Three Indian films -- Midnight's Children, The Reluctant Fundamentalist and English Vinglish -- will be showcased at the festival.
Avengers is expected to end its run at $1.5 billion but Dark Knight Rises may not be too far behind.
The latest hit from Japan's Studio Ghibli is a fabulous film, dubbed in English.
Dekh Indian Circus and Gattu impress and pick up awards at the New York Indian Film Festival.
Chiman Delwadia helps students solve problems and he gives them homework to boost their knowledge of math
Playwright Lloyd Suh's new play Jesus In India gives an account of Jesus Christ's India sojourn between the ages of 18 and 30.
Sir Mota Singh, who grew up in Kenya playing cricket and studying the way legislation worked there during British rule, is one of the most outspoken champions of Sikh rights in the United Kingdom.
"When you start a prize with the Dalai Lama, how do you keep it going?" asked Thomas P DiNapoli, New York State comptroller, at the Guru Nanak Interfaith Prize event in New York, April 18.
One of his earliest memories of childhood that interfaith leader and bestselling author Dr Eboo Patel remembers is that of his father's friend Ajit Uncle. Eboo was about four or five when he asked the question that has been bothering him: What is on your head?
The British film is doing decent business for an independent film, but Tim Burton's Dark Shadows hasn't been as lucky.
Johnny Depp and Tim Burton come together again after Alice In Wonderland.
The murders of Indian students in the United States in the last few years has been a reason of worry for not only students but also their parents in India. Arthur J Pais reports
Amid speculations that Andhra Pradesh students in America were targeted for robbery and murders, came the news of Soumya Tummala Reddy, a 22-year-old electrical engineering student at Southern Illinois University in Edwardsville, who was shot to death near a lake close to Chicago in September 2008.
The film will open on April 27 across North America.
The film is power-packed with action and smart performances.
Ravi Pazhani and his wife Sabita sat silently as Steve Altman, their son Dharun Ravi's lawyer, and members of the Support Ravi initiative declared that Ravi was judged unfairly -- first by public opinion and then by the 'muddled' New Jersey hate laws in the case of camera spying on his Rutgers University roommate Taylor Clementi, who later committed suicide.
The 14-year-old film is steadily doing fantastic business.
Don't think of renting out this film; buy the value pack.
Director Tarsem Singh tells us why he chose the actress in his new film, Mirror, Mirror.