Tag: Sunny Deol

  • Om Puri begins shooting for ‘Ghayal Once Again’

    Om Puri begins shooting for ‘Ghayal Once Again’

    MUMBAI: Veteran actor Om Puri, who was an integral part of 1990’s super hit film Ghayal starring Sunny Deol, will also be part of its sequel Gayal Once Again.

     
    Recently the actor began shooting for the film in Bandra along with Deol. A source close to the unit says,”Om Puri sir is playing a pivotal role in the film. He has started shooting for the film already. Sunny and Om Puri were seen having intense discussion during the shoot. Om Puri Sir hasn’t read the script and all he we reveal is that the police officer has retired now but still shares a warm relationship with Sunny’s character.”

     
    Ghayal Once Again is being directed and produced by Deol under the banner Sunny Sounds Pvt Ltd

  • Queen continues its dream run at the box office

    Queen continues its dream run at the box office

    MUMBAI: Dhishkiyaon, starring Harman Baweja and Sunny Deol, has maintained to keep a little over the crore mark through the weekend to collect Rs 3.3 crore for first three days.

     

    O Teri remains below the crore mark between Rs 70 lakh and Rs 80 lakh to complete a weekend of Rs 2.2 crore.

     

    Youngistan, which has been accorded a limited screen release, has managed a weekend of Rs 3.5 crore.

     

    Ragini MMS2 has had an excellent run through its first week with the opening weekend contributing well. The film has collected Rs 37.1 crore.

     

    While Gang Of Ghosts has crossed the one crore mark to collect Rs 1.5 crore in its first week, Lakshmi and Ankhon Dekhi have been received poorly with Rs 20 lakh and Rs 70 lakh respectively.

     

    Queen continues to regale the audience and creating a fan base for Kangana Ranaut. The performance of the film has been strong in third week too as the film collects Rs 10.8 crore to take its three week total to Rs 48.5 crore.

     

    Shaadi Ke Side Effects has collected Rs 40 lakh in its fourth week taking its four week total to Rs 36.95 crore.

  • Dhishkiyaon: Dhishki..yawn

    Dhishkiyaon: Dhishki..yawn

    MUMBAI: Looking at Dhishkiyaon, it is more than obvious that the writer director of this film, Sanamjit Talwar has been fed on a diet of 1970s films of Mumbai underworld. The all-time classic Deewaar set a trend that many makers have tried to emulate. Everything about Dhishkiyaon is copybook: it’s set in the Mumbai underworld of the Koliwada beaches and deals mainly with smuggling and the role of the police. And, like in many filmy underworlds, there are layers to the operatives so that the fight can continue and the main don can be taken up in the end like the favourite food item reserved till last.

    Harman Baweja is a well-behaved kid being brought up by his father, having lost his mother at five. His father has little time for him but advises him to follow the Gandhian path. Harman is the victim of a school bully who beats him up and humiliates him every day. But he also has close friends in a girl and a boy. Fed up of the class bully, the child Harman decides to give supari to a local gangster, Prakash Narayanan, because he has been told that Prakash can handle anybody. Prakash takes a fancy to the kid and tells him that the only way to stop the bully is to give it back to him. Prakash and Harman are now inseparable and next thing you know, Harman has grown up and is a member of Prakash’s gang.

    Prakash, as Harman learns soon, is not the ultimate don. He answers to another don, Sumit Nijhwan. And then there is another don, Rajesh Vivek, who is liquidating all his assets and clearing out of the game, though he doesn’t explain why. Harman wants to steal his computer and through that the loot from Vivek’s assets. However, his plan is hijacked by Sumit. There has been a killing in the process of stealing the computer. Vivek’s accountant as well as Harman’s mentor, Prakash, is killed. Harman is made an offer to either take a bullet or take the rap for the killings. For Harman, it is necessary to stay alive to avenge Prakash’s death.

    Producers: Sunil Lulla, Shilpa Shetty.

    Director: SanamjitTalwar.

    Cast: Sunny Deol, Harman Baweja, Ayesha Khanna, Prashant Narayanan, Aditya Pancholi, Anand Tiwari, Rajit Kapoor, in item number Shilpa Shetty.

    While in jail, Harman meets Sunny Deol, a Haryanvi. Both while away their time playing snakes and ladders, which Sunny also uses to teach his philosophies of life and survival to Harman. Once out of jail, both team up and, under the guidance of Sunny, Harman plans his revenge on Sumit. Harman impresses Sumit and gains his confidence despite opposition from Sumit’s right hand man, Anand Tiwari. He also cultivates the policeman, Aditya Panscholi. With the screen so crowded, it is time to eliminate some people. Finally, it is between Harman, Tiwari and Sumit.

    The film starts with Harman narrating his life story to Sunny in first person with some flashbacks. This continues almost till interval. It is a poor use of the visual medium of film. There is no background to Sunny’s character. He is larger than life because of his public image as a toughie. Sadly, the same can’t be said of the villains who are unknown faces without any image and don’t help Harman’s character grow. The script is patchy and the scenes that inspired the writer have been thrown in piecemeal. Dialogue is good at places. Musically, one song is hummable. A little trimming would have helped.

    While Sunny and Aditya stay true to their style of acting, Harman is limited by his expressions. Prakash is very good. Sumit is okay. Tiwari grossly overacts.

    Dhishkiyaon is a lost cause and will find it tough to see through even the weekend.

    Youngistaan: No Politics Please

    Political stories either blended with family sagas or with romance, whichever way, don’t usually work in mainstream Hindi cinema except for the odd one, like the antiestablishment Inquilaab (1984) or South remake Nayak (2001), both of which barely managed to scrape through. The one which went on to become a classic is Aandhi (1975). Against this, the list of flops is long. Even rarer are political films about young people in politics. Before the recent Rajneeti (2010) the last film one remembers of a young man (Prosenjit) going into politics with an agenda was Aandhiyan (1990), with the only attraction of this film being the return of Mumtaz to Hindi cinema. While Nayak and Inquilaab with Anil Kapoor and Amitabh Bachchan, respectively, in the lead had some star power, Aandhiyan lacked on that count, a problem that Youngistaan suffers from to a great degree.

    Producer: Vashu Bhagnani.

    Director: Syed Ahmad Afzal.

    Cast: Jackky Bhagnani, Neha Sharma, Farooq Sheikh, Boman Irani, Kayoze Irani, Meeta Vasisht.

    Jackky Bhagnani is a young easygoing guy enjoying life with his steady girlfriend, Neha Sharma. His life is all about fun and games, parties and romance. That he is the son of the powerful PM of India, Boman Irani, hardly touches his life as he is gallivanting in far away Japan. That is until, one day suddenly, Boman is no more and Jackky is called upon to fill in his father’s shoes until the elections, which are due soon. At 28, he is the youngest PM of a vast country, straight from a life of luxury to no-frills political showmanship, from denims to kurtas.

    Now instead of his friends, he is surrounded by his political ‘friends’ of whom he is never sure. There is no life or privacy with his lady love anymore. In fact, his love life with a live-in girlfriend is out of sync with the political traditions; they are not supposed to do these things openly! He also has another problem. His partner, Neha, is not in favour of him taking up politics, least of all his father’s responsibilities. And there is, of course, the game of wits with other politicians.

    Inspired from the Telugu film Leader, Youngistan could have been a subject worth trying in a regional language but not in Hindi where, in politics, even those in 40s are considered young! Also, it is not as simple as taking over a kingdom. This makes the theme seem implausible and farfetched. Also, there is too much of real politics happening in the electronic media nowadays what with general elections around the corner. Direction is fair. Musically, the film has a couple of good numbers. Jackky manages a passable act. Neha is okay. The one worth watching the film for is Farooq Sheikh, this being the great artiste’s last film.

    Youngistan has had a poor opening with no audience-no show at many cinemas.

    O Teri: No Teri

    Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro is a cult classic meant to be enjoyed again and again, not to be blatantly copied; never. O Teri is just that, an attempt to present, what the makers think, is a contemporary version of the Kundan Shah classic. In the bargain, the producers also waste the goodwill earned with their last production, Bodyguard. It could have been better utilized.

    Pulkit Samrat and Bilal Amrohi are greenhorn TV news reporters working as a team as well as living under same roof in Delhi. They have no sense of newsworthiness and their boss, Sarah-Jane Dias, is exasperated with the duo. She wanted scams and other such big news. Finally, she sacks them. What is worse, Pulkit is besotted by Sarah. The film’s tempo is set with the murder of a police detective who has managed to expose a scandal by Anupam Kher and was about to go public with it. He has been shot and then run over by a speeding car. Strings are pulled to have it declared an accidental death. The killers, however, fail to dispose the cop’s corpse safely and dump it in Pulkit’s Fiat car.

    Producers: Alvira Agnihotri, Atul Agnihotri.

    Director: Umesh Bist.

    Cast: Pulkit Samrat, Bilal Amrohi, Sarah-Jane Dias, Anupam Kher, Mandira Bedi, Vijay Raaz, Manoj Pahwa and Salman Khan in a cameo.

    Excited, the duo informs Sarah, who asks them to bring the body to her studio. (That is the kind of film this is where a news editor expects a corpse ferried around town and delivered at her doorstep.) However, when Sarah comes along to the car park to see the body, it is missing. The duo gets an earful. As both argue over a foot over bridge, the bridge, newly built, starts coming apart. The scandal is at hand and happening with the duo being right in the middle of the happenings. Bilal puts his Handycam to use. But, these are blundering boys and never get anything right. When they go to Sarah to show her the live coverage of the collapsing bridge, the disc is corrupted!

    While the CD may not have copied the whole shoot, it does manage to shoot the stolen corpse of the cop buried under the bridge debris. The boys are back in action. The charade goes on ad nauseam as just about everybody is on the villains’ side and gangs up against the two. However, the makers’ don’t let up on the greed for a happy ending.

    There are good films at times and there are bad films most of the time but, O Teri vies for the slot of a very, very bad film. It has no script, no coherence, no logic and no appeal of any kind. The presence of any director is suspect. Songs are forced in to take the film to an acceptable length which adds to the viewers’ tedium. Dialogue is banal. As for its two lead men, while Pulkit fails, making an effort, Bilal can’t act to save his life. Sarah lacks presence. Vijay Raaz is getting more irritable with every film he does. Anupam Kher is a caricature while Manoj Pahwa is okay in an undefined role. Salman Khan’s cameo song in the end titles may see few if any still around in the hall to watch it.

    For a film with thanks to Salim Khan and Salman Khan among others in its credit titles, O Teri is an example of gross waste of resources, financial as well as personal relations.

  • Shilpa Shetty says her first film as producer has taught her various lessons

    Shilpa Shetty says her first film as producer has taught her various lessons

    NEW DELHI: Bollywood actress turned producer Shilpa Shetty Kundra says: “I never thought that my first film will be an action-mystery. I always thought that if ever I make a film it would be a comedy or a love story. But I loved the script of Dishkiyaaoon so much that I wanted people to know the story “.

     

    Addressing a press meet here, she said “Harman Baweja and and Ayesha Khanna are both great actors and extremely good looking, so there is bound to be chemistry that shoots through the roof”.

     

    Releasing with the tagline “Aadmi bardha ho ya chhota, koi farak nahi pardhta bas uski kahani bardhi honi chahiye”, the film is about the story of two small men who are on their way to make it big in the world of crime. The story revolves around a gangster Viki Kartoos (Harman Baweja) and action man Lakwa (Sunny Deol).

     

    Actor Sunny Deol who is known for angry ‘avatars’ in Bollywood would be seen as a powerful man with a Haryanvi touch in the film. Harman Baweja would be seen as a gangster in the movie. Though from the first promos the movie looks like any other movie in the action crime genre, Deol’s ‘Haryanvi’ ‘avatar’ makes it different.

     

    Other cast includes Prashant Narayanan and Aditya Pancholi.  The film is directed by Sanamjit Singh Talwaar, the music is by Palash Muchhal. 

     

    Produced by Shilpa Shetty and Sunil Lulla, the film is slated for release on 28 March. The trailer of this Eros International and ESM film has already created a stir on the social media.

     

    Ayesha, stylist turned actress, was discovered by producer Shilpa Shetty Kundra and was initially very hesitant, but got a lot of encouragement from Harman. Ayesha said: “I would take a lot of advice from Harman. He was extremely sweet and patient with me and never once made me feel like I was a newcomer. It was great working with him and I did learn a lot from him and that shows on-screen”. Harman revealed that he had never felt Ayesha was a newcomer.

  • Sunny Deol to promote Manpasand Beverages Mango Sip

    Sunny Deol to promote Manpasand Beverages Mango Sip

    MUMBAI: Manpasand Beverages, India’s leading fruit juices company, has signed up Bollywood’s ‘Action King’ Sunny Deol as the brand ambassador for its flagship brand ‘Mango Sip’. Manpasand Beverages is in the business of beverages since a decade with its flagship brand Mango Sip established by first generation entrepreneur Shri Dhirendra Singh. It has carved a niche for itself in the market with a basket of 25 product variants. Mango Sip brand has grown to become one of the leading mango drink brands in India. The company plans to invest over Rs 100 crore in next one year even as it continues on its fast paced growth to take its sales to Rs 1000 crore in coming three years’ time from current Rs 300 crore plus.

    The Bollywood action star with a strong fan following amongst the urban and rural masses gels well with Manpasand’s Mango Sip brand which has a strong presence amongst the masses across the country. With a super-hit debut ‘Betaab’ in 1983, Sunny Deol went on to create a mark for himself and emerge as a Bollywood super-star with hit films like Arjun, Tridev, Ghayal, Jeet, Ziddi, Damini, Indian and Border amongst others. Sunny’s biggest blockbuster hit to date has been ‘Gadar: Ek Prem Katha’.    

    Endorsing the Mango Sip brand, Bollywood superstar Mr. Sunny Deol said, “I am extremely thrilled and honoured to be part of Manpasand family. I am personally very fond of mangoes and feel that only an Indian brand like Mango Sip can understand the importance of mango fruit as a whole and make the national fruit the most consumable beverage product in India. Mango is a fruit loved by all Indians, irrespective of their age, region, religion or caste. It is our duty to address the masses and educate them about the importance that mango drink holds.”

    Speaking about the company’s new brand ambassador, Mr. Dhirendra Singh, Chairman & MD of Manpasand Beverages said, “We are very proud to have Mr. Sunny Deol as the brand ambassador for our flagship mango juice brand and are confident that his association will help in significantly increasing the per capita consumption of mango drinks in the country. With a strong presence in tier-2 and tier-3 markets, our network is spread across 2 lakh plus retail outlets and over 2000 dealers. Our aim is to double these numbers in a few years and make Mango the most loved beverage product in India. We will be starting a full 360 degree media campaign shortly.”

     

  • Evelyn Sharma to match dance steps with Arshad Warsi

    Evelyn Sharma to match dance steps with Arshad Warsi

    MUMBAI: Evelyn Sharma seems to have all the luck by her side. From starting out as a fashionista and graduating to Bollywood success with super hits like Nautanki Saala! and then Ranbir Kapoor-starrer Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani (YJHD), she’s now turning a new leaf in her career.

     

    Evelyn has been signed by director Neeraj Pathak for Bhaiyyaji Superhit starring Sunny Deol, Preity Zinta and Arshad Warsi.

     

    Pitted as the leading lady opposite Arshad, she plays a cute, sexy but traditional Indian girl. But what the actress is most excited about is matching dance steps with him. Apart from being a powerhouse performer, Arshad is well-known for being a great dancer. And Evelyn feels this gives her a chance to hone her dancing skills too. Nowadays, the girl is often spotted at a dance rehearsal hall in Andheri, Mumbai. We wonder if that has something to do with the challenge of dancing with Arshad.

     

    Meanwhile, having bagged a role with various shades, comedy, songs, dance and all, Evelyn is glad to work with director Neeraj Pathak. “He spotted me in YJHD and invited me to his office for a meeting. He compliments me for my talent and thinks I am a quick learner. I feel honoured with the praise,” said the actress.

  • Krrish 3 continues its strong run; others struggle to make a mark

    Krrish 3 continues its strong run; others struggle to make a mark

    MUMBAI: Sunny Deol’s action film, Singh Saab The Great is old wine in a plastic bottle. With so much use of Punjabi language, it could well have been a Punjabi film due to which it loses out on patronage in South and East India while limiting it in other parts. The film’s appeal is only limited to single screens. The movie collected Rs 14.2 crore for its opening weekend which is not very encouraging.

     

    Gori Tere Pyar Mein – the second flick featuring Imran Khan and Kareena Kapoor Khan together – has failed to attract the audience from day one and failing to improve even on Saturday and Sunday. A poorly conceived and executed film, it draws neither youth nor the compulsive moviegoer. The film has managed a poor Rs 7.8 crore for its opening weekend.

     

    Goliyon Ki Rasleela: Ram-Leela crossed one more hurdle in UP as there were objections to the film’s title by certain people following which a court had stopped its screening in the state of UP. There were no shows on Friday and Saturday (22 and 23 November) in UP. The producer gave the film a new title, G-K.R.R, for UP and availed of the Censor Certificate following which the screening resumed from Sunday (24 November) onwards. The film has collected Rs 69.7 crore for its first week.

     

    Rajjo has proved to be a futile exercise with the film barley managing to collect Rs 1.65 crore in its first week.
    Krrish 3 has added Rs 8.5 crore for its third week taking its three week total to Rs 171.8 crore.

  • Teekhi Baat with Sunny Deol

    Teekhi Baat with Sunny Deol

    MUMBAI: This weekend on Teekhi Baat Prabhu Ke Saath, catch actor-producer-director Sunny Deol in a candid conversation with Prabhu Chawla. On the show, the ‘King of Action’ talks about his upcoming release ‘Singh Sahab the Great’ and also about his father who has been his role model. Deol also reveals the reasons for his long absence from the silver screen and why he chooses to avoid doing negative roles. Also on the show, he talks about his ambitions, his co-stars, future plans and much more.

  • Teekhi Baat with Sunny Deol

    Teekhi Baat with Sunny Deol

    MUMBAI: This weekend on Teekhi Baat Prabhu Ke Saath, catch actor-producer-director Sunny Deol in a candid conversation with Prabhu Chawla. On the show, the ‘King of Action’ talks about his upcoming release ‘Singh Sahab the Great’ and also about his father who has been his role model. Deol also reveals the reasons for his long absence from the silver screen and why he chooses to avoid doing negative roles. Also on the show, he talks about his ambitions, his co-stars, future plans and much more.

    Don’t miss the Special Episode
    Only on IBN7
    Sat, Nov 23rd, 2013 @ 8:30 PM & Sun, Nov 24th, 2013 @ 7:30 PM

  • Single screen saab

    Single screen saab

    MUMBAI: Anil Sharma’s Singh Saab The Great may as well have been a Punjabi film: much of the dialogue and songs are in Punjabi. This follows a week after Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s almost-Gujarati Ram-Leela, which had dialogue with Gujarati blend and just about every song and background songs taken from Gujarati folk music. If this is these makers’ idea of being different, they are succeeding only in limiting their audience. As for the rest, Sharma tries to cash in on Sunny Deol’s “dhai kilo haath” which now, with time, weighs three and half kilos, which he uses to take on hundreds of goons let loose on him by the villain, Prakash Raj. It is a simple story: Sunny is an honest government servant and Prakash Raj is a despotic evil man. Take it or leave it.

    Sunny Deol is a Sikh gentleman who descends on village after village and town after town to cleanse them of villains, corruption and other such evils. But one day a journalist, Amrita Rao, barges into his office and starts accusing him of hiding from the law in the guise of a Sardar without having completed his 18 year jail sentence, which he was given along with five of his colleagues. That is the cue; you know a flashback is coming. So Sunny, who usually flares up with fury at the slightest provocation, goes soft on this TV reporter and decides to tell her all.

    Sunny is the usual oft-transferred collector who is posted to a town where Prakash’s writ runs large, unchallenged. Because like all such bad men of recent era, he controls enough MLAs and MPs to topple the local government! However, Sunny turns out to be a tough ‘un-government-servant’ kind of guy. While he is dispatching Prakash off with disdain, the latter dares to threaten to harm his sister, meriting a resounding slap from Sunny. That is reason enough for Prakash not to use his clout and get Sunny transferred of town but to let him be and use his guile to harm him and his family on a regular basis. Guile is something Sunny’s brawn is no match for.

    Producer: Anuj Sharma, Sangeeta Ahir.
    Director: Anil Sharma.
    Cast: Sunny Deol, Amrita Rao, Urvashi Rautela, Prakash Raj, Shahbaz Khan, Johny Lever, Sanjay Mishra, Manoj Pahwa, Yashpal Sharma.

    The problem is that the fear of the villain vanishes in the very first encounter between the two, when Sunny slaps him. Whatever a writer or director does to resurrect his villainous nature after that does not help: he can have hundreds of his goons kill women or harass them to teach Sunny a lesson but he does not seem threatening. A villain has to be built till the end, preferably larger than the hero so that as much as the hero, even the viewer wants him punished! But if a maker has not learnt that in over three decades in filmmaking, it is too late.

    The film is a poorly conceived and executed and any claims (though it may read so in the titles) to story, screenplay and direction are not substantiated. Just filling up frames with crowds does not make an extravaganza. And what is with all the Punjabi dialogue and music? Who are they catering to—even Punjabi films have come of age and rate much better than Singh Saab The Great.(Not to mention they cost much less.) Music, even if Punjabi, is routine. Editing and photography both look uninspired. Action has been seen alike in many South remakes recently.

    Sunny Deol plays himself, the character he has been playing since his debut; mostly looking angry and trading punches. Amrita Rao’s fascination for the widower Sunny is rather too cliché. Urvashi Rautela as a many years younger wife leaves no mark. Prakash Raj matches Sunny in his consistency at villainy since his Hindi debut; the least he could do is vary his expressions.

    Singh Saab The Great, is an old fashioned mass film with appeal for single screen patrons with its best prospects being in the North.