A look at the top tweets from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
We go on the sets of Juhi Chawla's Chalk N Duster.
Who is the best onscreen brother - Salman or Ranveer?
Here's how lucky Akki has been at the box office so far!
The legendary athlete showers praise on the film, and the team behind it.
'Badlapur,' says Sreehari Nair, 'proves that sometimes there are more personal truths to be discovered in our trash cans than in our neatly arranged book-shelves.'
Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra's latest film lacks clarity and coherence.
Indians took to social media to pay their respects.
'Banning the film is an unfortunate response and does great injustice to Nirbhaya's parents, who have supported the film and to the brave young men and women who forced the government to set up the Justice Verma Commission.' Bollywood gets their voice across.
'2015 gave us a set of Hindi films that brought to light, the true uncorrupted joys of filmmaking even in their roughness.' 'Films which told us why we loved films in the first place. Films that were less ashamed of revealing their weakness and ones that took chances with audience expectations.'
'The public has appreciated Badlapur and a black marketeer was trying to sell me a ticket the other day!' Director Sriram Raghavan tells Patcy N/ Rediff.com
'In our film industry, there are not many opportunities for actors... Our films are not character based, they are hero and heroine based. The only roles we have for character actors are to play the girl's or boy's dad or a police officer...'
Farhan Akhtar's Bhaag Milkha Bhaag does not offer anything new
Badlapur is all fury and fog, a revenge saga that plays out with great eyebrow-singeing intensity, says Raja S