The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Here's looking at the films that failed at the box office in the first half of this year.
Bring on the 100-crore heroine's club already!
Kangana, Priyanka or Vaani Kapoor -- who takes the top slot?
Fascinating films based on true stories you might want to catch this year.
'Mumbai stands tall yet again.' Bollywood raves about the city's resilience.
There are quite a few reasons, and the main villain was not Chennai Express.
When TV stars take on the big screen...
Here's a look at the top 10 tweets from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
A look at the potential blockbusters this summer.
Bombay Velvet was Bollywood's biggest flop this year.
'People ask me why I'm not doing much work, where have I vanished... But it's my life. And I am enjoying it.' Bipasha Basu gets ready to haunt you all over again.
Milan Luthria's Once Upon A Time In Mumbai Dobaara is a complete drag, unintentionally comical and painfully verbose unlike the prequel which hit quite a few right notes, notes Sukanya Verma
'People must watch the film to see what is it about.' 'This incident has impacted the families of hundreds of people, whose lives were lost in bomb blasts.'
Bollywood's superstars have tried their hand at con films, and the genre has made quite a bit of money.
'Dharam sir is so chilled; he is like a buddy.' 'I am scared of Sunny sir.' 'With Bobby sir, I can talk anything.'
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Here's looking at the summer hits through the years.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi is likely to urge Tim Cook to begin manufacturing its prized iPhones in India.
'I didn't want to be the bottom-most in the food chain of a commercial film.' 'I'd rather do something experimental and learn and hope that this translates into somebody noticing me.'
Aseem Chhabra attends an unusual medley of movies and literature in Chandigarh.
'It would be rude to reject a girl who kisses me. So I kissed Diandra back. There was nothing more than that. I am going to marry the girl that my mother chooses for me.' Bigg Boss 8 winner Gautam Gulati is ready to move on.
Step aside, dear models. The celebrity showstoppers are here to steal the show.
The top posts on social media from your favourite Bollywood celebrities.
Hamari Adhuri Kahani is a film where three fine actors all play idiots, says Raja Sen.
A look at 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.
'Sridevi touched my feet.' 'Kajol is magical.' 'You will feel Salman is not paying attention, but when the camera rolls, he does the step you just showed him.'
'It is our fault that we are not superstars. We should be superstars if we can help it,' Tisca Chopra tells Sonil Dedhia/ Rediff.com
Raja Sen picks the bad movies of the year so far.
'I used to be humiliated.' 'If I would approach an actor, he would just say hello and then turn away.' 'That's when I understood the whole game of the industry.'
'Alia is brighter than me. I am extremely happy and proud that without her father's help, she has had a successful journey. People didn't think that a girl who was danced to Radha (a hit song in Student Of The Year) could do such serious acting as well.' Mahesh Bhatt, in a candid chat.
'Director Ali Abbas Zafar has directed a monstrous film, one with a repellent 70s-set storyline that makes no sense whatsoever, and a cast who should all hang their heads and offer up a minute's silence for assaulting their respective filmographies,' says Raja Sen after watching Gunday.
'When the same rotten paratha is served to someone year after year, it shocks them when all of a sudden there is a change in taste.' Kay Kay Menon justifies why he took up Yudh.
'Our country needs 542 Narendra Modis,' Paresh Rawal tells Sonil Dedhia.
And no, the list doesn't start and stop with Boman Irani!
Who was Mohammad Azharuddin? More crucially, *what* was he? Those are precisely the questions that, as the end credits roll after 132 minutes of run-time, remain unanswered, feels Prem Panicker.