A look at the last films of directors, who met with untimely deaths.
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
'She broke down, I broke down... because it is such an intense film.' 'The lines blurred between being on screen and our real emotions towards each other.' The Kapoor siblings turn reel life siblings in Haseena Parkar.
Satyagraha attempts to speak about important issues but ends up over-simplifying them.
'I don't know where the viciousness in the reviews is coming from.' 'To me, it feels more of a personal attack.'
"For years I had been the cynosure of all eyes in my residential complex -- 'the lady with the full-time maid!'"
Aseem Chhabra looks at the year's best Non-Hindi Indian movies.
Bollywood celebrities mourn the death of the charismatic actor.
'You don't need a godfather to protect you from dangers of Bollywood because nobody will.'
'The 17-year-old boy, who pulled out Nirbhaya's intestines, should have got the harshest punishment because he was not human at the time.' 'Instead, he was given a sewing machine and some money to have a new beginning!' 'Are we giving out incentives?' 'Are we telling our unemployed youth that if they do something like this, the government will give them jobs?'
Filmmaker Prakash Jha opens up about his life.
'Single life is pretty good. I like the attention. If I feel lonely, I just call my mom and she sleeps in my bed,' Kalki Koechlin tells Rediff.com contributor Paloma Sharma.