Category: Movies

  • Amitabh Bachchan and Aamir Khan to launch Dilip Kumar’s biography ‘Substance and Shadow’

    Amitabh Bachchan and Aamir Khan to launch Dilip Kumar’s biography ‘Substance and Shadow’

    MUMBAI: Come 9 June and the long wait for the biography of Bollywood thespian Dilip Kumar will be over! The biography ‘Substance and Shadow’, which was earlier scheduled to be released on his 91st birthday, is all set to be revealed now in Mumbai.

     

    The biography is written by author Uday Tara Nayar, who is also a close family friend of the Bollywood thespian.

     

    The book will be launched by Bollywood megastar Amitabh Bachchan and perfectionist Aamir Khan in the presence of Dilip Kumar, Saira Banu Khan, Lata Mangeshkar and Uday Tara Nayar.

     

    The launch event is arranged, managed and executed by Samara Productions, Astrus Talent and Event Management and MOH Entertainment. Glamsham.com is the exclusive digital partner, Oye 104.8 FM is the radio partner while Zoom is the channel partner for red carpet coverage.

  • ‘Filmistaan’ to be released in more than 450 screens

    ‘Filmistaan’ to be released in more than 450 screens

    NEW DELHI: In a rare case, a film with no romantic angle or female character and based on the backdrop of terrorism is being released on 6 June in more than 450 screens across the country.

     

    The film, ‘Filmistaan’ by debutante director Nitin Kakkar, is about interplay for a no-man’s land where the only connect between the two main characters of whom one is an Indian prisoner is their love for Bollywood.

     

    Kakkar told indinatelevision.com in an interview that he wanted to highlight that cinema has no division of caste or religion.

     

    ‘Patriotism is the reality and jingoism is how one sells this sentiment’ he said in reply to a question on how filmmakers attempt to show patriotism.

     

    Asked why he had kept the end open-ended, he said he wanted to convey the message that people are standing at the borders even today in the hope that these will open someday. He had also ensured thereby that the film was neither romanticized nor gloomy.

     

    H also stressed that the focus was always on the love for cinema and not politics or terrorism. He attributed this to the fact that he had been seeing films from childhood which indulged in anti-Pakistani jingoism.

     

    ‘Filmistaan’ had won a National Award for 2012 and has received good response in several international festivals including Busan, across the United States and Europe and in Jaipur.

     

    The response had been very positive even from those from Pakistan who saw the film at these festivals, Kakkar said.

     

    Produced by Shyam Shroff and Balkrishna Shroff, the film stars Sharib Hashmi, Inaamulhaq, Kumud Mishra, Gopal Datt, Sanjay Mehta, Ravi Bhushan, Waseem Khan, Tushar Jha, Saroj Sharma, Manoj Bakshi, Sagnik Chakrabarty, Habib Azmi, Kavita Thapliyal, Punit Nijhawan, and Neela Gokhale. The lyrics are by Ravinder Randhawa and music is by Arijit Datta.

     

    Kakkar said he based the film at the Bhatinda-Rajasthan border which is very close to Pakistan and people often cross the border easily.

     

    The film was shot in just 20 days – 16 days in Bikaner, and two days each in Jaipur and Mumbai.

     

    Interestingly, the film did not face any problems with the Central Board of Film Certification and was granted a ‘U’ certificate.

     

    Asked about the involvement of UTV and Shringaar, he said they came in at the last minute.

     

    He said the cost of marketing a film was often more if not equal to making it, and therefore independent filmmakers had to prove themselves before any distributor put his money into the film. He said what Bollywood needed at this time was high content and catchy stories.

     

    The story is about affable Bollywood buff and wannabe actor Sunny who is kidnapped by an Islamist terrorist group when he is in Rajasthan with an American crew to work on a documentary, where an Islamic terrorist group kidnaps him. The house in which he is confined belongs to a Pakistani whose trade stems from pirated Hindi films. Soon the two realize that they share a human and cultural bond. .

     

    Born in Mumbai, Kakkar made his first short film “Black Freedom” in 2004 which won some awards at various short film festivals. Since then he has been working on some television projects. This is his first feature, but he said he had three scripts ready and would get down to making them as soon as this film is released. 

  • PVR Pictures acquires ‘Fox Catcher’

    PVR Pictures acquires ‘Fox Catcher’

    NEW DELHI: Acclaimed film Fox Catcher which won the best director award for Bennett Miller has been acquired for India by PVR Pictures, the distribution arm of the largest cinema exhibition company in India, at the Cannes Film Festival this year.

     

    Director Bennett Miller, whose previous film Moneyball starring Brad Pitt was nominated for six Academy Awards, has based Fox Catcher on the real-life murder of Olympic wrestler Dave Schultz.

     

    In addition to the Fox Catcher PVR Pictures acquired Alone in Berlin, Our Kind of Traitor, Equals, Untitled Lance Armstrong Biopic, Legend, Civilian, Inversion, American Express, Hologram for the King, London Fields and Visions among others.

     

    PVR joint managing director Sanjeev Kumar said, “PVR believes in not only providing a world class standard of cinema watching experience to the audiences but it equally emphasises on quality content that is acknowledged globally for its viewers. Indian patrons are opening up to recognise global cinema with quality subject matter. This is a very good time for the industry and the Indian audience has a lot to look forward to in the coming months.”

     

    PVR Pictures had earlier brought films like American Hustle, The Wolf of the Wall Street, 12 years a Slave, Her, Nebraska, Lone Survivor, Dallas Buyers Club to name a few; which were major nominations at the Oscars, being testament to, bringing to the new class of cine goers, content driven films.

     

    PVR has a decade long association with international film festivals like Oscars and now it is becoming a leading exhibitor of French Riviera through Cannes.

  • Vijender Singh gets naughty in ‘Fugly’

    Vijender Singh gets naughty in ‘Fugly’

    MUMBAI: Sports star and big screen newcomer Vijender Singh, who is all set to make his Bollywood debut in Grazing Goat Pictures upcoming film Fugly, will impress his legion of fans by taking on a whole new avatar on the silver screen. To cement his ‘bad boy’ character in Fugly he appears in the risque song video entitled: Good In Bed. The cheeky number sees the delectable Vijender grooving with a bevy of scantily-clad girls.

     

    The lively video sees Vijender dressed in a traditional Greek Toga, however, he soon loses his inhibitions and his clothes, as he begins to strip layer by layer, until he is left wearing nothing but a pair of stars and stripes underpants and a t-shirt.

     

    Vijender, who plays a Harayanvi Jat in the film, is joined in the video by his co-stars Mohit Marwah, Kiara Advani and Arfi Lamba.

     

    ‘Good In Bed’ is the fifth track to be taken from the popular Fugly soundtrack. Previous hits include: ‘Yeh Fugly Fugly Kya Hai’, ‘Dhup Chik’, ‘Banjarey’ and ‘G Pe Danda’.

     

    ‘Fugly’, directed by Kabir Sadanand, is shot extensively in Delhi and Leh. The movie is also the launch pad for Mohit Marwah, Olympic medalist Boxer Vijender Singh, Kiara Advani and Arfi Lamba, the freshest faces to join the film fraternity. They will be making their debut in style along with the supremely talented Jimmy Sheirgill, who will be seen in one of his most powerful performances ever.

     

    ‘Fugly’ is set to release on 13 June 2014.

  • Angie-ficent!

    Angie-ficent!

    MUMBAI: “Let us tell an old story anew,” Janet McTeer’s voice echoes as a revision to the old fable opens. Given the rather stodgy characters in the 1959 Walt Disney classic Sleeping Beauty, the character of Maleficent is by far, the most interesting; which makes her perfect fodder for a revisit.

     

    The concept of retelling the classic Sleeping Beauty from the antagonist’s point of view is intriguing but the film itself is a visual feast.

     

    All’s well for the young and beautiful fairy Maleficent till a boy Stefan stumbles into the forest where she lives and wins her heart. However, ambition takes its toll and Stefan leaves Maleficent only to return for worse – cutting off her wings. Having lost her wings and her faith in love, a shattered Maleficent resolves to seek revenge at any cost and destroy Stefan and his newly minted empire.

     

    Comparisons with Disney’s 1959 film are inevitable, especially in the first half which includes scenes reminiscent of the old film, making the storyline and development of Maleficent’s character rather anomalous. However, as malevolence tries to redeem itself through maternity, right from the expose of Aurora to the curiosity of first love to Maleficent exposing her most vulnerable side in the final climactic event, Linda Woolverton’s screenplay shines through in the second half.

     

    Academy Award winner Angelina Jolie (Girl, Interrupted) is mesmerising as Maleficent; malevolent but motherly when required. Elle Fanning brings her own vivacity to Aurora while Sharlto Copley as Stefan makes the Queen of Evil look sunnier in comparison. After reprising a Dolores Umbridge whom fans love to hate in the Harry Potter franchise, Imelda Stanton’s turn as pixie is the surprise package.

     

    After winning many a golden statuette for production design, Academy Award winner Robert Stromberg makes a stellar directorial debut with Maleficent, coupled with a gripping score by Emmy Award winner James Newton Howard.

     

    It’s possible you’ll continue to hum Lana Del Rey’s rendition of Once upon a Dream long after leaving the movie theatre!

  • ‘Citylights’ …Dark and drab…

    ‘Citylights’ …Dark and drab…

    MUMBAI: Citylights is a pretentious film which attempts to depict the plight of a migrant family in a metropolis like Mumbai! The film is actually a crime story but is touted as a poor migrant’s travails in a major city.

    Rajkumar Rao is an ex-army man turned sari trader in Rajsthan’s Pali district. He fails to pay his liabilities and is thrown out of his shop by his creditors. After some deliberation, he decides to migrate to Mumbai with one contact number of a relative. He decides to do this with his wife and daughter, a move that you don’t see a sensible person make.

    In Mumbai, where a newcomer ceases to be so within minutes as the city takes him into its embrace, Rao’s start is not good. His contact is not traceable on the number he has, and with just a name and no address to go on, Rao doesn’t make much progress. Next, someone offers him a one-bedroom home against Rs 10,000 deposit and rent to be paid later. The house is actually in the hands of painters who are giving it a fresh coat of paint. Rao has been duped of his money. Finally he finds shelter in an under construction building for Rs 100 a night.

    From then on starts his struggle to find a job, which he lands eventually as a driver for a security company’s armoured car. These cars deliver sealed boxes to various clients and contain cash or stuff worth crores of rupees. Out of a horde of applicants, Manav Kaul, the supervisor, chooses Rao with a design in mind. Rao’s wife, Patralekha, meanwhile, finds a job with a dance bar.

    Producer: Mukesh Bhatt.

    Director: Hansal Mehta.

    Cast: Rajkumar Rao, Patralekha, Manav Kaul.

    Kaul gradually cultivates Rao and plots to involve him in an earlier foiled robbery. Kaul had managed to save the box from that robbery and now he needs Rao’s help to get the key lying in the security company’s locker room. The boxes can’t be forced open as doing that can detonate a bomb inside killing the one who attempts. Kaul shifts Rao to the house where he has hidden the box before telling him about his plan. Rao is livid but Kaul has trapped him from all sides. While on one assignment, the robbers catch up with Kaul and kill him. Rao is suspended for not saving him. He is now jobless and broke. Patralekha has kicked her job too. Exasperated, Rao decides to make a sacrifice for his family. He decides to execute the plan Kaul had made.

    The direction is fair. Music has no place yet is forced in. The original simple script has been complicated here. Performances by Rao and Patralekha are very good. Kaul makes an impact.

    A black film with no relief, Citylights is hard to take; all it can hope for is an award or two.

    ‘Kuku Mathur Ki Jhand Ho Gayi’…Same to you…

    This is one more film with Delhi flavour and locales. It is about a middle class locality of Delhi where two friends have grown up together. They are inseparable and the most clandestine thing they do is to indulge in fruit beer once in a while. And, lest the audience not believe it is truly a Delhi story, the inevitable statue of Bajrangbali of Jhandewalan/Karol Bagh does not fail to make its appearance like in all Delhi centric films! And, of course, the title, Kuku Mathur Ki Jhand Ho Gayi, is a local colloquial having little to do with rest of the country.

    Producers: Shobha Kapoor, Ekta Kapoor, Bejoy Nambiar.

    Director: Aman Sachdeva.

    Cast: Sidharth Gupta, Ashish Juneja, Simran Kaur Mundi.

    Siddharth Gupta (Kuku) is an average student who fails to get admission to a college after high school. He, like all boys of such age, has agendas they dare not open up about. Siddharth attends the English tuition class only because the girl living in the house opposite the class, Simran Kaur Mundi, has caught his fancy. He is motherless, responsible for looking after and cooking for his younger sister and father, a government servant. But cooking is something he relishes doing. His dream is to own a restaurant some day while his father wants him to become a NASA scientist.

    Kuku’s best friend, Ashish Juneja, is a little better off, hailing from a trading family. His family runs a sari shop and decides to set up a matching centre for him next to the sari shop so those who buy saris may go next door to his shop to buy matching falls and blouse pieces. While Ashish gets busy selling matching blouse pieces, Siddharth manages a job as a spot boy with a Haryanvi film unit. Here, at the shooting, just about everybody humiliates Siddharth. He snaps when his best friend too insults him.

    Siddharth is seething with anger when his cousin from Kanpur enters the scene. The cousin is as foxy as they come and, as a way of taking revenge on Ashish, suggests to Siddharth that they burn down the Sari godown owned by Ashish’s family after stealing all the goods which could be sold to another trader to finance Siddharth’s dream of starting a restaurant.

    Siddharth is now a successful eatery owner. Things change, he now has a car and, finally, also starts dating Simran who never noticed him in the seven years that he pined for her. But, the Kanpur cousin proves destructor for the family; his father gives up on his job while his sister is talked into leaking exam papers, both on the cousin’s advice.

    Siddharth’s conscience begins to bite him for his crime. He decides to meet Ashish and own up to his crime. Eventually, crime does not pay but friendship does.

    It is tough to understand the title of Kuku Mathur Ki Jhand Ho Gayi to care enough to watch it. It was explained to me by the director as the generally used term ‘Vaat lag gayi’ in Mumbai. That is the most likely fate of this film at the box office.

  • PVR Director’s Rare to release Sri Lankan film, ‘With You, Without You’ in India

    PVR Director’s Rare to release Sri Lankan film, ‘With You, Without You’ in India

    MUMBAI: Renowned Sri Lankan director Prasanna Vithanage’s Oba Nathuwa Oba Ekka (With You, Without You) is all set to see a limited release in India with PVR Director’s Rare. Adapted from Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s novella, ‘The Meek One,’ the film casts National Film Award winning Indian actress Anjali Patil and Sri Lankan actor Shyam Fernando in the lead. Originally a Sinhala and Tamil-language film, With You, Without You will release with English subtitles in Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai, Pune and Hyderabad on 13 June.

     

    Set in post war Sri Lanka, With You, Without You is the story of two people who collide accidentally. Through these characters, the film expresses a deep and seemingly unbridgeable chasm that conflict almost always creates. The two ends of the 30 year-old bloody civil war in Sri Lanka, 45 year-old Sri Lankan man Sarathsiri (Shyam Fernando) and 24 year-old Tamil girl Selvi (Anjali Patil) fall in love only to discover that the colour of love is blue, and life, shades of grey.

     

    Talking about the film, director Prasanna Vithanage said, “When I decided to adapt ‘The Meek One’ into a film, I based it upon the biggest issue of Sri Lanka which is the ethnic conflict. We live in a society which still has unhealed wounds from a war that lasted over thirty years and this confrontation of a Sinhalese man and a Tamil minority woman became the dramatic premise of my script. Their struggle with their own past for me was a metaphor for the struggles of the nation as a whole.”

     

    Added PVR JMD Sanjeev Kumar Bijli, “We are extremely pleased to announce the release of Sri Lankan film, With You, Without You in India. The film highlights a sensitive issue in the most touching way and we are sure that the audience will associate with the film, taking away the message that the director, Prasanna Vithanage has tried to convey. We look forward to continuing our association with the international film industries and bring quality films to our patrons in India.”

     

    With You, Without You has been screened and applauded at several Film Festivals like Chicago International Film Festival, Montreal World Film Festival, International film festival of India, Kerala International Film Festival and Hong Kong International Film Festival to name a few. The film bagged the Russian Critic’s Prize at Sakhalin International Film Festival, SIGNIS Award at Milano African Asian Film Festival, Best Actress – Anjali Patil at 43rd International Film Festival of India etc.

     

    Click here to watch the trailer of the movie:

  • LPU student honoured at Dadasaheb Phalke Film Festival

    LPU student honoured at Dadasaheb Phalke Film Festival

    NEW DELHI: Lovely Professional University (LPU) student Ahsif Khan from Bangladesh has been honoured with the ‘Dada Saheb Phalke 2014 Award’ for his ‘brilliantly executed’ short piece of the year ‘The Poster’.

     

    The award was given on the conclusion of the Dadasaheb Phalke Film Festival in Delhi, aimed at recognising the enlightening, entertaining and progressive new age cinema of youth and experienced filmmakers every year.

     

    The 15-minutes low-budget film ‘The Poster’ won “Special Festival Mention Award” in short film category for students. Ahsif received ‘Certificate of Excellence’ from national award winning producer Savita Raj Hirmath.

     

    Ahsif’s production has been adjudged excellent over other entries from all across India and 45 other countries. The LPU forwarded itself as title sponsor of the film. 

    ‘The Poster’ is a moving depiction of everyday anguish of common man, his endangered dreams, frustration over work and family, and the final march toward social reform. ‘The Poster’ is based on the story of Zahir Raihan-a legendary and revolutionary figure in the annals of Bangladesh, and is directed and produced by Ahsif khan.

     

    The film is in Bengali language with sub-titles in English and has earned success under various shows.

     

    LPU identified Ahsif’s creative power when he was motivated for a documentary, ‘Song of Padma’ in 2013, and it bagged the title of “Best Documentary” at the LPU Film Festival (India).

     

    The documentary was further appreciated at the 6th International Film Festival in Dhaka (Bangladesh). He has also won the first prize at Youth Vibe 2013 (India) for ad making and architectural photography.

     

    LPU chancellor Ashok Mittal said, “We are happy that our talented student put up his passion in a well-knit manner, and got such a prestigious award. We always inspire the students who reveal their zeal to do something innovative, creative and research oriented. We further make such students to reach to global heights for the ultimate benefit of the society. We wish all the best to the creative student to enable himself to get nominated for prestigious Oscar award!”

     

    Ahsif said, “I got admission at LPU on scholarship basis. My financial condition was not good and on getting help from LPU, I came thousands of miles away from my country to join LPU. Here I got the best opportunity to get wings to my passion. In spite of my being a student of medical field, my LPU teachers motivated me to carry on my film-making creation. LPU sponsored my project and result is before all. I have no words to thank my teachers and LPU top administration which has raised my status from a simple without any resource-student to an acclaimed director, writer, and even as an actor.” 

     

    The central character of the film, ordinary middle class man Amzad, believes that the government is doing everything for its people until the day he falls in a trap. He learns about the drawback of capitalism as he loses his job. A salaried government employee, Amzad lives his life with resigned acceptance. He is a critic of the likes of Afzal – a firm believer in the revolutionary zeal of the youth. However, it sketches Amzad’s final disillusionment as he is fired for no reason from his job.

     

    The festival celebrates the cinema and work of aspiring, young, independent and professional filmmakers. The festival attracts filmmakers from across India and 45 nations across the world. The festival has sections for feature films, short films, documentaries, animations, music videos and ad films. The festival awards the filmmakers in production, creative and performance categories. 

  • Sony Music collaborates with A.R Rahman’s K M Conservatory to create tracks from ‘XSCAPE’

    Sony Music collaborates with A.R Rahman’s K M Conservatory to create tracks from ‘XSCAPE’

    MUMBAI: Music industry giant Sony Music has collaborated with musician A. R. Rahman’s K M Conservatory music school to create cover versions of two songs from the King of Pop, Michael Jackson’s new music from the album ‘XSCAPE’. It is for the first time in India that official versions of Michael Jackson’s songs will be released giving his music an India feel.  

     

    Two official song versions of the single Love Never Felt So Good and Slave to the Rhythm will be available for download and streaming by the third week of June. The project within a week of its release is number one on iTunes India and across all other major streaming platforms.

     

    Commenting on the association, KM executive director Fathima Rafiq said, “It is a wonderful opportunity for KM to be creating Indian-influenced covers of these tracks from such a legendary musician. We hope to capture the spirit and essence of Michael Jackson’s music and infuse them with elements from different Indian traditions to make new musical masterpieces showing homage to his legacy.”

     

    KM academic coordinator Adam Greig added, ‘Although KM primarily teaches western and Indian classical music, working on MJ’s music demonstrates how connected popular music is with its classical past tradition. The students are relishing the chance to prove their mastery of these skills in re-working these tracks. I find it amazing how easily and naturally the Indian elements blend into the mix.”

  • Johnny Depp to soon take on the role of famed illusionist Harry Houdini

    Johnny Depp to soon take on the role of famed illusionist Harry Houdini

    MUMBAI: Johnny Depp, the actor famously known for taking on different roles like Captain Jack Sparrow in the Pirates of the Carribean franchise and the Mad Hatter in the Alice in Wonderland franchise is in negotiations to star as famed magician Harry Houdini in Lionsgate/Summit’s The Secret Life of Houdini: The Making of America’s First Superhero based on the bestselling book by William Kalush and Larry Sloman, reports The Hollywood Reporter (THR).

     

    Since his death eighty years ago, Harry Houdini’s life has been chronicled in books, in film, and on television. Now, in this groundbreaking biography, renowned magic expert William Kalush and best-selling writer Larry Sloman team up to find the man behind the myth. Drawing from millions of pages of research, they describe in vivid detail the passions that drove Houdini to perform ever-more-dangerous feats, his secret life as a spy, and a pernicious plot to subvert his legacy. After years of struggling on the dime museum circuit, Harry Houdini got a break that put him on the front page of a Chicago newspaper. He never looked back. Soon Houdini was performing for royalty, commanding vast sums, and exploring the new power of Hollywood to expand on his legend.

     

    At a time when spy agencies frequently co-opted amateurs, Houdini went to London and developed a relationship with a man who would run MI-5. For the next several years, the world’s most famous magician travelled to Germany and Russia and routinely reported his findings.

     

    After World War I was successfully concluded, Houdini embarked on a battle of his own. He created a group of disguised field operatives to infiltrate the seamy world of fake spirit mediums. In doing so, Houdini triggered the wrath of fanatical spiritualists, led by the esteemed British author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Death threats became an everyday occurrence, but the group would pose an even greater danger to Houdini’s legacy.

     

    Rigorously researched, and as exciting as a good thriller, The Secret Life of Houdini traces the arc of the master magician’s life from desperate poverty to worldwide legend, initiating the reader along the way into the arcane world of professional magic. In this remarkable book, Kalush and Sloman decode a life based on deception, providing an intimate and riveting portrayal of Houdini, the man and the legend.

     

    Depp is also set to revisit two of the earlier mentioned blockbuster franchisees in the coming year with Pirates of the Caribbean 5 and a sequel to Alice in Wonderland, Through the Looking Glass.

     

    History Channel announced late last year that they have given the greenlight to their four-hour Houdini miniseries. Academy Award winner Adrien Brody (The Pianist) will play Houdini with Kristen Connolly (House of Cards).