Company that was launched in 2003. Till now, Gupta has done 13 original productions. Recently, he bagged a National Award Natya Bhushan for his contribution to theatre.

    The 34-year-old Delhi-based director has trained more than 300 talents through various acting programmes. Gupta is not just helming the project, but is also writing the screenplay for it too.

  • Disney UTV signs Remo D’Souza for a two-film deal

    Disney UTV signs Remo D’Souza for a two-film deal

    MUMBAI: Disney UTV has signed choreographer-turned-director Remo D‘Souza for a two film deal.

    One of the films is likely to be the sequel of ABCD – Any Body Can Dance which is directed by Remo and stars Prabhudheva, Ganesh Acharya, Dharmesh, Prince, Mayuresh and Vrushali and Lauren Gottlieb (the finalist of the popular international television dance talent show So You Think You Can Dance) besides Dance India Dance winners Salman Khan.

    Said Disney UTV Managing Director – Studios, Siddharth Roy Kapur, “Remo is of course a gifted choreographer but as Prabhudheva said after working with him, he is an even better director. We have had a wonderful experience with Remo on ABCD. The film showcases his amazing ability to thrill and entertain his audience while at the same time to handle emotion and drama with sensitivity and depth.

    He has worked with a team of superb dancers and brought out the actor in each of them. To shoot a grueling dance film at this massive scale in 3D is not an easy job, but Remo coupled his talent and ability with patience and perseverance to make a superb film. We‘re thrilled to be continuing our association with him, and here‘s to making many more great movies together!”

    Averred Remo, “UTV has whole-heartedly backed my vision of making India‘s first ever 3D dance film ABCD. They were kicked about the project from the word go and I‘m really happy I had them as my producer. It‘s important for a producer to trust his director, trust the vision and UTV has done just that.

    I‘m really excited that I have been offered two more films under the UTV banner – one which could be the sequel to ABCD – which I‘m currently working upon. UTV and I have had a super journey and we are only strengthening our bond now. We will do some great work together.”

    Bringing together the best of both worlds, the Walt Disney Studios and UTV Motion Pictures have formed one of the leading film studios in India, the activities of which spans across creative development, production, marketing, distribution, licensing, merchandising and syndication of films in India and the world.”

  • Direction of Special 26 is good, ABCD’s wonderful

    Direction of Special 26 is good, ABCD’s wonderful

    MUMBAI: Special 26 is a caper movie with a story set in the 1980s. The story is inspired by a real life heist in Mumbai in 1987 when a famous jewellery shop in South Mumbai was raided by a team of fake CBI that took away valuables worth many lakhs. Coming from the writer-director of the acclaimed 2008 film, “A Wednesday”, the expectations from Special 26 were high.

    Producers: Shital Bhatia, Kumar Mangat.

    Director: Neeraj Pandey.

    Cast: Akshay Kumar, Anupam Kher, Manoj Bajpai, Jimmy Shergill, Kajal Aggarwal, Divya Dutta, Rajesh Sharma.

    Akshay Kumar aspires to join CBI but fails the entrance exams and is rejected. Undeterred, he forms his own personal CBI team with Anupam Kher, Rajesh Sharma and Kishore Kadam. This was the era of parallel economy, where much black money was involved in day-to-day transactions. The purpose of his “team” is to raid targets like jewellers and politicians in the name of the income tax department or the CBI as per need. The raids always go unreported: the targets dare not complain as it is a matter of black money. Kumar‘s team members are all spread out in different cities and how they came together is not explained.

    The team‘s targets so far have been small and medium range. Kher feels he is getting old and wants Kumar to plan one big heist so he can retire; Kumar has same plan in mind because his lady love, Kajal Aggarwal, a school teacher, is to be married off in a month‘s time. So, with a strict deadline, he plans to carry out one last job and vanish with his love.

    Meanwhile, Kumar‘s team raids a politician in Delhi. His modus operandi is simple but aggressive. He chooses his target and calls up the local police team of Jimmy Shergill and Divya Dutta as back up. This puts up a convincing show for the target. The politician is not willing to lodge an official complaint because it was all graft money and also because if leaked, the story would make him look like a fool among his people. However, since a real cop was witness and party to the incident, the police chief suspends him along with his aide, Divya Dutta while deciding to carry on the investigation off the record.

    Suspended and humiliated, Shergill has started his own investigation into the team. He approaches the real CBI, Manoj Bajpai. A chase around Delhi‘s crowded commercial areas to catch a criminal establishes Bajpai‘s sincerity, determination and bravery. His orders are to catch the fake CBI team and end their run of robberies which is about to reach half century. Meanwhile, Kumar‘s team is in the process of raiding a trader in Kolkata. But a real CBI team is already present there on their assignment. Kumar is a quick thinker and unfazed, he introduces his team as income tax officers, berates Kher for coming to wrong address and changes his target instantly. When the heist is over, he actually seeks the help of real CBI cops to carry the loot to his vehicle. The news reaches Bajpai, making him even more determined to catch the team.

    Aggarwal‘s wedding cards are printed and with the day nearing. Kumar plans his last big hit. It is the biggest jewellery shop in Mumbai, run by Tikku Talsania. However, he needs a huge team to carry out this job. He inserts a classified in a newspaper for aspiring young men and women for a job in CBI. Everything is carried out impressively. The candidates are interviewed at a five-star hotel and 26 candidates selected. They are to be trained next day in a two-hour lecture and finally tested in a raid which Kumar calls ‘Practical Training‘. Bajpai is in Mumbai along with Shergill keeping an eye on the happenings. He plants two of his own men in the team of 26. Thus is set up the climax, where Kumar and his gang will either escape or be caught.

    Special 26 sets a good pace with its first heist. One expects that pace to continue but that does not happen. The film goes onto dwell in the personal lives of the main protagonists. The second heist too is interesting but the proceedings quickly slow down again as Kumar plans his last trick. Finally, when it happens, the last raid makes the final half hour interesting and something to take away from the film.

    Coming from Neeraj Pandey, whose “A Wednesday” was a thrilling experience, Special 26 falls short on that count as it sags at times. It has Kumar but no scope for romance, music or action. The story does not go into the background of its characters nor how they came together. But overall the direction is good with an eye for details and in keeping with the ambience of 1980s.

    Performance wise, the film has unanimously good shows by all the actors. Kumar with his deadpan poker face is convincing as a CBI officer. Kher is excellent. So are Rajesh Sharma and Kishore Kadam. Manoj Bajpai as the determined CBI officer is very good. Jimmy Shergill, though cast in a side character, underplays very well. Divya Dutta, with just one line to speak every time, lends able support. Kajal Aggrwal has little to do.

    Special 26 has earned good reports and needs to improve over the weekend when it will require a huge leap at the box office to guarantee safe returns.

    ABCD: Any Body Can Dance 3-D Review

    Producers: Ronnie Screwvala, Siddharth Roy Kapur.

    Director: Remo D‘Souza.

    Cast: Prabhudheva, Kay Kay Menon, Ganesh Acharya, Dharmesh Yelonde, Salman Yussuf Khan, Lauren Gottlieb, Noorin Shah, Vrushali Chavan, Bhawna Khanduja, Punit Pathak, Mayuresh Wadkar, Sushant Pujar, Prince, Firoz Khan.

    ABCD: Any Body Can Dance is the first musical/ dance film in 3-D, which is used mainly in dance scenes. A dance film needs a cause, a challenge and a desire to do better than others. Prabhudheva, the master choreographer and dancer, finds all three when he is betrayed by his partner.

    Prabhudheva is a choreographer at Jehangir Dance Academy, run by Kay Kay Menon. The academy always wins first spot on a major TV dance competition. The competition is in its final round and, as usual, Menon‘s academy wins. However, Prabhudheva is not satisfied with the performance of the team of dancers he trained and says as much to his boss. Menon‘s answer is that it is not dancing that wins awards; it needs some manipulation, marketing and presentation. To this end, Menon has a plan to employ the services of a foreign choreographer and sideline Prabhudheva. Feeling let down by Menon, he decides to leave and head home to Chennai; after all he had built the academy.

    Prabhudheva books his ticket to Chennai but in the meanwhile takes refuge with Ganesh Acharya, a wannabe choreographer. Acharya does not want him to give up so easily and forces him to stay back and build a new team of dancers. Prabhudheva notices a few boys from the basti being chased by cops. He is impressed with the acrobatics and agility they use to dodge the cops. Later, he sees the same boys dancing during a Ganesh festival. He finds some hope in this bunch and decides to train them. The local politician provides him with a warehouse which is soon turned into a dance studio. There is rivalry between two groups in the basti so as one group of boys join the training, the other merely watches from the outside. Eventually, as they watch the process, they also join for after all there is a dancer in all of them and Prabhudheva‘s conviction is that Any Body Can Dance. The latest addition to the studio is a drug addict being chased by the police; he decides to mingle with the dancers to avoid the police. Not convinced he is one of the dancers, the police ask him to demonstrate. Funnily, his demonstration of dance is like an addict deprived of his regular fix. However, Prabhudheva sees a potential dancer in him too, one with a spark to become the lead dancer.

    The job looks near impossible as the dancers fumble and fall and keep fighting among themselves. There is no trust between the rival groups. Even in the elimination round, they start fighting on stage. They are instantly disqualified but Menon is delighted. He asks the organiser not to disqualify Prabhudheva‘s dancers as they can be the jokers of the competition and make people laugh. Menon wants to see Prabhudheva humiliated publicly. The disqualification is revoked. Prabhudheva is livid but decides to start all over again. He does that by first ending the enmity in the groups. Unless they unite, they cannot be a team.

    With the group ready and as if to rebuff Menon‘s taunt, they come dressed as jokers and get into second round and, eventually, into the decider. Now Menon sees tough competition for his academy; he tries to break Prabhudheva‘s group with handsome offers. The boys decline because they don‘t want to let their master down. The final round is announced but some manipulation by Menon has resulted in his team taking the opening slot which was otherwise allotted to Prabhdheva‘s dancers. Menon‘s dancers put up the same dance Prabudheva has choreographed for his dancers. Unknown to them, Menon had managed to lure at least one of their dancers who had given away his team‘s routine. Prabhudheva and his dancers have just ten minutes to think up a new routine before they are called on to stage. Prabhudheva tells them to go back to their roots, asking them to dance like they did on the streets at Ganpati. He wants them to dance like all Indians dance, with no rules or routine.

    This final dance and the one before that are the highlight of ABCD. After all, this is a dance musical and a story of a betrayed artiste and the underdogs he nurtures; when an underdog is contesting, the masses root for them. The final dance takes a bit from parts of India but is centred on a Ganesh stuti. Everybody loves Shri Ganesh and it turns out to be the masterstroke.

    ABCD is all about choreography and creating an atmosphere for music and dances. Director Remo D‘souza does that wonderfully. The disco number and the last two dances are excellent; the crowds are ably arranged and handled. The new talent in Dharmesh Yelonde, Salman Yussuf Khan, Lauren Gottlieb, Noorin Shah, Vrushali Chavan, Bhawna Khanduja, Punit Pathak, Mayuresh Wadkar, Sushant Pujar and Prince and Firoz Khan live up to expectations with their dances. Of the veterans, Prabhudheva plays the various shades and phases he passes through with total conviction. Kay Kay Menon in a small negative role is good. Ganesh Acharya is not much of an actor; he overacts. The expenses show in the costumes and sets as well as crowd scenes. Though tacky in parts, ABCD makes up with its second half and the climax.

    ABCD: Any Body Can Dance has a huge appeal for youth and masses and will have smooth sailing at the box office. The film‘s opening is very good.

  • Mumbai 125 km set to release in March

    Mumbai 125 km set to release in March

    MUMBAI: Hemant Madhukar‘s horror film Mumbai 125 km is all set to release in March.

    This is Madhukar‘s second Bollywood film as a director, the first being A Flat in 2010. He has also made a Telugu action film Vastadu Naa Raju in 2011.

    Mumbai 125km revolves around the life of five friends who go on a road trip on New Year‘s Eve. On the way, they come across a milestone written Mumbai 125 km. Even after travelling for an hour, they end up reaching the same road which has the stone. This is where the story takes a turn.

    The film features Karanvir Bohra and Vedita Pratap Singh in lead roles. The film also features Pakistani model turned actress Veena Malik.

    “The entire film is shot at night as the film is a one night story and my film also has a fresh pairing and I am launching Karanvir Bohra who is a well known TV actor. I saw his work in Saubhagyavati Bhava and I thought he was appropriate for the character I wanted,” revealed Madhukar.

  • Indo-German film week opens in Berlin

    Indo-German film week opens in Berlin

    MUMBAI: To bring film communities of Germany and India closer, an Indo-German Film Week has been organised in Berlin. The week will see film screenings, workshops, interactions and master classes, all presenting the Indian film and media world to the German and international audiences.

    States the Indo-German Film Week website, “We want to show the German and international audience the whole variety of Indian Cinema, that there is much more than just”song and dance films”. But we will also show the vibrant Fiction Production in Germany which is internationally recognized for its high quality Movies Made for TV.”

    The highlight of the event is the Indo German Screenwriting Workshop from 5 to 7 February that will have lectures by screenwriter and head of screenwriting department at FTII, Anjum Rajabali, Keith Cunningham, a German screenwriter and consultant, author and head of the German Film and Television Academy, Berlin, Jochen Brunow who will talk about principles of storytelling and Indian and Greek mythology.

    Among 15 film screenings, Barfi!, English Vinglish, Shanghai and Inkaar will make their German premieres in the presence of their respective directors.

    While Gauri Shinde (English Vinglish) will speak on women‘s rights in India, Anurag Basu will share his knowledge and experience about the process of turning a screenplay into a movie like he did with Barfi!

    Organised by Life Entertainment and Babylon Berlin, the film week that began from yesterday (5 February) will run till the 11th of this month.

  • UTV to come out with a coffee book on the making of Paan Singh Tomar

    UTV to come out with a coffee book on the making of Paan Singh Tomar

    MUMBAI: When Paan Singh Tomar released early last year, little did one realise that the film would go on to make such a significant mark globally.

    A story of an Indian athlete (represented India at the 1958 Asian Games in Tokyo, Japan) turned army man turned dacoit was an exciting concept for writer Tigmanshu Dhulia and Sanjay Chouhan to develop into a film. Great content, superb reviews, incredible word of mouth and a correctly targeted distribution strategy contributed to the success of the film.

    In its zest to immortalise the story, UTV Motion Pictures, the producer of the film, has decided to come out with a coffee table book on the making of Paan Singh Tomar. Journalist turned author Priyanka Jain was roped in to write about it. (She has earlier co-written a book on Vinod Chopra along with scriptwriter of 3 Idiots Abhijat Joshi).

    The book will give readers a good glimpse of the real and reel life of PST with some never seen before pictures depicting his life. Both director Tigmanshu Dhulia and leading actor Irrfan are backing this project.

    Says Disney UTV Managing Director – Studios, Siddharth Roy Kapur, “It is very important for filmmakers and studios to archive stories around iconic movies which have the ability to inspire future generations. As an industry we have not done enough so far to document our incredibly rich cinematic heritage, and this is a small step in that direction. To see the film alive in the form of a book is a way to share the experience of Paan Singh Tomar with all those who were touched by the movie.”

    Observes Tigmanshu Dhulia, “The story of Paan Singh Tomar was so captivating that both UTV and I believed that it needed to be told so much so that as a rare case UTV even funded the research for this film. The story of the making of the film Paan Singh Tomar, I believe, is equally compelling. Paan Singh Tomar‘s struggle is not very different from what our real heroes face even today. Hence the book and the film will be contemporary even today.

  • Viswarooopam to be released in Tamil Nadu on 7 Feb

    Viswarooopam to be released in Tamil Nadu on 7 Feb

    NEW DELHI: Actor-filmmakar Kamal Haasan‘s Viswaroopam is being released in Tamil Nadu on 7 February following the lifting of the ban by the state government.

    In an announcement, Haasan thanked the Tamil Nadu government for all the help and moviegoers, fans and people in Tamil Nadu and all over India for supporting him.

    He said the cheques and money which his supporters sent to him would be returned.

    The film was first announced for release on January 11, after a premiere on three direct-to-home (DTH) platforms, but this was withdrawn after protests by the theatre owners’ organisation in the state, and the release was postponed to 25 January.

    Thereafter, the film was banned by the state government on 23 January which pointed out that the release of the movie would create law and order issues as a section of the Muslims had raised objections.