Tag: Ranveer Singh

  • Ranveer Singh in Magadheera remake

    Ranveer Singh in Magadheera remake

    MUMBAI: After months of keeping the industry in suspense, producers Vikas Bahl and Anurag Kashyap have signed Ranveer Singh to play the lead role in the Hindi remake of the 2009 Telugu hit Magadheera.

    With his signing, Singh has edged out Hrithik Roshan and Ranbir Kapoor, the names of whom that were constantly doing the rounds.

    Confirming the same, Bahl said, “Magadheera is a passion project for us, and we are excited to have the rights to re-create this magical piece of work. Ranveer is the best thing that could have happened to it.
     
    He has all the ingredients to be a passionate lover, a warrior and an entertainer, all at the same time. All the fans of Magadheera are coming together to recreate its magic with the support of Allu Arvind, the producer of the original film.”

    Magadheera is a historic love story. Set against the backdrop of 17th century India, the film is said to have an estimated budget of Rs 50 crore.

    Preparing for the role, Singh will undergo intense physical training. He will also interact with Ram Charan, who played the lead in the original, to get some valueable inputs.

  • Lootera to rub shoulders with Ek Tha Tiger this Eid

    Lootera to rub shoulders with Ek Tha Tiger this Eid

    MUMBAI: Of late there is a craze to release films during Eid-ul-Zuha period as Salman Khan’s Wanted (2009),‘Dabangg (2010) and Bodyguard (2011) managed to cash in on the festival hype and rake in the moolah at the box office.

    Producers Balaji Motion Pictures and Vikramaditya Motwane’s Phantom have decided to release their Ranveer Singh-Sonakshi Sinha-starrer Lootera this Eid along with Yash Raj Film’s Ek Tha Tiger on 26 October.

    Sinha, who made her acting debut opposite Khan in Dabangg, also finds Eid lucky for her. Reportedly, the actress asked the makers of Lootera to release the film on Eid as she considers it an auspicious day.

    Lootera is a classic love story set in the 1950s.

  • Ladies Vs Ricky Bahl nets Rs 165.5 mn at BO

    Ladies Vs Ricky Bahl nets Rs 165.5 mn at BO

    MUMBAI: Ranveer Singh, Anushka Sharma starrer Ladies Vs Ricky Bahl opened slow on Friday but showed improvement in collections over Saturday and Sunday.

    The film‘s net box office collection for the first weekend stood at Rs 165.5 million; however, according to today‘s reports, it is not managing to sustain on the gains, showing a definite slide.

    Box office collections for the second release of the Friday, Lanka, remained very poor.

    Meanwhile, The Dirty Picture, which has been excellent through the first week to collect Rs 525.5 million, maintained steady business even over the second weekend. It collected over Rs 100 million; a rare first week profit project for the distributors.

    Desi Boyz collected Rs 65 million in its second week taking its two week total to Rs 403 million.

    Rockstar collected Rs 9.5 million in its fourth week; the four week total stood at Rs 595.5 million.

  • Ladies vs Ricky Bahl a pretty average fare

    Ladies vs Ricky Bahl a pretty average fare

    MUMBAI: Ladies vs Ricky Bahl is one of those products from Yash Raj Films where the process of limiting the budget starts with the casting itself. The burden of drawing the audience falls on the lead pair, Ranveer Singh and Anushka Sharma, with the other three girls being little known: Dipannita Sharma, Parineeti Chopra and Aditi Sharma. For the main location you have Goa, much exploited in recent films but not so well exploited in this film.

     

    Producer: Aditya Chopra.
    Director: Maneesh Sharma.
    Cast: Ranveer Singh, Anushka Sharma, Dipannita Sharma, Aditi Sharma, Parineeti Chopra.

    Ranveer Singh is a conman who picks only on women, mainly playing with their emotional vulnerability. He gains the confidence of the girl he zeroes in on as well as that of her family; to them he comes across as perfect groom material. He talks the family into some attractive moneymaking proposal only for them to realise that Ranveer Singh had vanished and so had their money. In his list of victims he adds Parineeti Chopra, Aditi Sharma and Dipannita Sharma.

    Parineeti Chopra finds her gym trainer Ranveer Singh very attractive and falls for him in the blink of an eye. The only daughter, she has a moneybags of a father to whom Ranveer Singh sells a bungalow in upmarket Barakhamba Road in New Delhi. While the hero takes the first flight out of Delhi, Mr Moneybags lands in police custody for breaking and entering someone‘s property. The next target is a young widow in Lucknow, Aditi Sharma, cloth merchant. Her family is impressed by the zari work cloth material he shows them. He collects a huge order against a hefty advance before the girl and her family know they have been conned.

    The third victim, Dipannita Sharma, is an ambitious corporate executive busy decorating the company premises. Ranveer Singh sells her a dud MF Hussain painting. When her case is reported on a news channel, the three victims contact each other, eventually forming a brigade to play a counter con and get their monies back from Ranveer. To lure their target, they engage the services of a salesgirl from a mall, Anushka Sharma, who never lets a visitor leave without buying something from the mall.

    The film starts off on a promising note and does manage to hold interest until girls descend in Goa, where Ranveer runs his own small enterprise between conning victims. When the process of Anushka Sharma luring Ranveer into her trap starts the interest starts sagging. The three girls chasing as Anushka Sharma and Ranveer Singh do their thing is like kids‘ spying game! Whatever happens during this process is predictable and lacks twists and turns or exciting moments.

    With a linear script, the narration is sans challenges too; direction being just usual. Music, considering the theme, is a letdown. While there are no sad scenes, there is no trace of humour either and the dialogue is routine.
    Of the performers, Parineeta Chopra scores most points, playing her typical, rich, loud Delhi Punjabi girl; she fits the character to a T Aditi Sharma is mostly underplayed, that being her part. Dipannita Sharma is okay. Anushka Sharma is her natural self, not that her role offers any challenges. As for Ranveer Singh, it is very well to describe him as charming, handsome and smooth to establish his character but tough to convince the viewer.

    Ladies vs Ricky Bahl a pretty average fare.

     

    Lanka has no entertainment value

     

    Producer: ASA Production & Enterprises P Ltd.
    Director: Maqbool Khan.
    Cast: Manoj Bajpayee, Arjan Bajwa, Tia Bajpai, Yashpal Sharma, Manish Choudhary, Yatin Karyekar.

    Lanka is a film about a small town real life inspired story. The real life stories such as Lanka are one off affair and are not known to catch the fancy of all cinemagoer. Usually these stories are so bizarre, that they have no entertainment value and to make such a film and expect the urban multiplex audience to accept is foolhardy.

    Tia Bajpai is a medical student having come to Bijnour where her father is posted as CMO at the local hospital; Manoj Bajpayee controls the town and his word is the law here. When he sees Tia Bajpai, he wants her to be his.

    Soon he takes control of Tia Bajpai and her parents‘ lives; they are literally under house arrest, being watched 24 hours by Manoj Bajpayee‘s goons and the family is at his complete mercy, helpless as he comes at whim and fulfils his urge. The third angle is added with the entry of Arjan Bajwa, whom Bajpayee loves like kid brother and for whom Manoj Bajpayee is the ultimate idol; he does what is expected of him, generally play escort to Manoj Bajpayee and do the killings for him. Having noticed the plight of Tia Bajpyee, he can‘t stay indifferent for long; he is attracted to her and decides to go against Manoj Bajpayee and help her escape. The end is on expected lines. There are side tracks of rivalries between communities which are of little interest.

    The subject is dry and can be described as a documentary genre at best, providing no scope for dramatics, music or humour. Performances are routine with Manoj Bajpayee doing what he has been doing in several films earlier, Arjan Bajwa is fair while Tia Bajpai fails to involve the viewer in her plight.

    There is nothing to write about for the box office prospects of Lanka since none exist.