Category: Movies

  • ‘Madaari’ rides on cast; ‘M Cream’  bores

    ‘Madaari’ rides on cast; ‘M Cream’ bores

    MUMBAI: Madaari arouses curiosity mainly because of its star cast combination of Irrfan Khan and Jimmy Shergill. As expected, they are on opposite sides of the law. Also, the film packs one of the favourite themes of the masses: a common man against the establishment.

    Irrfan is stalking two young boys, both hostelites somewhere in Uttarakhand. The boys, Vishesh Bansal and Sadhil Kapoor, love to defy the hostel regulations. They have timed the sentry’s checkup visits to the dormitory and, accordingly, every night between 12 midnight and 4 am they jump over the hostel premises to go have midnight meals at the roadside thelas. They get their kick out of this act.

    Unknown to Vishesh and Sadhil, they are being observed keenly by a scary looking man with longish hair and a beard, Irrfan. He is also seen inquiring about the boys from the food vendor. And, soon enough, he has kidnapped both the boys. While he lets off Sadhil, he has a serious reason for kidnapping Vishesh: he has an axe to grind with Vishesh’s father, Tushar Dalvi, who is the home minister (there is a bit of confusion here as one can’t really determine if this is a state subject or related to the central government.).

    Irrfan is an aggrieved person in that he was a single parent of a boy who he doted on. One day, lured by an opportunity to earn some extra money, he lets his son go to school on his own instead of dropping him there as has been his routine. But, within minutes of son and father parting, there is a tragedy. A bridge in the area has collapsed and one of the victims is Irrfan’s son. Had Irrfan gone to drop his son off, he would have perished too.

    Irrfan survives and now wants accountability. And what better than kidnapping the home minister’s son and force him to tow your lines? Soon, the whole legal force is out to track Irrfan though they still don’t know who the kidnapper is. The case is handed over to Shergill, who soon understands that the kidnap is not for ransom and the kidnapper has a solid motive. Also, that he is a computer savvy, educated man.

    As the manhunt starts, this turns into a road movie. Irrfan keeps moving from place to place so that his calls are not tracked. That is till the cops release Irrfan’s and Vishesh’s pictures. But, meanwhile, Irrfan has not only won over Vishesh to his side but also, thanks to the media, the general public. People are always with the underdog.

    The film moves towards the tried and tested climax; it is Irrfan vs. corrupt politicians with masses playing the referee thanks to the media.

    As mentioned at the onset, the main attraction in Madaari is its cast. As for the rest, the film offers nothing original. Public works and corruption? The earliest film I remember about building bridges which end in tragedy,  is Aadmi Aur Insaan (B R Films: 1969), which had a friendship background, Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro (Kundan Shah: 1983) had comedy as its main theme and there are many others. As for the kidnapping for justice, Gabbar Is Back was a recent release with similar theme. And the cops vs. Irrfan treatment is very much akin to the acclaimed film, A Wednesday!. And, of course, the climax of using the media to involve the public to witness the final confessions has now become as much a part of our films as are songs and dance routines!
    The scripting is taut initially but, as soon as Irrfan’s identity is known, the film loses some of its holding power. Also, the way it goes about, it offers no surprises or twists. It also leaves a lot unexplained as to the locale of the story, the wife deserting Irrfan and leaving a kid behind at a time he needed nursing and other such points. Direction goes by the script and does not rise beyond its limitations. Music has situational utility. Cinematography is good as it juxtaposes scenic northern mountains against barren Rajasthan landscapes.

    Irrfan is excellent. The film is woven around his character and he makes the most of it. Shergill proves a perfect foil with his restrained performance as well as his very presence. Young Vishesh impresses.

    Madaari has limited appeal, especially for the gentry.

    Producers: Irrfan Khan, Shailesh Singh, Madan Paliwal, Sutapa Sikdar, Shailja Kejriwal.

    Director: Nishikant Kamat.

    Cast: Irrfan Khan, Vishesh Bansal, Jimmy Shergill, Tushar Dalvi, Nitesh Pandey, Sadhil Kapoor.
     
     
    M Cream …..Trip to boredom!

    M Cream may be called a personal movie in that, if the film bore relevance to anybody, it would be to its makers. It is about four college youth perpetually on alcohol and drugs but the ones affected and on a high, it seems, are the makers. It is a product of indulgence. In fact, if at all, then the film tries to pick up events from the late 1960s and transpose them to today! To attribute a genre to the film, it is a road movie.

    Imaad Shah, Ira Dubey, Raaghav Chanana and Aurita Ghosh are Delhi University students who are seen anywhere but the university campus. They seem to live in their own world and are always sufficiently stocked with alcohol, drugs and cigarettes. If at all they take a break from these indulgence, it is for sex.

    Since their lives revolve around booze and drugs, they feel the need to go search for this mythical wonder hashish, M Cream, said to be found only in the Himalayas. The preparation contains mainly of alcohol stock. The group decides to drop in at Dharamshala, the city of the Dalai Lama. On the way, the equations seem to be changing between these two couples. Imaad,who was earlier attracted to Aurita, is now inclined towards Ira while Aurita shacks up with Raaghav.

    Their life is now about travelling through picturesque Himalayan tracks or eating, drinking and smoking when not travelling. Their next stop is at some sort of joint run by Barry John who enlightens them further on drugs and also gives them their first experience with LSD. Of course, wherever they go, there are groups of hippies stocked up with drugs waiting to welcome them, play music and have wild dance parties.

    For the sake of some kind of movement, the friends fight and the couples part ways. Imaad and Ira are left on their own. Whether they discover M Cream or not, they sure end up discovering each other!

    The film has soulful music, a fusion of songs you can hear again and again on a long drive. Shubha Mudgal along with a couple of foreign artists renders racy songs.

    If the film tries to take you back to the hippie era, it fails badly as the makers seem to have no clue about that age and time. For, if anything changed the world, people and way of life after WW2  more drastically, it was the 1960s and early 70s.

    Producer: Agniputra Films.

    Director: Agneya Singh.

    Cast: Imaad Shah, Ira Dubey, Barry John, Auritra Ghosh, Raaghav Chanana, Tom Alter, Lushin Dubey, Beatrice Ordeix.
     

  • Movies OK brings monsoon blockbuster festivals

    Movies OK brings monsoon blockbuster festivals

    MUMBAI : Monsoons are best spent with loved ones, a hot cup of coffee and your favorite movies on your home screen! This July, Movies OK is all set to make your monsoon a lot more exciting with two fantastic festivals, Kuch Kisse, Kuch Kahaniyan Aur Thodi Baarish and 8 Ka Thaat that promise to leave you enthralled and entertained.

    Kuch Kisse, Kuch Kahaniyan Aur Thodi Baarish, a festival perfect to watch with your loved ones, aims to make your monsoon afternoons magical. The festival will air movies including the superhit Aashiqui, Shah Rukh Khan, Preity Zinta and Saif Ali Khan starrer Kal Ho Na Ho, Shahid Kapoor’s debut film Ishq Vishk, the romantic drama Rehna Hai Tere Dil Mein, Mann, I Hate Love Storys, Dil, Dil Toh Baccha Hai Ji and Kahin Pyar Na Ho Jaye. This wonderful movie bonanza will culminate on 29th July with Alia Bhatt and Arjun Kapoor starrer romcom, 2 States.

    8 Ka Thaat, the prime time action festival, will feature Bollywood’s biggest action heroes that are bound to get your adrenaline racing. Kick starting with Ajay Devgn and Emraan Hashmi starrer Once Upon a Time in Mumbai, the festival will also feature Saif Ali Khan’s Bullet Raja and the dramatic tale of Amitabh Bachchan’s Agneepath amongst a host of others.

  • Movies OK brings monsoon blockbuster festivals

    Movies OK brings monsoon blockbuster festivals

    MUMBAI : Monsoons are best spent with loved ones, a hot cup of coffee and your favorite movies on your home screen! This July, Movies OK is all set to make your monsoon a lot more exciting with two fantastic festivals, Kuch Kisse, Kuch Kahaniyan Aur Thodi Baarish and 8 Ka Thaat that promise to leave you enthralled and entertained.

    Kuch Kisse, Kuch Kahaniyan Aur Thodi Baarish, a festival perfect to watch with your loved ones, aims to make your monsoon afternoons magical. The festival will air movies including the superhit Aashiqui, Shah Rukh Khan, Preity Zinta and Saif Ali Khan starrer Kal Ho Na Ho, Shahid Kapoor’s debut film Ishq Vishk, the romantic drama Rehna Hai Tere Dil Mein, Mann, I Hate Love Storys, Dil, Dil Toh Baccha Hai Ji and Kahin Pyar Na Ho Jaye. This wonderful movie bonanza will culminate on 29th July with Alia Bhatt and Arjun Kapoor starrer romcom, 2 States.

    8 Ka Thaat, the prime time action festival, will feature Bollywood’s biggest action heroes that are bound to get your adrenaline racing. Kick starting with Ajay Devgn and Emraan Hashmi starrer Once Upon a Time in Mumbai, the festival will also feature Saif Ali Khan’s Bullet Raja and the dramatic tale of Amitabh Bachchan’s Agneepath amongst a host of others.

  • Box Office : ‘Great Grand Masti’ fails; ‘Sultan’ continues its rule

    Box Office : ‘Great Grand Masti’ fails; ‘Sultan’ continues its rule

    MUMBAI: Great Grand Masti turns out to be one massive PJ; on its makers really, as the moviegoers rejected it from day one, show one. This is one film that fails to cash in on the brand equity built by its previous two installments, Masti and Grand Masti, both of which had fared reasonably well.

    Lacking a single moment of fun and laughter, original or borrowed, the film opens to poor houses and ends its opening weekend with a poor 7.8 crore.

    *The long wait by the exhibition trade, especially the multiplex chains who need to feed multiple screens at each property every week, finally fructifies with Salman Khan’s Eid ul Fitr release, Sultan. This Salman film also justifies the trade’s faith in his films.

    Sultan was planned to release on the Eid day but, Eid falling one day later did not in any way affect the film’s opening day draw, which was also thanks partly to an unprecedented advance booking and also to enhanced admission rates as the film closed its day one with 36.54 crore. It went ahead to end its five day extended weekend with 180.36 crore and the nine day week with 229.16 crore mark.

    The film maintained well in its second week, which is as good as an open week with virtually no opposition from the solo release of the week, Great Grand Masti. It has added 34.07 crore during its second weekend to take its 12 day tally to 263.23 crore.

    Rest of the inconsequential films, released during the Ramzan month and before that, have generally been losers.

  • Box Office : ‘Great Grand Masti’ fails; ‘Sultan’ continues its rule

    Box Office : ‘Great Grand Masti’ fails; ‘Sultan’ continues its rule

    MUMBAI: Great Grand Masti turns out to be one massive PJ; on its makers really, as the moviegoers rejected it from day one, show one. This is one film that fails to cash in on the brand equity built by its previous two installments, Masti and Grand Masti, both of which had fared reasonably well.

    Lacking a single moment of fun and laughter, original or borrowed, the film opens to poor houses and ends its opening weekend with a poor 7.8 crore.

    *The long wait by the exhibition trade, especially the multiplex chains who need to feed multiple screens at each property every week, finally fructifies with Salman Khan’s Eid ul Fitr release, Sultan. This Salman film also justifies the trade’s faith in his films.

    Sultan was planned to release on the Eid day but, Eid falling one day later did not in any way affect the film’s opening day draw, which was also thanks partly to an unprecedented advance booking and also to enhanced admission rates as the film closed its day one with 36.54 crore. It went ahead to end its five day extended weekend with 180.36 crore and the nine day week with 229.16 crore mark.

    The film maintained well in its second week, which is as good as an open week with virtually no opposition from the solo release of the week, Great Grand Masti. It has added 34.07 crore during its second weekend to take its 12 day tally to 263.23 crore.

    Rest of the inconsequential films, released during the Ramzan month and before that, have generally been losers.

  • ‘Movies.Masti.Magic’ at the Pandharpur Mela 2016

    ‘Movies.Masti.Magic’ at the Pandharpur Mela 2016

    MUMBAI: Pandharpur Ashadhi Ekadashi Yatra is a yatra of faith in the Almighty that unites lakhs of warkaris from various places of Maharashtra. The yatra progresses into a colossal Mela at Pandharpur and witnesses the submission of countless warkaris to Lord Vithoba. This year, India’s leading Hindi movie channel -Zee Cinema – staying true to its core proposition of ‘Movies.Masti.Magic’ has made efforts to provide basic amenities during the yatra to the pilgrims so that they have a memorable pilgrimage.

    With the fact that ‘The real India lives in villages’ and education being key to the development of India’s economy, Zee Cinema takes its first steps at the Pandharpur Mela this year. The channel is distributing books and pens to generate enthusiasm about learning amongst the youth. And, adhering to ZEEL’s ‘Zee is Green’ initiative, the stationary is being given along with eco-friendly cloth bags to more than fifty thousand pilgrims. Another concern in the region is the acute water shortage. Pilgrims wait endlessly in long queues for Lord Vithoba’s darshan in the scorching heat. The channel has made arrangements to distribute cold drinking water to the devotees to ensure a comfortable hassle-free darshan.

    An LED screen will also provide live feeds from the inside of the temple to all the devotees in the surrounding areas. On the banks of Chandrabhaga river, the channel has organized an all-day open theatre that showcases films on Zee Cinema for people to sit and relax. There will also be an exclusive movie screening in the evenings, showcasing the latest blockbusters.

  • ‘Movies.Masti.Magic’ at the Pandharpur Mela 2016

    ‘Movies.Masti.Magic’ at the Pandharpur Mela 2016

    MUMBAI: Pandharpur Ashadhi Ekadashi Yatra is a yatra of faith in the Almighty that unites lakhs of warkaris from various places of Maharashtra. The yatra progresses into a colossal Mela at Pandharpur and witnesses the submission of countless warkaris to Lord Vithoba. This year, India’s leading Hindi movie channel -Zee Cinema – staying true to its core proposition of ‘Movies.Masti.Magic’ has made efforts to provide basic amenities during the yatra to the pilgrims so that they have a memorable pilgrimage.

    With the fact that ‘The real India lives in villages’ and education being key to the development of India’s economy, Zee Cinema takes its first steps at the Pandharpur Mela this year. The channel is distributing books and pens to generate enthusiasm about learning amongst the youth. And, adhering to ZEEL’s ‘Zee is Green’ initiative, the stationary is being given along with eco-friendly cloth bags to more than fifty thousand pilgrims. Another concern in the region is the acute water shortage. Pilgrims wait endlessly in long queues for Lord Vithoba’s darshan in the scorching heat. The channel has made arrangements to distribute cold drinking water to the devotees to ensure a comfortable hassle-free darshan.

    An LED screen will also provide live feeds from the inside of the temple to all the devotees in the surrounding areas. On the banks of Chandrabhaga river, the channel has organized an all-day open theatre that showcases films on Zee Cinema for people to sit and relax. There will also be an exclusive movie screening in the evenings, showcasing the latest blockbusters.

  • Great Grand Masti….Greater disappointment!

    Great Grand Masti….Greater disappointment!

    MUMBAI: Indra Kumar acted in and made a few Gujarati films in the era of tax exemption and subsidy offered by the Gujarat government to promote Gujarati films. Indra’s forte in those days was to thrive on vulgar gestures and double meaning dialogue. It worked because Gujarati films catered mainly to a certain level of audience. He also came to be called the Dada Kondke (the legendary Marathi filmmaker) of Gujarati films. Indra directed some notable films in Hindi with top stars.

    With corporate studios calling shots and stakes gone sky-high, survival for independent filmmakers became impossible. Indra decided to go back to his Kondke style of film making starting with Masti (2004), followed by Grand Masti (2013) to now come up with the third part of his Masti series with Great Grand Masti.

    The Great Grand Masti has the same agenda as its earlier versions which is to weave a comedy around vulgarity. The male and female anatomy is the theme around which the makers plan to play. To this end, Indra lets loose his three generally out of work male characters from his earlier films, Riteish Deshmukh, Aftab Shivdasani and Vivek Oberoi. All that these three have in mind is sex 24×7. It oozes from all their actions.

    All three are married to very revealing and willing girls but all three girls carry excess baggage which keeps the trio from getting anywhere close to their spouses. Since the lads are desperate for sex and their own women are not available to them, they need to look elsewhere. They decide to embark on a village where Riteish has a palatial property to sell.

    The makers think it is time to make this film hattke from the earlier two. So the angle of paranormal is added to consolidate the comedy. This is rare because paranormal on its own has few takers in Hindi films, let alone with a blend of comedy. Last one in memory is late producer-actor Deven Verma’s Bhaago Boot Aaya, inspired from a James Hadley Chase novel, Miss Shumway Waves A Wand. But, to a disastrous results.

    In absence of a script or good gags, Indra lets his three non-actors loose on the screen as they start with trying to seduce the sexy maid, Urvashi Rautela, at the palatial house and, later, to save their lives when they realize that the maid is a ghost waiting to be seduced for the last 50 years! The hide n seek between the guys and ghost is meant to be funny but it is not and falls flat. In its 127 minute duration, the only funny scene the film has is of Viagra aftereffect which, again, has been lifted from Mel Brook’s comedy, History Of The World (1981). And, that too has been killed by stretching it too far.

    The film is a poor specimen of comedy, entertainment or whatever it may be called. Nothing works here. The performers keep to their reputation and don’t act; over two hours of buffoonery is what they resort to.

    The film is poor on all counts and has no hopes at the box office.

    Producers: Shobha Kapoor, Ekta Kapoor, Sameer Nair, Aman Gill, Ashok Thakeria, Sri Adhikari Brothers, Anand Pandit.

    Director: Indra Kumar.

    Cast: Ritesh Deshmukh, Vivek Oberoi, Aftab Shivdasani, Urvashi Rautela, Pooja Bose, Amar Saxena, Sanjay Mishra, Shreyas Talpade.

  • Great Grand Masti….Greater disappointment!

    Great Grand Masti….Greater disappointment!

    MUMBAI: Indra Kumar acted in and made a few Gujarati films in the era of tax exemption and subsidy offered by the Gujarat government to promote Gujarati films. Indra’s forte in those days was to thrive on vulgar gestures and double meaning dialogue. It worked because Gujarati films catered mainly to a certain level of audience. He also came to be called the Dada Kondke (the legendary Marathi filmmaker) of Gujarati films. Indra directed some notable films in Hindi with top stars.

    With corporate studios calling shots and stakes gone sky-high, survival for independent filmmakers became impossible. Indra decided to go back to his Kondke style of film making starting with Masti (2004), followed by Grand Masti (2013) to now come up with the third part of his Masti series with Great Grand Masti.

    The Great Grand Masti has the same agenda as its earlier versions which is to weave a comedy around vulgarity. The male and female anatomy is the theme around which the makers plan to play. To this end, Indra lets loose his three generally out of work male characters from his earlier films, Riteish Deshmukh, Aftab Shivdasani and Vivek Oberoi. All that these three have in mind is sex 24×7. It oozes from all their actions.

    All three are married to very revealing and willing girls but all three girls carry excess baggage which keeps the trio from getting anywhere close to their spouses. Since the lads are desperate for sex and their own women are not available to them, they need to look elsewhere. They decide to embark on a village where Riteish has a palatial property to sell.

    The makers think it is time to make this film hattke from the earlier two. So the angle of paranormal is added to consolidate the comedy. This is rare because paranormal on its own has few takers in Hindi films, let alone with a blend of comedy. Last one in memory is late producer-actor Deven Verma’s Bhaago Boot Aaya, inspired from a James Hadley Chase novel, Miss Shumway Waves A Wand. But, to a disastrous results.

    In absence of a script or good gags, Indra lets his three non-actors loose on the screen as they start with trying to seduce the sexy maid, Urvashi Rautela, at the palatial house and, later, to save their lives when they realize that the maid is a ghost waiting to be seduced for the last 50 years! The hide n seek between the guys and ghost is meant to be funny but it is not and falls flat. In its 127 minute duration, the only funny scene the film has is of Viagra aftereffect which, again, has been lifted from Mel Brook’s comedy, History Of The World (1981). And, that too has been killed by stretching it too far.

    The film is a poor specimen of comedy, entertainment or whatever it may be called. Nothing works here. The performers keep to their reputation and don’t act; over two hours of buffoonery is what they resort to.

    The film is poor on all counts and has no hopes at the box office.

    Producers: Shobha Kapoor, Ekta Kapoor, Sameer Nair, Aman Gill, Ashok Thakeria, Sri Adhikari Brothers, Anand Pandit.

    Director: Indra Kumar.

    Cast: Ritesh Deshmukh, Vivek Oberoi, Aftab Shivdasani, Urvashi Rautela, Pooja Bose, Amar Saxena, Sanjay Mishra, Shreyas Talpade.

  • Zee Classic promotes parallel cinema with ‘India’s Finest Films’

    Zee Classic promotes parallel cinema with ‘India’s Finest Films’

    MUMBAI: Zee Classic boasts of an outstanding library of Indian cinematic classics and it has recently associated with National Film Development Corporation of India (NFDC). Starting July 16, every Saturday at 10 pm, Zee Classic will premiere ‘India’s Finest Films’, a distinguished property showcasing masterpieces like ‘Mirch Masala’, ‘Ek Doctor ki Maut’, ’27 Down’ and ‘Salaam Bombay’ amongst many other such gems from the NFDC library. These movies mark the debut of icons like Irrfan Khan, Pankaj Kapur, Naseeruddin Shah and many more. This festival kickstarts with ‘Salaam Bombay!’ directed by Mira Nair on this Saturday.

    Zee Entertainment Enterprises Chief Business Officer Sunil Buch said, “A Hindi movie channel as distinct as Zee Classic has seen growing viewership with every property that we have showcased. In line with its brand positioning ‘Woh Zamaana Kare Deewana’, we have enriched the channel’s library to present our viewers with some never-seen-before timeless classics. Zee Classic will soon telecast the crème de la crème of landmark cinema under its latest property – ‘India’s Finest Films’. It offers a mix of critically acclaimed independent and award winning films that are treasures of Indian cinema. We have associated with NFDC to create this property and today, with new age films setting new benchmarks in parallel cinema, the films that are a part of ‘India’s Finest Films’ represent the semantics of Indian culture over the years and have carved the way for realism in films. With films such Gandhi, Mirch Masala, 27 Down, it is for the discerning cinema lover who likes to be challenged. This property will present films that brings life to so many iconic characters and thought provoking narratives.”

    To acquaint the youth of India with parallel cinema and enhance their movie-viewing experience, Zee Classic has also curated an hour long special feature called ‘India’s Finest Films – A Parallel Journey.’ It includes views of stalwarts of Indian cinema like Shyam Benegal, Mahesh Bhatt, Saeed Mirza, Kundan Shah, Rohini Hattangadi amongst others. It had an extravagant digital release and premiered on the Zee Classic YouTube channel on Tuesday, 12 July at 12 noon. Audiences can also catch it on television as a prelude to ‘India’s Finest Films’. Excerpts of this feature along with additional exclusive interviews will be showcased during the telecast of movies on Zee Classic. The channel has also launched a 360 degree marketing campaign including Outdoor, Radio, Print and exclusive screenings of these titles with influencers.

    Zee Hindi Movies Cluster, Business Head, Ruchir Tiwari said, “With the success of properties like ‘The Bimal Roy Festival with Boman Irani’ and ‘The Golden Years with Javed Akhtar’, we are constantly innovating with content on Zee Classic to entertain its audiences. We have acquired 49 path breaking titles produced by NFDC and some of them will be showcased for the very first time on television. The sheer brilliance and uniqueness of these films is that they have no shelf life as they are timeless genius masterpieces! The promotional campaign has already kick started across mediums. The prelude, ‘India’s Finest films – A Parallel Journey’ has luminaries from the industry share their unrivalled expertise and insights of these classics and is a content goldmine for lovers of parallel cinema. While this genre of films is not commercial, the work of many superstars and filmmakers in them has increased the popularity of these masterpieces and will surely entertain viewers across age groups.”

    NFDC spokesperson, Director (Finance) Nazhat J. Shaikh said, “Over the last few years NFDC has developed and nurtured not only Indie cinema and fresh film talent but also audiences that would be groomed to connect with the same. Our Best of Indian Cinema initiative with Zee Classic is a step further in that direction. The viewer will experience over the next few months a selection of some of our landmark films packaged with some interesting trivia. A true spread for the Cineaste ! This is also a great moment to acknowledge the contribution made by the filmmakers and the film talent who walked with us on this journey and created these endearing works of cinematic expression.”

    Talking about India’s Finest Films and Zee Classic, Shyam Benegal too added, “Rabindranath Tagore once said that every art seeks to find its own independent manner of expression within the world it creates, and no creative genius has yet arrived to deliver it from its bondage. Having said that, television has always been a very effective medium, particularly for films that may or may not have the opportunity to do well in cinema houses. This is because televisions reaches homes and you do not pay individually for movies. I personally feel Zee Classic’s initiative is a very good one. It will help to keep alive the film culture of our country and Zee Classic is in the ideal position to do this.”