Tag: Aradhana

  • Sony Max2 initiates Double Trouble film festival

    Sony Max2 initiates Double Trouble film festival

    MUMBAI: The Double role formula has wooed the Indian audience ever since and has been a major success in Bollywood. This September Sony Max2 attempts to ride high on this formula by doubling up the entertainment quotient for its viewers with Double Trouble film festival starting from 19 September until 23 at 8 pm.

    Max 2’s film festival, will bring some of the most iconic movies of the yesteryears that guarantee to offer double the action, comedy and drama. The movie festival will be showcasing films of some of Bollywood’s favorite superstars like Amitabh Bachchan, Rajesh Khanna, Dilip Kumar, etc.

    http://www.indiantelevision.com/sites/drupal7.indiantelevision.co.in/files/styles/large/public/im_0.jpg?itok=aaRXHp6D

  • Sony Max2 initiates Double Trouble film festival

    Sony Max2 initiates Double Trouble film festival

    MUMBAI: The Double role formula has wooed the Indian audience ever since and has been a major success in Bollywood. This September Sony Max2 attempts to ride high on this formula by doubling up the entertainment quotient for its viewers with Double Trouble film festival starting from 19 September until 23 at 8 pm.

    Max 2’s film festival, will bring some of the most iconic movies of the yesteryears that guarantee to offer double the action, comedy and drama. The movie festival will be showcasing films of some of Bollywood’s favorite superstars like Amitabh Bachchan, Rajesh Khanna, Dilip Kumar, etc.

    http://www.indiantelevision.com/sites/drupal7.indiantelevision.co.in/files/styles/large/public/im_0.jpg?itok=aaRXHp6D

  • 9X Jalwa presents Fatafat Films

    9X Jalwa presents Fatafat Films

    MUMBAI: 9X Jalwa, the all time hit Bollywood music channel from 9X Media Pvt. Ltd, is launching a unique show called Fatafat Films, starting 8th March 2014 at 8 pm. Fatafat Films will showcase the all time Bollywood hit films in 6-7 mins capturing all the high points of the movie along with some of its popular songs.

    Each episode of the short format based show Fatafat Films will comprise of three Bollywood blockbusters rolled into a single well packaged episode. The films showcased on the show will be clubbed together based on the year of their release. The first few episodes of Fatafat Films will showcase the all time Bollywood hits such as Aradhana, Abhimaan, Guide, Yaadon Ki Baaraat, Saajan and Hare Rama Hare Krishna amongst others.  

    Speaking of Fatafat Films, Mr. Imtiaz Baghdadi, Programming Head – 9X Jalwa said “Today everything around us is going on a super fast track and even the audiences want something that they can enjoy but without spending too much time. Fatafat films- Bada Filmi  Dhamaka ab Chote Size Mein is yet another innovation in the music space from 9X Jalwa. The movies featured on this show have the best music of the era. With Fatafat Films we ensure that the Bollywood movie buffs not only enjoy three blockbuster movies in one episode but also make sure that they will relish the all time hit music too.”

    Fatafat films will be promoted across social media and digital platforms.

    Watch out for Fatafat Films only on 9X Jalwa every Saturday at 8pm and repeat telecast on Sunday 8pm.

     

  • ‘Gandi baat’, badly told

    ‘Gandi baat’, badly told

    MUMBAI: Can one say, ‘A love story is a love story’? One cannot; how the story is told makes all the difference. Mughal E Azam, Barsaat, Aradhana, Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge, Kabhie Kabhie and Hum Aapke Hain Koun..!, among others, were all love stories but each was memorable for its own reasons.

     

    At the opposite end of the spectrum is the recent crop of South Indian-style formula love stories that have been raiding the box office of late. R… Rajkumar is one of them. It is a mindless action film in the guise of a love story, and not a very good action film at that. The villain loses his credibility too many times in a period of two hours 26 minutes to be of any interest by the time the climax comes about. The villain’s superiority, ego and power are all finished long before the final fight; all that remains is finishing him physically. And the film, already bankrupt of ideas, devotes 20-25 minutes just to that. It seems never-ending.

     

     

    Producer: Sunil Lulla, Viki Rajani.
    Director: Prabhu Dheva.
    Cast: : Shahid Kapoor, Sonakshi Sinha, Sonu Sood, Ashish Vidyarthi, Mukul Dev, Asrani, Srihari, Poonam Jhawer; Charrmy Kaur and Ragini Dwivedi (both in special appearance in songs).

    Earlier named Rambo Rajkumar and later forced to withdraw Rambo from its title, it settled for a suggestive R….. Rajkumar which is explained in the film as Romeo Rajkumar; after all, the Romeo, Shahid Kapoor, falls for Sonakshi Sinha at first sight. He has dropped in to an unfamiliar town in midst of two warring groups exchanging bullets. Sonakshi is caught in this crossfire and he stretches his arm to ward off bullets aimed at her, in the process showing off his tattoo to her. (No, the tattoo does not materialise into any Manmohan Desai kind lost and found story.)

     

    Shahid loves to poke his nose into others’ business. Ashish Vidyarthi’s goons plan to kidnap truck carrying opium belonging to Sonu Sood. Shahid saves it and earns an entry into Sood’s gang. Shahid can tackle 100 goons singlehandedly, the goons being very sporting as they tend to be in all South Indian action choreography. They always attack one after the other, each waiting his turn. Sood is thoroughly impressed and Shahid is promoted to his right hand man, displacing Mukul Dev who is also a sport and, instead of hating Shahid, makes him his best friend. Shahid’s reason for staying around in the town is probably Sonakshi as he has fallen head over heels for her.

     

    Soon, Shahid has a competitor. Sood sees Sonakshi and is besotted by her. She turns out to be the orphan niece of Sonu’s enemy, Vidyarthi, but so what? They decide to bury the hatchet and become rishtedaars. Challenges are thrown and a fight sequence is in place when Shahid leaves the scene. He could have taken Sonakshi along at that very moment but he avoided doing that for the sake of taking the film into the second half and eventually to its never-ending climax. No sense ending a film at interval stage.

     

    In the absence of anything worthwhile, the second half is whiled away with songs, some action and some cell phone romance besides unsuccessfully attempting some Himmatwala, Mawali kind of funny sequences with Asrani, Poonam Jhawar, Vidyarthi etc.

     

    Prabhu Dheva is handicapped as this time he is directing an original and not a remake; he is totally at sea! The film has one item number which is popular with masses in Gandi baat… The background score is eardrum shattering cacophony. The editing department seems to have been passed over. Action is routine South brand where the hero is superhuman. Besides, every action sequence has been stretched as if to make up for the lack of content. Shahid does a tapori role he is not cut out for. Just growing stubble does not make one a tapori. Sonakshi is too large for the frame. She is unimpressive in all that is expected of her. Sood is routine while Vidyarthi, Srihari, Asrani and Poonam Jhawer pass muster. Mukul Dev makes his presence felt.

     

    R…. Rajkumar has nothing to offer to multiplex audience and, may be, three days’ worth to single screens before it ends its reign.

     

    Sweet 60

    Producer: Kavee Kumar.
    Director: Sanjay Tripathy.
    Cast: : Farooq Sheikh, Sarika, Raghubir Yadav, Satish Shah,Sharat Saxena, Tinnu Anand, Vineet Kumar, Suhasini Mulay, Zareena Wahab, Himani Shivpuri, Viju Khote, Harsh Chhaya, Mona Wasu.

    When a personal tragedy is juxtaposed with comedy, when underlying emotion in every person’s life is camouflaged with vibrant humour and still a maker comes out with an entertainer, the concept is the hero. Such is the confidence in the script that the cast is made up of half a dozen veteran 60-plus actors; in fact, casting is the mainstay of the film. Club 60 is one of those films which come as a breeze of fresh air. It joins the category of Vicky Donour, OMG Oh My God, Dirty Picture, Kahaani and Special 26 as a rare gem. In short, it is not just another run-of-the-mill movie.

     

    Farooq Shaikh, a neurosurgeon of repute in Pune and his wife, Sarika, also a doctor, are in depression and mourning having lost their only son in a shootout in a cinema hall in the US where he went to study further. To leave their son’s memories behind, the couple has moved in to the very flat they had bought for their son’s future use in Mumbai after folding up their medical practices in Pune. While Shaikh is totally shattered and even tries to commit suicide once by slashing his wrist, Sarika contains her pain and loss within herself and tries to be a support to Shaikh. While Sarika joins a local hospital to keep her mind from the tragedy, Shaikh refuses to divert his attention and prefers to wallow in his sorrows. Then, a few days into his Mumbai life, there comes in his life a storm called Raghubir Yadav.

     

    Yadav lives in the same building, a floor above Shaikh. He dresses in t-shirts bearing suggestive messages, branded sunglasses, half-cargoes and Nike shoes. He is a gaudy, loudmouthed, overenthusiastic Gujarati who believes in living his life to the fullest but also forcing it on to others. After as short ride in the lift with Yadav, Shaikh has had enough of him. He decides to keep Yadav at arm’s length and also advises Sarika to do the same. But Yadav is not easily contained. He soon invades the Shaikh household, force-lands on breakfast table and invites the couple to join Club 60. While Yadav irritates Shaikh, Sarika finds him quite amusing and does not totally reject him.

     

    Yadav wants Shaikh to come look up the club and with little help from Sarika, he manages to do so. Yadav manages to involve Shaikh in his club along with four other friends, Sharat Saxena, Satish Shah, Tinnu Anand and Vineet Kumar, who are as boisterous as Yadav. At the club, their life revolves around a tennis court where they play little, abuse and fight each other more and finally settle down for their favourite finale, breakfast followed by a fight over who pays! Everything they do is like any group of boys in teens would be doing. Shaikh is a witness to all this camaraderie but aloof.

     

    Within a generally well-thought-out script, there are two scenes, both involving Sarika that stand out for being thought provoking. One is her talk with Shaikh’s psychiatrist, Harsh Chhaya and another with Shaikh, both of which are better seen on screen. The scene with Shaikh changes his attitude, turning him from a loser to a positive man. As Shaikh comes closer to the five people in the 60 plus group, he learns that he was not the only one to have lost someone close to him. All five around him had a sad story to tell which they hid behind their boisterous bravado and loud demeanour. They did not indulge in self pity like Shaikh did.

     

    Sanjay Tripathi has written and directed this film, his debut. He has excelled on both counts. Despite dealing with two shades, tragedy and comedy, the film’s dialogue is effectively relevant. The songs, composed by Pranit Gedham, besides being well penned, take one back to the melodious 80s. Background score is effective. Performance wise, Sarika tops with Shaikh and Yadav (who could have been a little less loud) also do very well. The other four, Saxena, Shah, Anand and Kumar give a natural account of themselves. Suhasini Mulay, Zareena Wahab, Himani Shivpuri, Viju Khote, Harsh Chhaya and Mona Wasu are fair in support.

     

    Club 60 is a small budget film with still smaller budget for promotion. Its hopes rest on word-of-mouth, failing which the business will sadly go to pirated discs because, the film is an entertainer with human story and the word is bound to spread eventually.

  • Gandi baat, badly told

    Gandi baat, badly told

    MUMBAI: Can one say, ‘A love story is a love story’? One cannot; how the story is told makes all the difference. Mughal E Azam, Barsaat, Aradhana, Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jayenge, Kabhie Kabhie and Hum Aapke Hain Koun..!, among others, were all love stories but each was memorable for its own reasons.

    At the opposite end of the spectrum is the recent crop of South Indian-style formula love stories that have been raiding the box office of late. R… Rajkumar is one of them. It is a mindless action film in the guise of a love story, and not a very good action film at that. The villain loses his credibility too many times in a period of two hours 26 minutes to be of any interest by the time the climax comes about. The villain’s superiority, ego and power are all finished long before the final fight; all that remains is finishing him physically. And the film, already bankrupt of ideas, devotes 20-25 minutes just to that. It seems never-ending.

    Earlier named Rambo Rajkumar and later forced to withdraw Rambo from its title, it settled for a suggestive R….. Rajkumar which is explained in the film as Romeo Rajkumar; after all, the Romeo, Shahid Kapoor, falls for Sonakshi Sinha at first sight. He has dropped in to an unfamiliar town in midst of two warring groups exchanging bullets. Sonakshi is caught in this crossfire and he stretches his arm to ward off bullets aimed at her, in the process showing off his tattoo to her. (No, the tattoo does not materialise into any Manmohan Desai kind lost and found story.)

    Shahid loves to poke his nose into others’ business. Ashish Vidyarthi’s goons plan to kidnap truck carrying opium belonging to Sonu Sood. Shahid saves it and earns an entry into Sood’s gang. Shahid can tackle 100 goons singlehandedly, the goons being very sporting as they tend to be in all South Indian action choreography. They always attack one after the other, each waiting his turn. Sood is thoroughly impressed and Shahid is promoted to his right hand man, displacing Mukul Dev who is also a sport and, instead of hating Shahid, makes him his best friend. Shahid’s reason for staying around in the town is probably Sonakshi as he has fallen head over heels for her.

    Producer: Sunil Lulla, Viki Rajani.
    Director: Prabhu Dheva.
    Cast: : Shahid Kapoor, Sonakshi Sinha, Sonu Sood, Ashish Vidyarthi, Mukul Dev, Asrani, Srihari, Poonam Jhawer; Charrmy Kaur and Ragini Dwivedi (both in special appearance in songs).

    Soon, Shahid has a competitor. Sood sees Sonakshi and is besotted by her. She turns out to be the orphan niece of Sonu’s enemy, Vidyarthi, but so what? They decide to bury the hatchet and become rishtedaars. Challenges are thrown and a fight sequence is in place when Shahid leaves the scene. He could have taken Sonakshi along at that very moment but he avoided doing that for the sake of taking the film into the second half and eventually to its never-ending climax. No sense ending a film at interval stage.

    In the absence of anything worthwhile, the second half is whiled away with songs, some action and some cell phone romance besides unsuccessfully attempting some Himmatwala, Mawali kind of funny sequences with Asrani, Poonam Jhawar, Vidyarthi etc.

    Prabhu Dheva is handicapped as this time he is directing an original and not a remake; he is totally at sea! The film has one item number which is popular with masses in Gandi baat… The background score is eardrum shattering cacophony. The editing department seems to have been passed over. Action is routine South brand where the hero is superhuman. Besides, every action sequence has been stretched as if to make up for the lack of content. Shahid does a tapori role he is not cut out for. Just growing stubble does not make one a tapori. Sonakshi is too large for the frame. She is unimpressive in all that is expected of her. Sood is routine while Vidyarthi, Srihari, Asrani and Poonam Jhawer pass muster. Mukul Dev makes his presence felt.

    R…. Rajkumar has nothing to offer to multiplex audience and, may be, three days’ worth to single screens before it ends its reign.

  • Aradhana is Rajesh Khanna’s most watched film online

    Aradhana is Rajesh Khanna’s most watched film online

    MUMBAI: Like it always happens, a celebrity‘s past is dissected after his demise. Soon after his death, web video service iStream.com conducted an analysis of the popularity of Rajesh Khanna‘ films.

    In the analysis, it was found that Aradhana and Haathi Mere Saathi emerged as the most popular films among the online users in the month of July.

    They were followed by his other popular films like Joroo Ka Ghulam, Avishkaar, Namak Haram, Apna Desh , Mere Jeevan Saathi, Sachaa Jhutha, Dil Daulat Duniya and Amar Deep.

    The analysis is based on over 100,000 online views of over 50 Rajesh Khanna movies on the website last month, according to the company‘s statement.

  • Zee 24 Taas to dawn new look from 1 January

    Zee 24 Taas to dawn new look from 1 January

    MUMBAI: Zee 24 Taas, the first 24–hour Marathi news channel, will be dawning a new look from 1 January 2010. With a new logo and positioning – Ek Paul Pudhe (One Step Ahead) – the channel will have a different feel and format.

    The channel claims that the new programming will explore new frontiers in Marathi news genre.

    “Zee 24 Taas also tries to make a statement through its new positioning, which is aligned with the channel’s effort to always be ahead of others when it comes to delivering quality news content to Marathi viewers across Maharashtra,” it said in a statement.

    The change comprises a new logo, new positioning, new channel-id, new graphics (header, ticker) new studio backdrop and new costumes.

    A Zee 24 Taas re-launch film of 60 seconds would be running from 1 January on 24 Taas and on other network channels like Zee Marathi and Zee Talkies. The film depicts the inspirational and aspirational aspect of a common man, which he seeks in idolising great personalities.

    The film’s music has been composed by Taufiq Qureshi, son and disciple of Ustad Allarakha and brother of Ustad Zakir Hussain.

    The new programming on the channel includes bulletins like 24 Taas 24 Batmya (24 hours 24 news), Khabar Udyachi (Tomorrow’s newspaper), Zara Hatke (off beat news), Non-stop news (news without break), Aradhana (religious program) and Around the World.