Category: Movies

  • First Indian animation film made in 3D is on Mumbai terror attack

    NEW DELHI: The animation film ‘Crackers,’ based on the 26/11 Mumbai Terror attack, is now being re-released as a 3D film, making it the first animation film to be made in 3D with indigenous technology.


    Director Anil Goyal said he had made the film as an animation film since people had accepted his earlier animation film ‘Icy-N-Spicy’. He claimed that 3D animation films so far have been made outside India or with foreign technology.


    The film will be released by the end of the year. The songs in the film have been sung by veteran singers Hariharan, Shaan and Shreya Ghoshal. Dilip Sen has composed the music of the film.


    The film contains special effects that are used in Hollywood movies. The lead actress of the film has been created keeping in mind the image of Katrina Kaif. Goyal justifies this saying “Katrina Kaif is equally popular among kids and adults and this is why we have tried to give Katrina’s look to the lead actress”.

  • Moser Baer to launch Bollywood movies on pen drives

    NEW DELHI: In its quest to increase its market share, Moser Baer India has launched pre-loaded Bollywood movies on pen drives.


    Said Moser Baer India senior vice president, domestic sales and marketing Deepak Shetty, “We plan to launch around one lakh units per month of this USB (univeral serial bus) drive which will enable us to capture an additional 4-5 per cent of the market share in the solid state media.”


    Says G Dhanajayan Moser Baer Entertainment Ltd Chief Executive, ” This exercise is nothing but a value-addition to the existing hardware. If the consumer likes this concept, we can look at increasing the manufacture of such pen drives.


    As an introductory offer, the company has priced a 4 GB drive stick at Rs 850. It will be followed by more new exciting offerings in higher end 8 GB and 16 GB drives shortly.


    Said a source in the company, “The pre-loaded content can be erased by customers as and when required and the device can be used as a normal USB drive.”


    In January this year, the company had launched content- loaded Micro-SD cards for mobile handsets, containing movies and songs.

  • UK’s Swipe Films to distribute Anurag Kashyap’s movie

    MUMBAI: UK-based Swipe Films has bagged the worldwide distribution rights of Anurag Kashyap‘s That Girl in Yellow Boots.


    Written by Kalki Koechlin and Kashyap, the film stars Kalki Koechlin as Ruth along with Naseeruddin Shah, Prashant Prakash, Gulshan Devaiya, Shivkumar Subramaniam, Divya Jagdale, Kumud Mishra and Kartik Krishnan.


    The film is a thriller tracing Ruth‘s search for her father, a man she hardly knew but cannot forget. Desperation drives her to work without a permit at a massage parlour in Mumbai. Torn between several schisms, the city becomes an alien but yet strangely turns out to be a familiar backdrop for Ruth‘s quest. 


    The film had its world premiere in ‘Out of Competition‘ at the Venice Film Festival on 9 September and will be screened at the Toronto International Film Fest next week.
    NFDC has also joined hands with Kashyap by pulling out the project of post production limbo and completing it.


    Swipe Films, a production, sales and distribution company, has produced films like Grand Theft Parsons and Osama, the winner of a Golden Globe for Best Foreign Film.

  • French director Chabrol no more

    MUMBAI: French director Claude Chabrol, one of the founders of the New Wave movement, expired on Sunday. He was 80.


    During his more than half-century-long career, Chabrol made more than 70 films and TV productions. His first movie, 1958‘s Le Beau Serge‘ won him considerable critical acclaim and was widely considered a sort of manifesto for the New Wave, that reinvented the codes of filmmaking and revolutionised cinema starting in the late 1950s.


    Chabrol‘s films focused on the French bourgeoisie, lifting the facade of respectability to reveal the hypocrisy, violence and loathing simmering just below the surface. Often suspenseful, his work drew comparisons with that of Alfred Hitchcock.


    Calling him a great producer, director and screenwriter, French Prime Minister Francois Fillon said in a statement, ” ‘With the death of Claude Chabrol, French cinema has lost one of its maestros.‘‘


    Chabrol worked at a fast clip, churning out about a film every year. He wrote some original scripts, but also adapted classics of French literature, including Madame Bovary‘ (1991) and stories of Guy de Maupassant for cinema as well as for television.
     

  • Avatar sequel to be shot 10,972 meters under water

    MUMBAI: For the sequel of his much-acclaimed Avatar, James Cameron has decided to set the follow-up to his hit blockbuster beneath the waves and he has commissioned engineers to build a special vessel to travel 10,972 meters to the bottom of the Mariana Trench in the western Pacific.


    The two-seater submersible will be fitted with a heating system and 3D cameras to capture pictures of the depths for the film expected to release in 2014. Cameron, who has long had a passion for diving, is hoping to begin preparing for his mission later this year.


    If he is successful, Cameron‘s team will be only the second to ever visit the Mariana Trench. In 1960, it took a scientist and a navy lieutenant five hours to descend to the floor, where they spent just 20 minutes before coming out of the ocean.

  • Dabangg sets new weekend opening records

    MUMBAI: Dabangg has set all time new weekend opening records registering the biggest opening response in this decade. The opening weekend ended at approximately Rs 470 million from around 2000 screens with Friday accounting for Rs 146 million and Saturday raking in Rs 158 million.


    While the film is a personal triumph for the Khan Brothers on professional front, it is also a financial windfall for them as four circuits- Delhi-UP, Punjab, CI and Rajasthan have been released by the family.


    The distributors of all small and medium circuits have sailed safe in the very first weekend, recovering all or almost all their investment.


    The film is holding strong even today (Monday) and with an unopposed run of a fortnight in the offing, should carry on conquering the box office.


    “Very strong even today”, says Delhi distributor and cinema chain holder Brajesh Tandon. For Jharkhand distributor Sunil Boobna, this was a gamble. He had paid Rs 60 lakh to acquire the rights of Dabangg for Jharkhand. Considering the highest business done in the region by the hits is- Rajneeti Rs 500 million and Wanted Rs 540 million, the basic price of 60 itself exceeded all benchmarks and expectations. Sunil is a happy man today as he says, “ My three day collections are Rs 410 million and the way the film is doing, it would be safe to expect another 30 in next four days, if not more.”



    We Are Family finds no takers, not even the ladies audience it was aimed at and goes on to complete its first week run with a meagre Rs 186 million from over 800 screens. Besides resources, it also wastes Kajol’s talents on a mundane story routinely executed. The trade, which wrote off the film on day one, had nothing to say about it.
     

  • US rights of The Tree of Life lands on Fox Searchlight lap

    MUMBAI: Fox Searchlight Pictures has acquired the US theatrical rights of Terrence Malick‘s The Tree of Life from River Road Entertainment.


    The film, which tells the story of a Midwestern family in the 1950s chronicling the journey of the eldest son, Jack (played as an adult by Sean Penn) from childhood to his disillusioned adult years as he tries to reconcile his complicated relationship with his father, played by Pitt. 


    The outcome of Life starring Brad Pitt, Sean Penn and Jessica Chastain had been hanging for quite some time when River Road head Bill Pohlad had closed the distributorship issue in the wake of Bob Berney‘s resignation in May. The film is produced by Pohlad, Sarah Green, Pitt, Dede Gardner and Grant Hill.


    At one time, the film had been rumored as a possible Cannes debutant but it wasn‘t completed in time for that festival.


    Searchlight will now release the film in 2011.

  • Ice hockey movie opens Toronto fest

    MUMBAI: Score: A Hockey Musical, opened the Toronto Film Festival on Thursday.


    The festival, seen as a starting point in the race for the Oscars, raised the ire of the local arts community last year when it ditched its tradition of showcasing a Canadian film on opening night and chose British evolutionist drama Creation.


    This year the pendulum has swung back with equal force with a hokey musical about Canada‘s favourite sport Hockey on skates as the festival‘s gala opening show. The inclusion of Score has also sparked a debate over giving low-brow subject matter such plum placement.


    The audience, some wearing hockey jerseys, clearly enjoyed the campy film as they hooted and hollered through key scenes.


    Directed by Toronto-born filmmaker Michael McGowan, Score stars Olivia Newton-John. Walter Gretzky, father of hockey‘s Great One, Wayne Gretzky and former hockey player Theo Fleury make interesting cameos.


    McGowan previously screened two other critically acclaimed films at the Toronto fest, Saint Ralph and One Week.
     

  • Narahari Rao is Federation of Film Societies of India prez

    NEW DELHI: Well-known film society enthusiast H N Narahari Rao has been elected President of the Federation of Film Societies of India while R Mani is the General Secretary and Siddharth Pillai is the Treasurer in the Central Office.


    The election was held recently for the years 2010-12 and the Central Office has shifted to Bangalore.


    Renowned award-winning author Gautam Kaul, and film society activists Dilip Bapat, Premendra Mazumdar and V T Subramanian are the Vice-Presidents for the Northern, Western and Southern regions. The Kerala Sub-Region has V K Joseph as the Vice-President.


    The Regional Secretaries are Northern Region – Ashok Chakraborty; Western Region – Subhash Desai; Eastern Region – Sankar Pal; and Southern Region – Bh. S S Prakash Reddy.


    The Secretaries are Northern Region – Anil Jain; Western Region – Viren Chitrev; Eastern Region – Bijan Sen Sarma; and Southern Region – Varala Anand.
     

  • Dabangg : A one man show







    Producers: Arbaaz Khan, Malaika Arora Khan
    , Dhilin Mehta
    Director:
    Abhinav Singh Kashyap
    Cast: Salman Khan, Sonakshi Sinha, Arbaaz Khan, Sonu Sood, Vinod Khanna, Dimple Kapadia


    MUMBAI: Dabangg lives every common man’s fantasy; an invincible hunk, police man, Chulbul Pandey, who can fell any evildoer. What is more, unlike the 70s’ angry young man with sullen expressions, Chulbul loves to enjoy and have fun out of his acts of cleansing the society, which adds entertainment and humour to this, otherwise mindless, action movie.


    In a typical UP semi urban scenario, Chulbul grows up to be a sour man who becomes fearless and a defiant policeman. Bearing total disregard for his step father, Vinod Khanna, and disdain for his step brother, Arbaaz Khan, he sticks around with them because of his mother, Dimple Kapadia. These surroundings, he has not learnt to respect much. So he is just the hero to be pitted against politicians, bad ones on one side and less bad on the other. Chulbul is a corrupt policeman for no apparent reason, or maybe to make him more identifiable with a UP cop or for that matter any cop!


    Dabangg is a Salman Khan vehicle all the way, a one man entertainment show. Almost all action, comedy, dance and music and some namesake emotions are designed around him in this film, which has no solid story or cause for the hero’s crusade and to his credit, Salman Khan carries the film through with flying colours. There have been post-Wanted expectations, which the film’s content does not live up to, but Salman Khan more than lives up to it and hence the film’s collections will also excel. 


    The film introduces Sonakshi Sinha in a role she can’t be rejected for even if it does not propel her to the stardom overnight. She is presented as a simple village potter’s daughter; no glamour, no exposure nor great demands to display histrionics. Arbaaz Khan is okay. Sonu Sood, judged individually, does well for himself. However, Salman Khan’s character has been built so larger than life, his is not the villain equipped to take him on. Vinod Khanna, Dimple Kapadia, Anupam Kher, Om Puri, Vishwajeet Pradhan and Tinnu Anand fit the bill.


    The major asset that boosts the prospects for Dabangg is its music. While the item number, Munni Badnam hui….. is already a rage, other numbers are also good and choreographed to entertain. While the credit should go to the writers for making Dabangg a good watch despite lack of a coherent story, director Abhinav Singh Kashyap needs to be praised for being part of the writer duo and then adding to the entertainment quotient with his execution. Dialogue is funny.


    Dabangg built huge expectations before its release, a rare occurrence in recent times, and has gone on to live up to it by drawing full houses all over, at single screens and multiplexes alike. It is all set to create new opening day as well as opening weekend box office records.