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Bollywood Hollywood Films Bollywood & Hollywood Films: August 2014
                   

Friday, 22 August 2014

Mardaani _ Rani Mukerji

Rani Mukerji’s latest movie- Mardaani





Rani Mukerji returns to the silver screen after almost two years with YRF’s Mardaani that has hit the theatres today. Our critic Srishti Dixit is watching the film at the moment and has sent us the first impression of the film. Srishti says, “In a twisted cat-mouse chase, Rani essays the character of Shivani Shivaji Roy, who is trying to find a street urchin, Pyari whom she had rescued and put in a shelter home. But Pyari and many other girls like her get caught in the murky web of human trafficking. 
Will Shivani Shivaji Roy find the victims before they lose their innocence to prostitution? Rani plays a toughened cop and her spell binding performance has engaged and hooked us to wait for more. Tahir Bhasin plays the role of a pimp running an organised racket to the T. Chilling scenes depicting what happens in the dreaded world of forced prostitution and sex trade will haunt you even after you walk out of the theatre. For now Rani has given the pimp an ultimatum and we are waiting to get to the other side eagerly. Lets hope that the cat mouse chase ends in Mardaani‘s favour!” (Sources from http://www.bollywoodlife.com/)

Wednesday, 20 August 2014

Guess who's next Bollywood fashion Girl?? KRITI SANON

kriti-sanon
Kriti Sanon has become the toast of ramps recently. The young actress has just made her entry in Bollywood with Sajid Nadiadwala's 'Heropanti'.
And she has been getting a lot of requests from various fashion designers to walk on the ramp for them.
A lot of people around her tell her how her looks justify both Indian as well as western outfits. She can carry off any look with comfort and ease. Lots of designers have approached her to walk the ramp for them.
Also a lot of fashion magazines have approached the pretty actress to shoot with them with different concepts.
The actress is currently learning Salsa for her next film, 'Singh is Bling' and has been trying to manage time for the requests which have been coming her way.

Monday, 18 August 2014


Love to Blog once again--About Singham Returns

There isn't one quiet moment in Rohit Shetty's 'Singham Returns'. This sequel is an orgy of relentless action, shrill dialoguebaazi, and eardrum-shattering background music. And yet, buried somewhere under all that noise is a well-meaning - although misguided - story about the need for corruption-cleansing in the system.

Ajay Devgan reprises his role as Bajirao Singham, upright cop and dispenser of vigilante justice, now promoted to Deputy Commissioner of Police and relocated from a village on the Goa-Maharashtra border to big bad Mumbai city. Our fearless hero locks horns with a fake godman (a deliciously hammy Amole Gupte) and a crooked neta (Zakir Hussain), when it becomes clear that they're responsible for the death and humiliation of one of his officers, and for the murder of an Anna Hazare-like figure (Anupam Kher) who'd been spearheading a movement to introduce dynamic and committed young candidates into the political fray.
There isn't much that's groundbreaking in the script, but Shetty and Devgan have created a leading man worth rooting for. Singham is steadfast in his intolerance for dishonesty and corruption; in one scene at the start of the film when someone offers him a bribe, he lands a stinging slap on the fellow's face and this classic line: "Main leta nahin, deta hoon."
Shetty shrewdly roots this protagonist and the film's conflict in the real world. He taps into our collective cynicism towards politicians and the system, and gives the'aam aadmi' a platform to vent. So far, so good. What's disconcerting however, is the film's suggestion that taking the law into one's own hands might be the only effective solution to fix things. It's a dangerous message, and Shetty delivers it via rousing scenes that are designed to elicit applause. Even more dangerous.
What I especially enjoyed in 'Singham Returns' were its stray moments of clever, unexpected humor. Twice our hero takes it on the chin when his girlfriend, and an officer in his team, makes a joke about his age. In another scene, when Gupte'sdhongi Baba rattles off lines from the Bhagwad Gita to him, Singham quotes from the Indian Penal Code in response.
Sources from ibnlive