After a dry, dreadful, spell of darkness and desolation, it looks like Bollywood love stories are ready to rock the silver screen again.
There is very little in the film to keep the audience engaged.
Rashmika Mandanna will star alongside Amitabh Bachchan in Vikas Bahl's next directorial venture, Deadly.
Tamil film Ya Yaa is an average movie, with a story that lacks direction and performances that failed to deliver.
Yaatris works neither as a comedy nor as a family drama.
After repeatedly essaying the role of doomed lover, Dilip Kumar, a thinking actor, found it diffcult to break out of in real life. Heeding his psychoanalyst, he flirted with some frothy roles and played the swashbuckling hero with elan, recalls Dinesh Raheja.
The film is named after a song from the late Akkineni Nageswara's film Raamudu Kaadu Krishnudu.
The Nitya Mehra-directed film starring Sidharth Malhotra and Katrina Kaif is scheduled to release on September 9.
Vellaikaara Durai barely makes an impression. The story is let down by an aimless screenplay with tedious characters and average music, writes S Saraswathi
'Murlikant sir saw the film for the first time alongside the army chief and many other army officers.' 'The way he got a standing ovation there, I got teary-eyed. It was a very emotional moment for all of us.'
Director Bakkiyaraj Kannan's Remo is a ridiculous romantic comedy revolving around the hero's struggles to win the girl of his dreams.
Celebrate the weekend with Shah Rukh Khan and more on OTT.
So which film will *you* watch at a theatre near you?
A lot of scenes in the film reminded me of Mani Ratnam's pattern and treatment of love stories -- love at first sight, the talkative partner, picturesque song sequences and of course, longing and heartbreak, observes Divya Nair.
'I am not such an actor that hits and flops will decide my career.'
Dream Girl 2's understanding of womanhood boils down to her boobs, sighs Sukanya Verma.
Sukanya Verma leaves you spoilt for choice on OTT this week.
The OTT glass is full again. Here's all the exciting new fare to watch over the week. Sukanya Verma offers a peek.
A mix of real-life-inspired and fiction flicks will release this month.
We saw the big hits of Tamil cinema. Now it's time to look at the flops.
There's a lot of action on the OTT front as well as in theatres.
The film is ridiculously long romantic comedy that seriously tests your patience.
You'll wish weekends lasted as long as weeks after looking at Sukanya Verma's long, long list of recommendations on OTT this week.
Radhika Apte's espionage skills, a quartet of romances in Visakhapatnam and a whole lot of other adventures and thrills, there's tons of action to catch on OTT this week.
Zwigato urges viewers to think critically about the kind of unethical behaviour that food delivery workers have to put up with on a daily basis because of insensitive customers, observes Chintan Girish Modi.
Bring on the popcorn, the OTT scene is buzzing with three things -- entertainment, entertainment, entertainment.
Joginder Tuteja lists 10 romantic movies playing on OTT that you can watch with your date.
So which film is releasing at a theatre near you? We tell you, right here!
Tamilselvanum Thaniyar Anjalum or Thirunaal, what's your pick?
'I have watched comedies but some have failed to make me laugh. The characters indulge in too much buffoonery. They move too much, falling, hitting each other, making faces... Comedy is very serious business.' Director Anees Bazmee tells us how he makes people laugh with his films.
Shimla Mirchi is a lost opportunity, feels Moumita Bhattacharjee.
The 'NRI movie' appeared soon after Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge's blockbuster success.
Any movie about time loops is bound to draw comparisons with the Bill Murray classic, Groundhog Day but Palm Springs holds rather well on its own, raves Sukanya Verma.
'The world needs Gandhi now more than any other time in history.'
Baar Baar Dekho looks vibrant and genuinely intriguing, writes Raja Sen.
'People go through lifetimes without speaking about what they've gone through as kids.' 'And that colours their entire lives, their choices, their bosses, their friends, their lovers, the way they are with their children.'
The reasons are too private to be discussed at a round table, listed out during a seminar, or uncovered in an academic course. A proud but insomniac connoisseur murmuring in his sleep may do a better job of explaining the phenomenon than an expert on a podium. Sreehari Nair airs his thoughts.