Category: Hindi

  • Restored print of Garam Hawa to screen at IFFI on 25 November

    Restored print of Garam Hawa to screen at IFFI on 25 November

    MUMBAI: The Balraj Sahni-starrer Garm Hava, directed by M S Sathyu, considered a milestone in Indian cinema, that has been fully restored, will be screened at the International Film Festival of India (IFFI) in Goa scheduled to go underway today.

    According to IFFI officials, the film that also stars Geeta Siddharth, Farooq Shaikh, the late A K Hangal and Jalal Agha, will be screened on 25 November as part of commemoration of 100 years of Indian cinema.

    The 1973 Hindi-Urdu classic based on an unpublished Urdu short story by Ismat Chughtai and adapted for screen by Kaifi Azmi, will also be released theatrically soon.

    The film deals with the plight of a North Indian Muslim family post-Partition as the protagonist (Sahni) faces the dilemma of whether to move to Pakistan or stay back. One of the most poignant films ever made on the Partition, it was also India‘s official entry to the Oscars in 1974.

    Since the film‘s negative was in a bad shape, Mumbai-based distributor Subhash Chheda who also runs a DVD label Rudraa Chheda proposed to Sathyu that he be given the responsibility of restoring of both the audio and video segments of the film to which the director easily obliged.

    Thus began Chheda‘s two-year-long elaborate effort to have an upgraded 5.1 and Dolby mixed version of Garm Hava, which was almost lost in the annals of time.

    “Restoration of a classic is very tricky and complex, as people remember the original movie forever – frame-by-frame, dialogue-by-dialogue, word-by-word,” he says.

    “The project stayed under the scanners of the best creative and technical experts around the world for about a year. Almost 2,00,000 frames of 2K resolution were observed by all these experts again and again. The restoration and post-restoration of the movie consumed more than 5,00,000 man-hours of our technical and creative team and terabytes of space of our computers,” Chheda said in a statement.

    However, no portion of the film has been deleted nor anything added. “Everything has merely been enhanced to give a complete theatrical experience to the modern viewer,” Chedda concludes.

  • Bal Thackeray‘s death hit BO collections

    Bal Thackeray‘s death hit BO collections

    MUMBAI: Jab Tak Hai Jaan, Yash Chopra‘s last directorial romantic story, was awaited with much expectation which was not met by this three hour saga, looking at the public response. The film was released in direct opposition of a mass entertainer, Son Of Sardar, after much controversy on sharing screen space with Yash Raj Film having cornered a chunk of better single screens using their Salman Khan starrer Ek Tha Tiger as leverage thus leaving little for Son Of Sardar.

    This offered the audience an option and it showed on the collections as Jab Tak Hai Jaan could manage only Rs 152.3 million on Tuesday (13 November), the Diwali day, then peaking on the next, the New Year day with Rs 195.4 million and then finding its level on Thursday with Rs 144.5 million.

    The collection figures tapered thereafter; Sunday which collected Rs 99.6 million could have been better by at least Rs 20 million as the film‘s collections suffered due to closure of cinemas in Maharashtra for most part of the weekend due to the demise of Balasaheb Thackeray.

    According to Girish Wankhede of Cinemax chain, all the 66 group screens in Maharashtra had to cancel three shows each on Saturday and all five shows each on Sunday, these shows being the cream of the week. Same was the case with other multiplex screens. The collections also suffered to an extent in the North due to closure of Wave group multiplexes from Saturday afternoon and whole of Sunday following a tragedy in the owners‘ family. Jab Tak Hai Jaan ended its six-day festive weekend with Rs 807.3 million.

    Son Of Sardar had to fight for screens till the end and distributors could not advertise in time (where all the movie was going to be screen). However, the film did hit the screens as scheduled with less number of screens than they would have liked to open. An old fashioned action comedy about two warring families, the film met with mixed response. However, its cluttered cast and their antics earned it the label of ‘entertainer‘. The film opened with a moderate Rs 100.72 million on Tuesday, the Diwali day, as expected it peaked the next day being the New Year day with Rs 162.1 million before settling down to average levels. The film suffered on Saturday and Sunday for the same reasons as Jab Tak Hai Jaan and went on to end its six day festival season with Rs 660.2 million.

    1920 – Evil Returns could enjoy a limited run despite holding steady in the second week since the film had to be discontinued from most screens to make way for new releases, Jab Tak Hai Jaan and Son Of Sardar, on Tuesday. The film still managed to collect a decent Rs 47 million taking its tally to Rs 233 million.

    Luv Shuv Tey Chicken Khurana collected Rs 13.5 million in its second week taking its total to Rs 78.5 million.

    Student Of The Year mopped up approx Rs 10 million in its fourth week. It has netted Rs 608 million so far.

    English Vinglish collected Rs five million taking its tally at the end of the sixth week to Rs 373.5 million.

    OMG Oh My God! has collected Rs 3.8 million in its seventh week. The movie‘s box office score after seven weeks is Rs 769.3 million.

  • Bal  Thackeray’s  death  hit BO collections

    Bal Thackeray’s death hit BO collections

    MUMBAI: Jab Tak Hai Jaan, Yash Chopra‘s last directorial romantic story, was awaited with much expectation which was not met by this three hour saga, looking at the public response. The film was released in direct opposition of a mass entertainer, Son Of Sardar, after much controversy on sharing screen space with Yash Raj Film having cornered a chunk of better single screens using their Salman Khan starrer Ek Tha Tiger as leverage thus leaving little for Son Of Sardar.

    This offered the audience an option and it showed on the collections as Jab Tak Hai Jaan could manage only Rs 152.3 million on Tuesday (13 November), the Diwali day, then peaking on the next, the New Year day with Rs 195.4 million and then finding its level on Thursday with Rs 144.5 million.

    The collection figures tapered thereafter; Sunday which collected Rs 99.6 million could have been better by at least Rs 20 million as the film‘s collections suffered due to closure of cinemas in Maharashtra for most part of the weekend due to the demise of Balasaheb Thackeray.

    According to Girish Wankhede of Cinemax chain, all the 66 group screens in Maharashtra had to cancel three shows each on Saturday and all five shows each on Sunday, these shows being the cream of the week. Same was the case with other multiplex screens. The collections also suffered to an extent in the North due to closure of Wave group multiplexes from Saturday afternoon and whole of Sunday following a tragedy in the owners‘ family. Jab Tak Hai Jaan ended its six-day festive weekend with Rs 807.3 million.

    Son Of Sardar had to fight for screens till the end and distributors could not advertise in time (where all the movie was going to be screen). However, the film did hit the screens as scheduled with less number of screens than they would have liked to open. An old fashioned action comedy about two warring families, the film met with mixed response. However, its cluttered cast and their antics earned it the label of ‘entertainer‘. The film opened with a moderate Rs 100.72 million on Tuesday, the Diwali day, as expected it peaked the next day being the New Year day with Rs 162.1 million before settling down to average levels. The film suffered on Saturday and Sunday for the same reasons as Jab Tak Hai Jaan and went on to end its six day festival season with Rs 660.2 million.

    1920 – Evil Returns could enjoy a limited run despite holding steady in the second week since the film had to be discontinued from most screens to make way for new releases, Jab Tak Hai Jaan and Son Of Sardar, on Tuesday. The film still managed to collect a decent Rs 47 million taking its tally to Rs 233 million.

    Luv Shuv Tey Chicken Khurana collected Rs 13.5 million in its second week taking its total to Rs 78.5 million.

    Student Of The Year mopped up approx Rs 10 million in its fourth week. It has netted Rs 608 million so far.

    English Vinglish collected Rs five million taking its tally at the end of the sixth week to Rs 373.5 million.

    OMG Oh My God! has collected Rs 3.8 million in its seventh week. The movie‘s box office score after seven weeks is Rs 769.3 million.

  • Jury lineup for Doha Tribeca film fest

    Jury lineup for Doha Tribeca film fest

    MUMBAI: The Doha Tribeca Film Festival (DTFF) has announced the juries to select the winners of the Arab Film Competition, the only competition at any regional film festival dedicated wholly to honour talent of Arab cinema.

    The members of the four juries, drawn from across the world, include internationally acclaimed film professionals, authors and cultural thought leaders. They will evaluate the Arab Film Competition’s three segments viz: Feature Narrative, Feature Documentary and Short Film besides the ‘Made in Qatar’ segment that is devoted to films made by Qatar-based talent.

    The Feature Narrative jury that will be headed by renowned Tunisian actress Hend Sabry will also include Ashutoush Gowarikar , Dr. Emad Amralla Sultan, Deputy General Manager of Cultural Affairs of Katara Cultural Village, renowned Turkish filmmaker Yesim Ustaoglu and critically acclaimed Algerian author Mohammed Moulessehoul.

    The jury for Documentary Narrative comprises Syrian documentary filmmaker, producer, and scriptwriter Hala Al Abdalla, Qatari director Hafiz Ali Ali and renowned Iranian artiste and filmmaker Shirin Neshat. The short films at the competition will be evaluated by Joana Hadjithomas, Tahani Rached, and Nadir Mokneche.

    Those appraising the ‘Made in Qatar’ showcase features the largest line-up yet this year with 19 films including 15 world premieres.

    Said Doha Film Institute CEO Abdulaziz Bin Khalid Al-Khater, “We are thankful to the jury members, coming from around the world, to evaluate our Arab Film Competition entries. The jury members will evaluate the films to international standards thus ensuring that our films are benchmarked against the best. We are setting the bar high to ensure that the finest Arab filmmaking talent get the due recognition and international recognition through the Doha Tribeca Film Festival.”

    This year, Doha Tribeca Film Festival will feature over 87 movies from 34 countries, with numerous nations making their debut at the Festival through the Arab Film Competition.

    The fourth edition will open with Mira Nair’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist. The awards have a total prize money of over $440,000.

  • Industry asks Govt to help prevent frivolous litigation against films

    Industry asks Govt to help prevent frivolous litigation against films

    NEW DELHI: The film industry has strongly protested the manner in which the freedom of speech and expression has been ‘grossly mistreated by filing of frivolous litigations against the content of cinematograph films‘ despite their getting certified by the Central Board for Film Certification.

    In a letter to Information and Broadcasting Minister Manish Tewari, Film and Television Producers Guild of India President Mukesh Bhatt described this as an "extremely serious issue concerning the entire film fraternity all over the country as it is abuse of the legal system which is meant for protection of individual rights and freedom".

    Bhatt said: “Any litigation initiated for challenging the content of a cinematograph film as objectionable after its certification by CBFC is superfluous and gratuitous since it disregards the authority and competence of CBFC. Such litigation is detrimental to the society at large apart from the film industry and needs to be discouraged. Moreover, any attempt to trigger the process of pre-censorship by addressing frivolous letters to the CBFC as has been done in several instances results in CBFC being over-cautious, conservative and using a magnifying class to certify films for public exhibition. The freedom of speech and expression of a filmmaker is thus jeopardized when the CBFC acts in an unstructured and conventional manner."

    He added: "It is disheartening to mention that the filmmakers have also been exploited at the instance of government and public authorities who have themselves demonstrated lack of faith in the statutory body constituted for certification. Films such as Aarakshan and Mausam are witnesses to such exploitation."

    Urging the Minister to find ways to discourage speculative litigation, Bhatt said the judicial process had also been "ill-treated at the hands of political parties and fake interest groups who find such frolicsome litigations an effortless and uncomplicated way to achieve self-advertisement and popular choice. Even kick starting a procedure by initiating litigation and summoning the CBFC, producers, directors, actors and distributors of cinematograph films is sufficient to give mammoth publicity to the litigant on one hand and cause undue harassment to those associated with the film on the other hand."

    A film scheduled for release is "therefore perceived as a potential wage for undue gains in terms of money, fame and publicity and it has become a preferred tendency to approach courts at the last minute before scheduled release of a film to suit such mala fide purpose", Bhatt added.

    However, he said the courts had been vigilant in evaluating and addressing such mischief. The Delhi High Court while deciding the validity of summons issued on the famous painter M F Hussain in relation to a contemporary painting made by him had ‘rightly observed that our scenario of painters, actors, writers, directors and theatre personalities being dragged to court on account of a mechanical exercise of issuance of summons results in growing fear and curtailment of the right of the free expression in such creative persons is hardly a desirable or an acceptable state of affairs’.

    "The need of the hour is therefore to instill faith in the expert body which, in my respectful submission, comprises of qualified members competent to certify films. It is also pertinent to inspire faith in the process of certification which prescribes a reasonable classification of certification such as ‘A‘, ‘U/A‘, ‘S‘, ‘R‘, based on the content", he said

  • 20th Century Fox pleased with Mahesh Bhatt working; pledges to work together for two more projects

    20th Century Fox pleased with Mahesh Bhatt working; pledges to work together for two more projects

    MUMBAI: During his recent visit to India, Chairman and CEO- 20th Century Fox James N Gianopulos visited Mahesh Bhatt to observe his production house‘s operations.

    So taken aback was James that both resolved to work on more films together after the recent Raaz 3. Comments Mahesh Bhatt, "It (20th Century Fox) is the biggest body in international cinema. We had a three-film deal with the production house. We are sure to work on one more project with him in the future."

    Speaking about this deal, Mahesh Bhatt said that his company had a three-film deal with them.

    Bhatt has also gone ahead and announced that once the third installment of Murder is released next year, he would work with Fox for two big projects which are to be announced next year. "These are not international projects. It will be made in Hindi but serve the global audience," he adds.

    Adds Fox Star Studios CEO Vijay Singh, "The association with the Bhatts goes a long way. We have done some stellar work together. James and our president Sanford Panitch want to cement our long standing equation."

  • Jab Tak Hai Jaan: A feeble swansong by Chopra

    Jab Tak Hai Jaan: A feeble swansong by Chopra

    MUMBAI: A Yash Chopra film means romance and soulful music that stays with you for a lifetime and emotions that tug at your heart. A Yash Chopra film is also expected to be made of a totally homemade recipe, his leanings towards Punjab culture being part of his package.

    Jab Tak Hai Jaan, Yash Chopra‘s last hurrah, alas, does not live up to the maker‘s lifelong formula and belief of his idea of a film story: romance, music, bonding. For Shah Rukh Khan‘s character of the bomb expert, the writer has chosen to borrow the character of Jeremy Renner, the hero of Hurt Locker; the character also brings along with him all the bomb diffusion sequences from the film. And the resemblance of Khan‘s London years with Jeremy Renner‘s own life story cannot be purely incidental.

    Anushka Sharma jumps into a pond at a deserted location in Ladakh and pretends to be drowning to draw the attention of Khan, who is camping solo on the shore taking break from his journey. He travels like a cowboy, using his Bullet bike instead of a horse. He saves her, drapes her in his army jacket and departs as if nothing had happened. For Sharma, this was just a game as she has shot the event on a video camera to win a bet with her friends. The jacket Khan leaves behind contains his diary where he has meticulously penned his life till date. As Sharma starts reading the pages, Jab Tak Hai Jaan unfolds in flashback.

    Khan is in the UK making a living by being a busker at times (a busker sings or performs in a public place to earn money), a restaurant waiter at others, when he is not clearing your driveway of heavy snow. He is a multifaceted Punjabi man who sings only Punjabi tunes to the London masses, which generously fill his begging bowl with coins and notes (beggar being how a busker would be seen in India). But for a loner who has no demands in life, that is not enough for the hero Khan. He also washes cars and serves as a waiter for God knows who since he has no aspirations! The idea is to make him a larger-than-life hero.

    Khan, among his other jobs, is strumming his regular Punjabi song, Challa…, on the streets and over the bridges of London and it so happens that Katrina Kaif, the daughter of a tycoon (Anupam Kher), happens to pass him by notwithstanding his change of location each day! She even drops a pound or two in his collection plate. Soon, the rich vs poor love has happened and the two are inseparable. The only problem is that, Kaif answers only to ‘Sir Jesus‘, her confidante and faith keeper; she trades with the Lord on regular basis giving up her favourite things for wishes granted.

    One fine day, Khan drops her off after their little rendezvous. On the way back, he meets with a near-fatal accident. Kaif swears by ‘Sir Jesus‘ that she would never meet Khan again if his life is spared; ‘Sir Jesus‘ does the needful. Kaif keeps her commitment and severs all ties with Khan. Khan, on his part, is somehow not disappointed with Kaif-he holds ‘Sir Jesus‘ responsible. He decides to court death everyday of his life and visits the church to challenge the Lord to kill him. Kaif‘s parting request to him is that he leaves London and he duly obliges by returning to India.

    Before the parting of the lovers, Kaif had made a one-month pact with him that he would teach her a Punjabi song which she then would sing for her father as a surprise to him and overwhelm his Punjabi heart. She in turn would teach him English. Possibly thanks to that one-month crash course in English, Khan qualifies to join as an officer in the bomb disposal squad of the Indian army.

    There are age bars and minimum education qualifications required to join an army but that does not seem to apply to a film hero. Khan is now a Major in the Indian Army‘s Bomb Disposal Squad. He leads a group but when it comes to a mission, he works alone and wears no protective gear; his dare to ‘Sir Jesus‘ stands. Khan has become a legend and like the encounter specialist cop‘s Ab Tak Chhappan, his score stands two short of a century, having diffused 98 bombs.

    Sharma has finished reading the diary and is not sure if this is Khan‘s story or fiction. But if it is his story, she has already fallen for him! The diary has changed this believer of one-night stands into a romantic. She is enamoured and wants to do a feature on Khan for Discovery Channel, which would bring her close to him as well as cement a permanent job for her with the channel. In the process of making her feature on Khan, she manages to break the ice with him as he softens up to her. Her admiration keeps mounting for after all, he not only excels at diffusing bombs but can even repair her video camera when it breaks.

    The feature is complete and approved by the channel heads but the rules dictate that the maker as well as the protagonist needs to be present at the launch. Reluctant at first, Khan agrees to visit London for the event only to meet with another accident this time. The accident causes retrograde amnesia in Khan; this takes his memory status back by ten years to when he had met with his first accident and takes the film‘s script level to 1960s films.

    Khan can‘t remember a thing about past ten years now; not his army days nor his tryst with Sharma. All he does is keep asking for Kaif. The doctor treating Khan, Sarika, seems to be familiar with 1960s films and devises a way to cure Khan without risking a side effect. According to her therapy, Kaif needs to pretend to be Khan‘s wife, accompany him to all those places in London he was familiar with. The scheme works, memories of the missing ten years come in flashes till there is a bomb situation on a London underground train and he instinctively volunteers to diffuse it and he is back to normal status with everything falling in place. It is time for the original lovers to unite.

    Jab Tak Hai Jaan is a lengthy film: 40 seconds short of three hours. Three characters are expected to see those hours through, a tough call as the film is put together by a script of convenience. The music does not come up to levels set by Yash Chopra films; it is too heavy on Punjabi words and flavour with uninspiring lyrics. The romance between Khan and Kaif is not very convincing (their cause for parting is superficial), the film lacks on solid emotions and fails to touch the viewer. To add to these woes, the major let down is Khan; he looks jaded, his pairing against two much younger women making it jarringly obvious. He fails to charm his fans as always. Kaif, on her part, shares little chemistry with Khan if at all. Sharma brings some life to the film but her role does not get her very far. So, what does one have the film to remember by? Well, it is a cameo by Rishi Kapoor and Nitu Singh, who land the film a few minutes of freshness.

    Yash Chopra‘s direction shows his usual touch of class and finesse aided by excellent cinematography by Anil Mehta at the same time showing his blind faith in a weak script.

    Jab Tak Hai Jaan drains the viewer of patience, falls short of the expectations generated by the pre-release hype and its makers‘ label which, despite its Diwali release, is bound to reflect on its box office outcome.

     
    Son Of Sardar: A rom-com..almost

     

    Producers: Ajay Devgn, NR Pachisia, Pravin Talreja.
    Director: Ashwani Dhir. 
    Cast: Ajay Devgn, Sanjay Dutt, Sonakshi Sinha, Juhi Chawla, Tanuja, Vindu Dara Singh, Mukul Dev, Rajesh Vivek, Arjan Bajwa.

    Son Of Sardar is a typical masala comedy of the sort the South churns out, with action and full star cast trying to raise laughter. The plot is basic: boy meets girl, they fall in love but they both belong to warring families. And why not! Even if Son Of Sardar is a remake of the Telugu film Maryada Ramanna, the later is a lift from the 1923 Buster Keaton silent movie, My Hospitality. Despite its title, the film is about two Sardar families, one Pagree clad and the other an assorted lot.

    Ajay Devgn is in London ‘doing what all Punjabis do, looking for something to do‘. Six months into his stay in London, he has already caused enough trouble. Whatever he does, his Pathan friend, Salman Khan (cameo) promises to stand by him. That is when he receives a mail from a tehsildar in a small town in his native Punjab informing him that he has inherited a huge plot of farm and that he should come back to claim it. Simple enough, Devgn decides to go there, sell of his land and return with money to start a business in London. Turns out that things are not all that simple and waiting for him in his native town is a bunch of another clan of Sardars who want to kill him and end an age old feud, a feud Devgn is not even aware of.

    In India, Devgn takes a train to his hometown and the ground is laid for romance and to connect the feuding families. Sonakshi Sinha boards the same compartment as Devgn. Some pranks and odd situations later, the girl is duly charmed. After landing in town, the first attempt to liquidate Devgn comes from Mukul Dev, one of the enemy clan members; having given a lift to Devgn halfway down the road he learns that this is the guy they had been waiting for since 25 years. His attempts, first with a gun and later with a sword, chasing Devgn through the by lanes of the small town, prove disastrous for himself while his victim is oblivious of the charade. The sequence sort of sets the tone of things to follow when Devgn comes face-to-face with the enemy clan led by Sanjay Dutt. Dutt has sworn off marriage till he kills last of the Devgn‘s family hence his fiancé, Juhi Chawla, calls herself his Muhboli biwi!

    This happens soon enough as Devgn is advised against going to tehsildar and to go to Dutt instead, the de facto boss of the town who can settle things faster than the tehsildar. Being a comedy, Devgn ends up asking Dutt where he could find Dutt! The problem is reported to Dutt, surrounded by his family and cronies who include Vindu, Rajesh Vivek and others. Sinha, Dutt‘s niece is around and seeing that Devgn and Sinha know each other, Devgn is invited to a lunch and sees the family‘s hospitality by Dutt.

    Over lunch Devgn‘s family roots are revealed and all hell breaks loose. Every man in the room and a small army outside the house is ready to kill him. But it has been conveyed at the outset that the Dutt clan‘s rules prohibit harming a guest while he is on family premises: Atithee Devo Bhava–Guest Is God–and all that. Devgn now knows what is happening and decides to keep finding reasons not to leave the house even as his hosts are itching to get him out and finish the job. The compulsion also gives him chance to woo Sinha till he is finally led into a trap with the town cop and taken to a secluded place where he is surrounded by Dutt‘s cronies.

    It is time to move from comedy to some hardcore action and also some computer-generated action. However, actions involving an animal, a horse in this event, mandates a footnote in the film‘s frame asserting it is a computer generated stunt so that no animal was harmed, a fact that takes away the thrill of that effort. The other problem in fights with Devgn and Dutt is that neither of the two can be shown to be losing and the bout only amounts to both exchanging countless blows for nothing. Meanwhile, there is an ample supply of Punjabi and Sardarji jokes with Dev playing the dimwit of the family and Vindu complementing him.

    Son Of Sardar is an action comedy but since none in its main cast is a natural comic, the funny scenes are generally situational and jokey. Devgn is good in his comic scenes with Sinha while in action he maintains his image. Dutt has to look menacing which he does without effort. Dev and Vindu are good with Vivek, Tanuja and Arjan Bajwa supporting well. Sinha‘s frame is expanding faster than her career. Chawla still manages to look bubbly. Directorially, the film is okay with some scenes stretched unnecessarily. The music is foot tapping with the title song sure to be a favourite in the wedding seasons in the North. Dialogue has a mix of wit and puns and some are good while some are PJs. Other aspects are passable.

    Son Of Sardar has some juvenile entertainment to offer but nothing that has not been seen many times in last few years. Its range at the box office, hence, is limited.

  • Balaji to produce comedy film with Bejoy Nambiar

    Balaji to produce comedy film with Bejoy Nambiar

    MUMBAI: Balaji Motion Pictures Limited, the motion pictures arm of Balaji Telefilms, has partnered with critically acclaimed director, producer and screenwriter Bejoy Nambiar to produce a comedy film titled Kuku Mathur Ki Jhand Ho Gayi.

    Currently underproduction, Kuku Mathur Ki Jhand Ho Gayi will be directed by National award winning ad-filmmaker Aman Sachdeva. The film will star Siddharth Gupta and former Miss India Simran Kaur.

    Balaji Motion Pictures CEO Tanuj Garg said, "We are delighted to partner a creative talent like Bejoy Nambiar on a film that we believe is clearly among the most hilarious and entertaining scripts we‘ve read."

    Talking about the new project, Bejoy said, "The director held a long audition process over several months. We were very clear about wanting a fresh face. Lots of youngsters were auditioned and I went to Balaji with the tapes. It took us around five odd months to lock Siddharth for the role."

    "This is our third venture at Getaway Films and the first one that I am not directing. Aman (Sachdeva) makes his directorial feature debut and we couldn‘t have asked for a better alliance than one with Balaji on our pet project," he adds.

  • 1920…… does well in dull pre-Diwali week

    1920…… does well in dull pre-Diwali week

    MUMBAI: Vikram Bhatt’s 1920 – Evil Returns, the sequel to his earlier offering 1920, has done excellent business in its first week despite a dull period before Diwali. The film collected Rs 186 million.

    Ashok Tyagi directed Its Rocking – Dard-E-Disco, with Bappi Lahiri as an added attraction, did very poorly.

    UTV Motion Pictures and Anurag Kashyap Films Pvt Ltd’s Luv Shuv Tey Chicken Khurana collected Rs 65 million.

    Prakash Jha’s Chakravyuh showed a major drop ending its second week with Rs 12 million.

    Karan Johar’s Student Of The Year remained steady in its third week with collections of Rs 36 million.

    Sridevi’s comeback movie English Vinglish can now definitely be defined as a hit having collected Rs 10.5 million in its fifth week taking its tally to Rs 368.5 million.

    Paresh Rawal starrer OMG Oh My God! collected a moderate Rs nine million in its sixth week to take its total collection to Rs 765.5 million.

    Barfi! collected about Rs one million in its eighth week to take its total to Rs 1.09 billion.

  • ‘Talaash’ launches movie app on Windows 8

    ‘Talaash’ launches movie app on Windows 8

    MUMBAI: The upcoming movie ‘Talaash‘ launched its movie app on Windows 8. With this app, the audience can get more information about their favourite star and the movie, watch trailers and even download wallpapers. This marketing tie up between Microsoft and the film is a part of the recent announcement by the company on the availability of Windows 8 for its customers in India and around the world.

    Consumers and businesses worldwide can now experience all that Windows 8 has to offer: a new UI, a range of apps with the grand opening of the Windows Store, available on a variety of Windows 8 certified PCs and tablets.

    Talaash‘s actor Aamir Khan, as inspector Shekhawat, along with Bhaskar Pramanik and senior Microsoft executives, showcased the fast and fluid Windows 8 at Ambience Mall, Gurgaon. The audience also met the star after an exciting demo of the new Windows 8 OS. Consumers, across India, get a chance to meet the star by taking a demo of Windows 8 at a retail store near them.